Moore v. Smith

499 S.W.2d 634, 255 Ark. 249, 1973 Ark. LEXIS 1351
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 8, 1973
Docket73-84 and 73-85
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 499 S.W.2d 634 (Moore v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Smith, 499 S.W.2d 634, 255 Ark. 249, 1973 Ark. LEXIS 1351 (Ark. 1973).

Opinion

Frank Holt, Justice.

Appellant sought custody of his 12-year-old son which the court denied. The custody of the boy was continued with the appellee mother. On appeal appellant contends that the chancellor’s findings are not supported by the evidence. We think the appellant is correct. We review the evidence, as abstracted, since the appellee does not favor us with a brief.

We first observe that the controlling principle in child custody cases, which are always difficult, is focused solely upon the best interest of the child. In Stephenson v. Stephenson, 237 Ark. 724, 375 S.W. 2d 659 (1964), we held:

“In custody matters the unyielding consideration is the welfare of the children. It matters not to this court which of the parties ‘wins’ custody, so long as the children are the ultimate winners of good care and home.”

Appellant and appellee were divorced in 1963 at which time the appellee was given custody of their 2-year-old son, Carl, Jr. This was appellee’s second of five marriages. It appears the appellant and appellee continued to live in the same vicinity. The appellant had enjoyed visitation rights with his son and maintained support payments. For about three months before this litigation, the boy had lived with the appellant father with appellee’s consent. The appellee brought contempt proceedings against the appellant at the end of the three months alleging that he had refused to return their son to her. Appellant, by counterclaim, sought custody. The court found that the appellant was not in contempt and continued the custody of the child with the appel-lee. The appellant appealed from the denial of custody to him. About two weeks after this hearing, the appellant instituted another action seeking custody of his son alleging, inter alia, that the appellee mother had physically abused their son and the boy had fled to the shelter of appellant’s home, whereupon the appellant took his son to the police and left him in their care. The police> at the direction of the chancellor who had received two telephone calls from appellee seeking advice, returned the child for the time being to the father. Upon a hearing the court again continued the custody with the appellee. The two adverse decrees as to custody are consolidated on appeal.

In the first custody proceeding, as abstracted, the appellee testified that her son would not mind her although “he minded his father;” her son loves his father more than her; he wanted to live with his father; the father had bought him a mini bike, a Honda, and a sword; she was receiving $93 a month in Social Security payments from appellant for maintenance of the boy until appellant stopped payment to her after she let their son live with appellant for three months; because she had to leave for work at 6:30 a.m., she yielded to appellant’s request about three months before this litigation to let the boy stay with the appellant; and this permission was solely for the welfare of the child because the father, who was retired, could let him sleep longer, take him to and pick him up from school. She further testified that the father had kept his agreement with reference to child support; she had never heard the appellant encourage the boy not to mind her, although she could not make the child mind her and that he had no respect for her; and her son had reported to the police that she had “beat” him.

One neighbor testifying for the appellant, stated she had two children approximately the same age as appellant’s son and they played together; Carl, Jr., is high strung, high tempered and hard to approach; after he had spent more time with his father his attitude was better; and he played with other children without throwing fits. For the past several months this neighbor had observed a car parked in front of appellee’s house on numerous occasions and at times the car was there in the morning; Carl, Jr., said the man’s name was Bill; her little girl had made curious inquiry as to why this man was staying there so much; Carl, Jr., was having problems with his grades, although he attended school regularly; and appellee kept Carl, Jr., clean.

The appellant testified that he took his son on short trips with appellee’s knowledge; appellee had brought their son to live with him stating he could live there as long as he wanted to; appellee never asked him to return their son to her during the three months until the day he had the $93 Social Security check stopped being sent to her; he had understood they had a binding agreement that their son would live with him and he had refused to allow the child to return because of her living with Bill, her paramour. On legal advice, however, he permitted the boy to return to appellee with the understanding that she would “stick to her agreement” about not living with Bill; the night the boy was returned to appellee he went to the police because the appellee had whipped him and the police brought the boy to him; he loves his son very much and when his mother brought their son to him in March to live with him, their son was sick and disturbed; after a few hours he “calmed down;” appellee admitted to him Bill was staying with her and it was no one’s business except hers. The boy needed orthodontic care which would cost $1,500 or $2,000.

The appellant, again testifying, said that after the boy had lived with him for three months he gained weight but lost weight upon his return to his mother; a few days before this first hearing he had taken him to a doctor who had prescribed medicine for the boy’s nerves and another prescription for his stomach; the boy had made failing grades until he reached the sixth grade where he made nearly a “C” average because, he had had three months opportunity to work with him; the appellee admitted to him that it was making their son nervous when she lived with her' husband, Max Smith, to whom she was twice married and divorced, inasmuch as they were “having fusses and fights almost continuously.”

A playmate of Carl, Jr.’s, testified that a man named Bill lives with the appellee; Bill, sometimes stays with the appellee at night and that he had seen them “laying down in bed together,” once with their clothes on and another time “they were up under the cover.” He further testified that once when he spent the night with Carl, Jr., he awoke and saw Bill going to the bathroom clothed only in his undershorts. He admitted that he and Carl, Jr., were good friends and had enjoyed shooting guns together. He said appellant had promised to give him a gun. However, he denied it was in relation to the trial.

Carl, Jr., testified that a Bill Andrews lived at their house; he had seen him in the bedroom with his mother and observed him leave her bedroom unclothed. When he complained to his mother about the presence of Bill, she told him it ,was not any of his business; he was afraid of Bill and had told his mother he wanted to live with his father.

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Bluebook (online)
499 S.W.2d 634, 255 Ark. 249, 1973 Ark. LEXIS 1351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-smith-ark-1973.