Patterson v. Patterson

375 S.W.2d 614, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 717
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1964
Docket31551
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 375 S.W.2d 614 (Patterson v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Patterson, 375 S.W.2d 614, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 717 (Mo. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

RUDDY, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal by the father of three minor children from an order modifying a decree of divorce wherein the trial court substituted provisions for the temporary custody of the children to defendant in lieu of visitation privileges.

The petition for divorce was filed on January 21, 1960, by the father, husband of the defendant, in which he alleged that he was married to the defendant on October 13, 1943, and that there were three children born of the marriage. The wife, defendant, filed an answer and a cross-bill for divorce.

On June 13, 1960, the Circuit Court of St. Louis County awarded plaintiff a decree of divorce. Prior thereto the plaintiff and the defendant had entered into a stipulation, in which, among other things, they disposed of their property rights and agreed that *616 plaintiff should have the custody of the minor children. The trial court in its decree did not refer to the provisions of the stipulation covering custody but decreed that plaintiff have the care, custody and control of the three minor children and “that said defendant have the right to see and visit said children at all reasonable times.” The stipulation was filed in the cause.

On October 2nd, 1962, defendant filed her motion to modify the decree of divorce and asked that the custody of the minor children be given to her. In her motion to modify she alleged that since the rendition of the decree of divorce she has remarried and is now Delores M. Hager and is residing with her present husband who is gainfully employed and that she has an adequate home for her minor children. She further alleged in said motion that the plaintiff has refused to allow and permit her to have the right of reasonable visitation and, therefore, the children have been denied the right of the love of their mother. She further states in said motion that the welfare of the minor children will be improved should their custody be transferred to her.

After a hearing the trial court entered its order modifying the decree of divorce and in said order it eliminated and terminated the reasonable visitation privileges contained in the original decree and “further ordered, * * * that the defendant shall have the temporary custody of said minor children on the first weekend of each month from 10 A.M. on Saturday until 8 P.M. on Sunday and on the third Sunday of each month from 1 P.M. to 8 P.M.” The court further ordered that the defendant shall have the temporary custody of said children on certain designated holidays.

In the points relied on by plaintiff he contends that defendant failed to prove substantial change in conditions since the entry of the decree of divorce; failed to prove that the welfare and best interests of the children required a change in custody, and, that it was to the best interests of the children to leave them in plaintiff’s custody. He also contends that the trial court erred in restricting his examination of defendant in certain respects and that the judgment entered by the trial court was beyond that permitted under the pleadings.

Two days after the decree of divorce was entered defendant married Robert F. Ha-ger. A daughter was born of that marriage. She was 14 months old at the time of defendant’s testimony. Defendant now lives in Cahokia, Illinois, in a home consisting of two bedrooms, a nice sized living room, kitchen and bath. She said that the baby’s bedroom was very large in size in which there is a studio couch and that their living room was very large and in it there was a large couch that could be used for overnight sleeping. These sleeping facilities were in addition to the bedroom she and her husband occupied. It is the plan of defendant and her husband to purchase a larger home, and to assist in the purchase of a new home they have placed their present home for sale with a real estate company. The home she now lives in with her second husband was purchased four days after the decree of divorce was entered.

When defendant was questioned in her cross-examination about the relationship between her and her present husband prior to the divorce, she answered, “He was just a friend.” She said that the love and affection that culminated in their marriage on June 15, 1960, developed within the two day period after the divorce. This was the fourth venture into the field of matrimony for Robert Hager. His three previous marriages culminated in decrees of divorce in favor of his previous wives. He has been employed by the United States Government for 19 years and is presently connected with the United States Army Transportation Materiel Command. His income at the time of the hearing on the motion to modify was $8270 a year. He thought that his wife’s request for custody of the children was a wonderful thing, stating in his testimony, “I believe the children should be with their mother — any child should be with their mother.”

*617 Defendant professed a great love for her children and in her testimony she said that she never failed to send gifts to the children on their birthdays or at Christmas and had frequently sent gifts on the occasion of Easter and Valentine Day. When questioned about the last time she sent gifts to her children, she said that she took a large dinosaur to one of her daughters on her birthday and upon finding no one home at plaintiff's residence she took the gift to a next-door neighbor, Mr. Kearney, and asked him to deliver it to her daughter. She said that she misses the children very much.

When defendant was asked on cross-examination why she did not fight for the custody of the children at the time the divorce was granted if she really cared for them, she said that at the time of the divorce and for some years prior thereto she had suffered from a nervous breakdown and that approximately one month before the divorce she had concluded six weeks of shock treatment in a hospital, these treatments having been given to relieve her nervous condition. She said that during that period and for a time thereafter she was confused and would suffer blackout periods, which she claimed were caused from the shock treatments. She further said that she did not forget her children but because of her physical and mental condition, and particularly her confused state of mind, she was in no position to care for the children. When pressed for an explanation of why she married her present husband two days after the divorce she said that he had proved to be the only comfort that she had during this period. She said that she had spent various periods of time in the hospital for her nervous condition during the seven year period before the divorce proceedings. This physical and mental condition related by the defendant was confirmed in the testimony of defendant’s present husband, who said that she had remained under the attention of a doctor for two or three months after their marriage. Defendant testified that at the present time her health is perfect, both mentally and physically, stating that she is not now under a doctor’s care and that she had been released from medical attention in October of 1960 for the nerve condition.

Defendant denied having any problem with alcohol, admitting that on social occasions she would have one or two drinks in an evening. In her cross-examination, when questioned about drinking in the automobile while riding with her husband, she explained, that while riding “ * * * down in Texas you drink in the car.

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Bluebook (online)
375 S.W.2d 614, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-patterson-moctapp-1964.