Prangley v. Comerford

122 So. 2d 423
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 12, 1960
DocketNo. 1701
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 So. 2d 423 (Prangley v. Comerford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prangley v. Comerford, 122 So. 2d 423 (Fla. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

ALLEN, Chief Judge.

The appellee, as petitioner in the lower court, filed a petition on May 11, 1959, seeking to adopt Sandra Eleanor Prang-ley, the ten year old daughter of his wife, Eleanor C. Comerford, by her previous marriage to the appellant-respondent, Arthur G. Prangley. Mrs. Comerford, the mother, consented to the adoption, but the respondent-father objected thereto. The petitioner asked that no investigation by the State Welfare Board be required and none was held. After the taking of testimony and filing of documentary evidence, the lower court entered an order granting the adoption which stated in part :

“The facts in this case are like those in Steets v. Gammarino, (Fla.-1952), 59 So.2d 520, where a decree of adoption was upheld over the objection of the father who had not contributed to his child’s support for a number of years. In this case the father has not contributed to the support of the child in question in eight years, being in the meantime able to remarry and support his new wife and two children born to the second marriage. According to principles stated in the case referred to above, petitioner is entitled to a decree authorizing the adoption * *

Sandra, an only child, was born November 5, 1948. On April 9, 1951, the parties separated pursuant to a separation agreement with the mother taking custody of the child. The agreement, which was introduced into evidence, provided among other things that the father’ was to have custody of the child for three weeks during the summer of each year, with additional periods of custody to be agreed on after the child reaches the age of ten years; and in paragraphs three and four it provides :

“Third: The wife agrees to defray the expense of the care, education, support and maintenance of the Child, and to save the Husband harmless therefrom, except that the reasonable living expenses of the Child during the periods when she shall be in the custody of the Husband shall be defrayed by the Husband. The traveling expenses of the Child while going from the custody of the Wife to the temporary custody of the Husband and while returning to the custody of the Wife shall be shared equally by the Husband and the Wife. The Husband further agrees that he will contribute towards the education of the Child to the extent that he is able to do so.
“Fourth: The Wife possesses independent means, ample to provide for her own support, care and maintenance and for the care, maintenance, support and education of the Child. The Wife makes no claim upon the Husband for separate maintenance and support, nor for provision for the care, maintenance, support and education of the Child, and the Husband makes no financial claim upon the Wife, other than the agreements respecting property and property rights expressly included in this agreement. Each of the parties hereby releases and relinguish-es any and all interest which he or she has or may have in the property and estate of the other, present and future, including property, real, personal and mixed, and property rights and rights incident thereto of every nature, except as hereinafter provided, and releases the right to share in any capacity in the estate of the other party upon the death of such party. Each of the parties agrees to execute, acknowledge and deliver at the request of the other or of the legal representatives of the other, all deeds, releases or other instruments as may at any time be necessary to bar and extinguish the rights and interests hereby released, and to carry out the intent of this paragraph.”

The parties were divorced in June, 1951, and the separation agreement was incorporated into the final decree. At that time the father was in medical school, and with [425]*425the exception of two years in the Air Force, has continued his medical training up to the time of this proceeding in order to become a specialist in gynecology and obstetrics.

The father has not contributed to the support of the child and stated that as to his contribution to the child’s education that he planned to assist in the college education for her when that time arrives. In the meantime he stated that he knew of no reason that she could not attend public school.

The father remarried in July, 1954, and his first child from that marriage was born in March, 1955, and his second child in January, 1957. After his discharge from the service in 1957, he earned $100 per month as an intern, $150 from the V. A., and received an average of $150 — $160 per month from his parents. Aside from this monthly gift from his parents, the father’s income record is as follows:

1951 - none - intern.
1952 - $20 per month - intern.
1953 - $50 per month - residency.
1954 - $50 per month through the summer.
1954 - 1955 - $417 per month U.S.A.F.
1956 - $500 per month U.S.A.F.
1957 - $100 per month - resident surgeon plus $160 per month from V. A.
1958 - $100 per month plus $160 from V. A.
1959 - $150 per month plus $160 per month from V. A.

The father had custody of the child for three weeks in 1951, which he spent with her at his parents’ home at Cape Cod when he wasn’t on duty. He owned no home at this time. In 1952 he requested the three weeks’ custody but the mother wrote back that he could not have custody unless he assured the mother that he would be with the child continuously. The father objected to these conditions and the end result was that the child did not visit her father that year.

The mother married the petitioner in February, 1952, and they and the child have lived in Palm Beach since that time. The father has been in Hartford, Connecticut, most of the period in question. In 1953 the child spent two weeks with her father at the paternal grandparents’ home after which the father returned the child to her mother in Wisconsin. In 1954 the child visited her father for three weeks at the paternal grandparents’ home after which he returned the child to her mother in Miami. In 1955 and 1956 the father was overseas with the U.S.A.F. during the summer months.

In 1957, after his discharge from the service, the father, for the first time, had a home of his own and planned a visit with his daughter to commence on August 5th. On July 27th the mother wrote warning that the child could not come unless she finished her summer reading and also demanded that the father send funds for the child’s education immediately. On August 5th the father received a telegram stating that the child could not come north.

The next the father heard was a letter from the mother’s attorney, on November 22, 1957, stating that there would be no more visits by the child unless the father started sending money for support and education of the child. The father’s attorney replied that no support was required under the agreement.

During 1958 the father did not request the child to visit him. This was allegedly on the advice of his attorney and on the advice of his father, who is also an attorney. The father did not request custody for the same reason apparently during 1959. In addition, the father was informed that the child had been entered in summer camp and would not come north.

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Related

In re Adoption of McCoy
287 N.E.2d 833 (Pickaway County Court of Common Pleas, 1972)
In Re Adoption of Prangley
122 So. 2d 423 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 So. 2d 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prangley-v-comerford-fladistctapp-1960.