Ogden v. Ogden
This text of 220 So. 2d 241 (Ogden v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Ruby Yvonne OGDEN
v.
John Randolph OGDEN.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*242 Ashton L. Stewart, of Laycock & Stewart, Baton Rouge, for appellant.
Fred H. Belcher, Jr., of McCollister, Belcher, McCleary & Fazio, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before LANDRY, SARTAIN and MARCUS, JJ.
LANDRY, Judge.
This appeal by plaintiff Ruby Yvonne Ogden, mother of four children, ages 5, 7, 9 and 10 years, respectively, requires our review of the lower court judgment granting visitation privileges to defendant-father, John Randolph Ogden, incident to a divorce proceeding wherein permanent care, custody and control of the children were awarded plaintiff. The lower court, inter alia, gave defendant visitation rights as respects the three younger children on the first and third week ends of each month from 6:00 P. M. Friday, until 6:00 P. M., Sunday, to take them from their home in Lafayette, Louisiana, to defendant's residence in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Identical visiting privileges were accorded as regards the older child excepting that her trips to Baton Rouge were restricted to the third week end of each month only.
Appellant's sole complaint is that granting of visitation privileges with respect to the three younger children on first and third week ends each month from Friday to Sunday afternoon amounts to "split" or "divided" custody and this aspect of defendant's visitation rights should be reduced to one week end per month for all of the children. We find appellant's point well taken and amend the judgment of the trial court accordingly.
Plaintiff was granted a judicial separation from defendant on June 7, 1966, and a final divorce on August 23, 1967. Both decrees granted plaintiff custody of the four children of the marriage whose present ages are as above indicated. In addition, both judgments accorded defendant-father reasonable visitation privileges.
*243 From the date of the divorce until some time during the summer of 1968, visitation privileges exrcised by defendant created no problems between the ex-spouses. During this interval defendant was permitted most liberal visitation rights and exercised them regularly and freely with plaintiff's apparent consent and approval. During the summer of 1968, however, some disagreement arose concerning defendant's visitation rights. There resulted a rule taken by defendant in September, 1968, ordering plaintiff to show cause why defendant's visiting privileges should not be fixed according to a schedule set forth by defendant. Upon trial of the rule, judgment resulted setting defendant's visitation rights as above indicated and additionally as follows: (1) All of the children for three weeks during the summer months, beginning in the summer of 1969; (2) all of the children for three days during the Thanksgiving holidays and five days during the Christmas holidays, commencing at 5:00 P. M. Christmas Day, and (3) reasonable visitation rights in appellant's home in Lafayette, Louisiana.
After these parties separated, plaintiff resided in the home of her parents in Monroe, Louisiana, until August, 1966, at which time plaintiff moved with her children and established a home in Lafayette, Louisiana, where plaintiff has resided since and attended college. It is virtually undisputed that during the time plaintiff resided in Monroe and until the summer of 1968, defendant was accorded most liberal visitation privileges and was in fact encouraged by plaintiff to visit the children regularly and frequently, which defendant did. It further appears that from September, 1966, to about March, 1968, defendant's brother, Guy Powers Ogden, resided in Lafayette, during which same period defendant made frequent business trips to that city in connection with a theater interest he held there. In this interval defendant visited the children virtually every other week end, picking them up Saturday morning and taking them to the home of his brother and returning them to their mother in the evening after having taken them to movies and on outings of various sorts. Again on Sunday mornings defendant would get the children, take them to church, keep them until the afternoon or evening and return them to their home. In March, 1968, however, defendant's brother moved from Lafayette and a change took place in defendant's business arrangements which eliminated the necessity of defendant's periodic visits to Lafayette. From March until late summer of 1968, defendant with more or less regularity picked up the children in Lafayette every other Friday afternoon, transported them to his home in Baton Rouge and returned them to Lafayette Sunday evening.
Beginning in early 1968, defendant, on his visits to the children in Lafayette, was frequently accompanied by his then secretary whom defendant married in June of 1968. After defendant's second marriage, the present Mrs. Ogden almost always accompanied her husband on his trips to Lafayette to pick the children up for their visits to Baton Rouge.
Shortly before commencement of the school term in September, 1968, plaintiff threatened to reduce the frequency of the Baton Rouge visits from two to one week end each month whereupon defendant filed the previously mentioned rule to fix his visitation privileges which resulted in rendition of the decree herein appealed.
This controversy is concerned solely with the frequency of the children's visits to their father in Baton Rouge. No other aspect of the trial court's determination is at issue herein. Neither is the fitness of either parent a matter of contention. On the contrary, it is conceded by both parties that the children are well cared for while in the company of the other parent. Moreover, there is no question but that both parents love their offspring dearly and consider the welfare and happiness of the children their chief concern.
It is settled law that in the event of divorce or separation of parents with *244 the consequent awarding of custody of children of the marriage to one parent, the other parent has the right of access to the children. This privilege of access is subject to such reasonable restrictions as the circumstances warrant within the discretion of the court. Said privilege may not be denied unless the parent has forfeited same by his conduct or the exercise thereof be injurious to the children's welfare. Johnson v. Johnson, 214 La. 912, 39 So.2d 340.
Equally well established is the rule that in cases of this nature the paramount issue is the welfare of the children concerned, which consideration dictates that the control of the spouse granted custody be an undivided authority. Consequently visitation privileges accorded the spouse not having custody should never be so extensive or liberal as to constitute a divided authority or shared control of the children concerned.
As aptly observed by the Supreme Court in Newson v. Newson, 176 La. 694, 146 So. 472, custody should be given to one spouse, not alternatively to each inasmuch as the latter situation is not conducive to a child's welfare but rather is likely to prove injurious to a child's future well being.
In resolving issues of this nature much discretion and latitude is accorded the trial court whose judgment is entitled to great weight and will not be set aside unless it amounts to an abuse of its discretion under the circumstances of each particular case. Johnson v. Johnson, supra.
Counsel for appellant contends, mainly on authority of Pierce v. Pierce, 213 La.
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