Molto v. Molto
This text of 64 N.W.2d 154 (Molto v. Molto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
HULDA MOLTO, NOW KNOWN AS HULDA WIMPFHEIMER,
v.
MARTIN MOLTO.[1]
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Steining, Olson & Thysell, for appellant.
Stanley C. Olson, for respondent.
DELL, CHIEF JUSTICE.
Plaintiff appeals from an order of the district court of Norman county modifying the judgment entered in a divorce action relating *113 to the custody of Mavis Molto, eight years of age, the only child of the parties.
The plaintiff and the defendant were married in June 1944. They separated in November 1950. Thereafter plaintiff instituted an action for divorce against the defendant alleging cruel and inhuman treatment. The defendant answered and served a cross-complaint in which he sought a divorce from the plaintiff upon the same grounds. After a trial the court, on March 1, 1952, entered its findings. Judgment was entered on March 3, 1952. Defendant was granted a divorce from the plaintiff on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment, and the custody of the child was awarded, until otherwise ordered by the court, to the defendant for that part of each year from June 15 to August 15 and to the plaintiff for the remainder of each year. The findings and judgment provided:
"During the part of each year when the defendant shall have the custody of said child she shall be cared for by and in the home of Arthur Molto and his wife and the defendant shall pay them for the reasonable value of such care."
On May 19, 1952, in violation of M.S.A. 517.03, plaintiff married Christ Wimpfheimer. They established a home in Fargo, North Dakota. During the remainder of 1952 and until August 13, 1953, Mavis lived with the plaintiff and her husband in Fargo and with Arthur Molto and Helma Molto, his wife, on their 240-acre farm in Norman county, Minnesota, under the divided custody arrangement provided for by the judgment. Arthur and Helma Molto are the uncle and aunt of the child.
On August 13, 1953, the defendant, under § 518.18, petitioned the court for a modification and revision of said judgment so as to secure an award granting the full custody of said child to Arthur and Helma Molto subject to the right of the plaintiff to visit said child at such times and under such circumstances as the court might deem proper. After a hearing upon the petition, partly upon affidavits and partly upon oral testimony, the court, on August 25, 1953, entered its order modifying and revising the judgment and specified:
*114 "Until otherwise ordered by the court Arthur Molto and his wife Helma Molto shall have the actual custody of Mavis Molto upon the following conditions:
"(A) Arthur Molto and Helma Molto shall care for Mavis in their home; they shall provide her with the maintenance, attention, support and supervision that they would if she were their own child; and they shall cause her to regularly attend school and Sunday School.
"(B) The plaintiff and the defendant shall each have the privilege of visiting Mavis at reasonable times and intervals."
The issue before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion in modifying and revising the judgment relating to the custody of the child as above set forth.
We consider this matter under well-established rules and principles of law. Normally custodial preference of small children is for the mother. The paramount and primary consideration, however, is the welfare of the child and to that welfare the rights of the parents must yield. The natural rights of the parents should be carefully safeguarded but not at the expense of their children. In arriving at a solution, the trial court is vested with broad discretionary powers and in the absence of a showing of arbitrary action in awarding custody of a child, this court will not interfere. It should be kept in mind that a trial court, unlike an appellate court, has the opportunity to see the parties as well as their witnesses, hear their testimony, observe their actions, and weigh the evidence in the light of those factors. In the absence of a clear abuse of discretion the action of the trial court must be affirmed. Aske v. Aske, 233 Minn. 540, 47 N.W. (2d) 417; Wicklem v. Wicklem, 229 Minn. 478, 40 N.W. (2d) 69; Christianson v. Christianson, 217 Minn. 561, 15 N.W. (2d) 24; Dacey v. Dacey, 179 Minn. 520, 229 N.W. 868; Spratt v. Spratt, 151 Minn. 458, 185 N.W. 509, 187 N.W. 227; Novotny v. Novotny, 152 Minn. 420, 189 N.W. 258; In re Adoption of Jaren, 223 Minn. 561, 27 N.W. (2d) 656; Hervey v. Hervey, 180 Minn. 182, 230 N.W. 479; State ex rel. Price v. Price, 211 Minn. 565, 2 N.W. (2d) 39; Polzin v. Polzin, 237 Minn. 164, *115 54 N.W. (2d) 143; French v. French, 236 Minn. 439, 53 N.W. (2d) 215.
This court in the case of State ex rel. Rys v. Vorlicek, 229 Minn. 497, 499, 40 N.W. (2d) 350, 351, stated:
"The applicable principles of law have been stated on many occasions and are so well stated in State ex rel. Olson v. Sorenson, 208 Minn. 226, 227, 293 N.W. 241, that they bear restating here. In that case we said:
"`* * * All other things being equal, the natural parents have the paramount right to the care and custody of a child. State ex rel. Anderson v. Anderson, 89 Minn. 198, 94 N.W. 681; State ex rel. Lehman v. Martin, 95 Minn. 121, 103 N.W. 888; State ex rel. Renning v. Armstrong, 141 Minn. 47, 169 N.W. 249; State ex rel. Machgan v. Pelowski, 145 Minn. 383, 177 N.W. 627; State ex rel. Fossen v. Hitman, 164 Minn. 373, 205 N.W. 267; State ex rel. Feeley v. Williams, 176 Minn. 193, 222 N.W. 927. That right is not absolute, however, and must yield to the child's welfare. If its best interests will be served by granting custody to someone else that will be done. Gauthier v. Walter, 110 Minn. 103, 124 N.W. 634; State ex rel. Larson v. Halverson, 127 Minn. 387, 149 N.W. 664; State ex rel. Neib v. Krueger, 143 Minn. 149, 173 N.W. 414; State ex rel. Henning v. Gundvaldson, 169 Minn. 335, 211 N.W. 310; State ex rel. Lund v. Anderson, 175 Minn. 518, 221 N.W. 868; State ex rel. Feeley v. Williams, 176 Minn. 193, 222 N.W. 927.'"
Divided custody of a child between two different homes and two different home influences should not be encouraged even where both homes are proper, since the shunting of a child back and forth is likely to cause disturbance and contention between the child and the custodians. Larson v. Larson, 176 Minn. 490, 223 N.W. 789. In considering the issue of custody the trial court is not limited to any particular line of inquiry nor is it bound by the strict legal rules governing the introduction of evidence, and its orders and directions in that respect are not subject to the same legal tests usually applicable in the trial of other causes. Arne v. Holland, 85 Minn. 401, 89 N.W. 3.
*116 Plaintiff was the mother of three illegitimate children, two of whom were born prior to her marriage to the defendant. At the time of the trial of the divorce action, unknown to the defendant and to the court, she was pregnant with another child conceived as a result of adulterous intercourse with her present husband after she left the defendant. That child was born on April 28, 1952. On May 19, 1952, she married Wimpfheimer. After the child was born she concealed its identity from Mavis, representing to her that it was a neighbor's child and that she was caring for it on behalf of the neighbor. Later she told Mavis the truth and that the child was hers.
The Wimpfheimers live in Fargo in the lower apartment of a duplex dwelling house.
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64 N.W.2d 154, 242 Minn. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molto-v-molto-minn-1954.