McKinley v. McKinley

172 So. 2d 35, 277 Ala. 471, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 543
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 18, 1965
Docket1 Div. 252
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 172 So. 2d 35 (McKinley v. McKinley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinley v. McKinley, 172 So. 2d 35, 277 Ala. 471, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 543 (Ala. 1965).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

This is an effort on the part of the father, Reuben F. McKinley, to have us review certain orders or decrees affecting the custody of his three minor daughters. The case comes here on the record alone. Reuben F. McKinley and his wife, Lois Elizabeth McKinley, were divorced sometime prior to August 31, 1962. We are not advised by the record presently before us as to the ground for divorce or as to the custody provisions of the divorce decree, if any.

The first entry in the record is an order or decree under date of August 31, 1962, which was entered on September 4, 1962, wherein the custody of the girls was awarded to Reuben F. McKinley subject to the further orders of the court. The mother, Lois Elizabeth McKinley, was given visitation rights subj ect to the direction, control and supervision of the Department of Pensions and Security of Baldwin County.

The next entry in the record is an order or decree under date of May 12, 1964, which was entered on July 15, 1964, whereby the mother was given the right to have the girls visit with Her and her family for a period of two weeks beginning May 15, 1964.

The next entry in the record is an order or decree under date of July 8, 1964, which was entered on July 10, 1964, wherein it was provided that the girls should “visit with and in the home of their mother, Mrs. Lois A. Morris, R#4, Atmore, Alabama, for the period of July 15, 1964, to August 15, 1964.” Apparently the mother, Lois Elizabeth McKinley, had married one Morris sometime between May 8, 1964, and July 8, 1964.

The record next shows that on July 22, 1964, Reuben F. McKinley filed a petition directed to the special judge who had been handling these matters, wherein he asked that the court have a full and complete investigation made of the home of his former wife in view of the order or decree of July 8, 1964. Petitioner assigned ten grounds, all of which are to the effect that the home of Lois Elizabeth McKinley Morris is unfit for the children to visit. Petitioner goes into considerable detail in the grounds assigned in support of his motion, which detail he said was based on information, and which it Was impossible for him “to know of his own knowledge.” Petitioner asked that the investigation be made “by other than the Baldwin or Escambia County Departments of Pensions and Security, who are prejudiced against your petitioner because of my zeal for my children * * * ” He asked that the court, “will base your investigation on the sworn [473]*473evidence of the unfitness of said home you heard on the trial of said cause, as well as on the information herein.”

The next entry in the record is an order under date of July 23, 1964 entered on July 24, 1964, by the special judge, setting a hearing “for Wednesday, August 12, 1964, at 10:00 A.M. in the Circuit Court room, at Bay Minette, Baldwin County, Alabama, on all matters relating to the custody, care, and maintenance of the three minor children involved in this case, viz: * * * and the homes now provided by both the Complainant and the Respondent for said children and all other matters relating thereto.” That order further provided that all witnesses who have any material evidence to give in this case should be summoned and be available for the hearing and that the minor children be made available to the Court for examination

The record next shows that on July 24, 1964, Reuben F. McKinley filed a motion to set aside the decree dated July 23, 1964, ordering a hearing for change of custody in said cause on the ground that the court was without authority to conduct such a hearing in the absence of an application therefor and that no such application had been made in that his motion of July 22, 1964, was simply a request that the court conduct an investigation of the home of his former wife, Lois O. Morris, and “to see to it that the welfare of said minor children was protected, when in the home of their mother.”

The next entry in the record is a “Plea in Abatement” filed by McKinley on July 28, 1964, wherein it is averred, among other things:

“This hearing is the fifth litigation between the same parties and for the same subject matter, and the law of Alabama provides that there shall be an end to vexations, Harassing and Endless litigation concerning the custody of children and that the policy of the courts be and is, that the parties shall not continuously have to suffer over and over, a repetition of litigation concern- ■ ing children.”

.... . , , , McKinley is a lawyer and apparently he filed on his own behalf the motions to which we have referred.

The record next shows a decree under date of August 12, 1964, entered on August 24, 1964, the first two paragraphs of which ad as follows:

“DECREE
“This being the day regularly set in the Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Alabama, in Equity to hear all matters relating to the care, custody and control of the three minor children of the parties hereto, viz: * * * and the homes now being provided by both the Complainant and Respondent for said children and other matters relating thereto.
“And the Court having talked privately with said children, separately in chambers; with Mrs. Stanton, the sister of the Complainant, and with Mr. Morris the husband of the Respondent, and with the Complainant and the Respondent, with their respective Solicitors of record being present, and upon agreement of the parties and their respective Solicitors, the Court is of the opinion that the decree of the 31st day of August 1952[sic], pertaining to the care, custody and control of said minor children above named should .be amended, it being made known to the court that since the rendition of said decree that the Respondent has remarried * * * ”

The decree then modifies the decree of August 31, 1962, by providing that the mother, Lois Elizabeth McKinley Morris, is to have the custody of the minor children from the date of the decree until Sunday, August 23, 1964; that the father, Reuben F. McKinley, is to have custody of the said children from Sunday, August 23,1964, until the last day of the school year 1964-65, [474]*474except at certain specified periods of time when the children are to visit their mother; that the mother is to have the custody of the children from the day school is out until the day before school begins in the Fall of 1965, except for certain periods of time during that summer vacation when the children are to visit their father. The decree further provides that when the time arrives for change of custody or visitation, the party then having the children shall return them to the other party. Aside from the specified visitation periods, the decree provides for reasonable visitation on the part of both the mother and father when the children are in the other’s custody. Costs were taxed equally between the father and the mother.

On the same day that the decree last referred to above was entered, the father, Reuben F. McKinley, filed the following instrument:

“REPUDIATION OF AGREEMENT

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 2d 35, 277 Ala. 471, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinley-v-mckinley-ala-1965.