Moore v. Moore

391 A.2d 762, 1978 D.C. App. LEXIS 298
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 1978
Docket12312
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 391 A.2d 762 (Moore v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Moore, 391 A.2d 762, 1978 D.C. App. LEXIS 298 (D.C. 1978).

Opinion

FERREN, Associate Judge:

This is a custody case brought by the father. After trial, the court permitted the mother to amend her pleadings with a counterclaim conforming to the evidence, since the court at the conclusion of trial had orally awarded custody of the minor child to the mother and ordered the father to pay child support. The court also granted the" father visitation rights, conditioned on a $7,500 bond. Later, the court awarded the mother separate maintenance, as well as her counsel fees. Appellant, the father, argues primarily that the court improperly permitted appellee to amend her pleadings, pursuant to Super.Ct.Dom.Rel.R. 15(b), and that, in any event, the evidence of record did not support the court’s findings and conclusions.

We conclude that the trial court properly allowed post-trial amendment of the pleadings to permit appellee, the mother, to claim custody, child support, a bond for visitation rights, and attorneys’ fees. We further conclude, however, that the court erred in permitting amendment of the pleadings to claim separate maintenance. We conclude, finally, that the record is not adequate to support the court’s particular assessments of child support, the visitation rights bond, and counsel fees. The case accordingly must be remanded for further proceedings.

I. The Facts; Proceedings to Date

Reuben and Sidney Moore, plaintiff-appellant and defendant-appellee, respectively, were married on October 19, 1968, in the District of Columbia. Their only child, Jessica Moore, was born on August 4, 1973. The marriage deteriorated, especially in the fall of 1975 when Sidney Moore learned of her husband’s infidelity, whereupon she ended their conjugal relations. According to Mrs. Moore, shortly thereafter — sometime during early December — Reuben Moore stopped replenishing the family checking account. The culmination of this marital decline occurred in late December, 1975, when Sidney Moore moved with Jessica to her parents’ home in Schenectady, New York.

*766 Reuben Moore soon initiated a custody action in New York. The court orally granted temporary custody of Jessica to Mrs. Moore, with visitation rights for Mr. Moore. On February 22, 1976, pursuant to a plan aided by a detective he had hired, Reuben Moore took Jessica from the physical custody of her maternal grandfather and brought her to Washington, D.C. 1 Sidney Moore followed, but Mr. Moore refused to return the child. On February 26, 1976, Sidney Moore initiated a habeas corpus proceeding in the District of Columbia seeking custody of Jessica.

At this time Reuben Moore took Jessica, then 2V2 years old, on a 372 week excursion to Europe and the Bahamas. After his return, while leaving a hospital where he had been visiting his ill father on March 17, 1976, Reuben Moore was confronted and grabbed by his wife and her parents. They wrested control of the child from him and returned, with Jessica, to Schenectady.

On April 2, 1976, Reuben Moore filed an opposition to his wife’s habeas corpus petition. He also filed the present action: a complaint for custody. Sidney Moore sought first to have the suit dismissed on jurisdictional grounds; but after the New York court suggested that she submit the pending custody issues to the District of Columbia court, she withdrew the jurisdictional challenge and answered the complaint on June 30, 1976. The matter came to trial on October 20-21,1976, in the Family Division of the Superior Court.

At the conclusion of trial, the court orally awarded custody and $500 per month child support to the defendant, Sidney Moore. The judge, recognizing that “there ha[d] not been an affirmative pleading requiring alimony” did not award any support for Mrs. Moore herself but, somewhat cryptically, remarked that “the defendant may yet have her opportunity to pursue the issue of alimony” (actually separate maintenance). The court then asked for motion papers on the issue of awarding attorneys’ fees to defendant, reserving judgment on that issue until a later date. The court also granted Reuben Moore visitation rights, conditioned on his posting a $7,500 bond.

On October 27, 1976, Sidney Moore filed a motion to conform the pleadings to the evidence, Super.CtDom.Rel.R. 15(b), as well as a motion for award of counsel fees. In the first motion, Mrs. Moore sought to assert a counterclaim for custody, child support, separate maintenance, and counsel fees (in connection with the District of Columbia custody litigation only). In the second motion she asked for the same counsel fees, specified the reasons for requesting them, and itemized the matters and amounts claimed.

By written order of February 28, 1977, the court granted the motion to conform. It awarded to defendant Sidney Moore custody of Jessica, child support of $500 per month, separate maintenance of $500 per month, and counsel fees in the amount requested, $5,916.65. The court granted plaintiff Reuben Moore visitation rights, subject to the continued posting of a $7,500 bond. The court’s order included extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court subsequently denied Reuben Moore’s motions for stay of the entry of judgment and for a new trial, and issued a written memorandum of its reasons. Plaintiff Reuben Moore now appeals.

II. Alleged Trial Court Reliance Upon Improper Presumptions

Appellant maintains that the trial court improperly accorded presumptive significance to the factors of “motherhood” and “physical possession” of the child in determining the question of future custody. We disagree.

Neither the oral ruling of the judge nor the court’s written findings of fact and conclusions of law reflect an express or implied reliance upon the fact that Mrs. Moore was the child’s mother, or that she *767 had actual possession of Jessica for most of the period between her departure from the family home and the trial. The court’s mere inclusion of the relevant fact that the child had resided with the mother “except for a brief period of time, for most of the child’s life,” does not indicate that it was a dispositive or even influential consideration, or, as appellant contends, that the court believed either maternity or present physical possession was presumptively significant to the custody determination.

In summary, it does not appear that the trial court in fact employed either of the allegedly improper presumptions in determining the issues of the suit. 2

III. Alleged Trial Court Reliance on the New York Court Order

Appellant makes much of the fact that when he took his daughter from her maternal grandfather on February 22,1976, there was no outstanding written court order granting custody to his wife. See note 1, supra. He argues that Mrs. Moore’s reliance upon the New York court’s temporary custody order of February 23 was therefore fraudulent, in that she misled the District of Columbia court into believing, erroneously, that Mr. Moore had kidnapped the child in violation of an outstanding judicial decree. He further maintains that the trial court erred by relying upon this faulty factual premise in rendering its decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
391 A.2d 762, 1978 D.C. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-moore-dc-1978.