Ridgeway v. Cels

214 N.E.2d 31, 350 Mass. 274, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 723
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 214 N.E.2d 31 (Ridgeway v. Cels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ridgeway v. Cels, 214 N.E.2d 31, 350 Mass. 274, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 723 (Mass. 1966).

Opinion

Whittemore, J.

J. Robert Cels of Cleveland, Ohio, has appealed from the decree of the Probate Court for Middle-sex County, dated November 10,1964, appointing as guardian, with custody, of his two minor children, Linda May born March 7,1957, and Carol Ann born July 23,1958, their maternal grandmother, Eva May Ridgeway, of Lexington, Massachusetts. There is a report of material facts. The evidence is before us.

There was evidence as follows: Cels and Mrs. Ridge-way’s daughter Ruth were married on December 31, 1955, and thereafter lived in Cleveland until 1960. In that year the husband and wife and the two children were in Massachusetts together for about two weeks at Mrs. Ridgeway’s home; Ruth had an operation; Cels returned to Cleveland expecting his wife to return shortly. Ruth, however, did not return, and started a divorce proceeding in Ohio against Cels which was dismissed in 1961 after a full hearing. Cels wrote a number of letters to his wife, but received no reply. In October, 1960, he came to Boston attempting reconciliation and seeing the children for a short time. Subsequently a marriage counsellor met on a number of occasions with Ruth. Reconciliation failed. On July 18, 1962, the husband and wife entered into a separation agreement under which the wife was to have custody of the children subject to the husband’s right to make reasonable visits and to take the children with him at reasonable times and for summer vacation visits of stated duration. The husband was to pay $62.50 a month for the support of each child.

On January 4,1963, an Ohio court granted Cels a divorce for the wife’s “gross neglect of duty.” The decree incorporated the separation agreement.

*276 From sometime in 1960 until the signing of the separation agreement Cels made regular voluntary monthly payments for the support of his wife and the children. Thereafter until the summer of 1963, except for a two months’ period in 1962 or 1963, he made payments under the agreement and the decree. Cels held up the payments for the two months after talking with his counsel “awaiting some kind of response from Boston.” Those payments were made up after a short time. After July, 1963, except for a payment to the Malden Welfare Department in February, 1964, of $397.69 for aid through January 31, 1964, Cels made no payments.

On June 30, 1962, Cels wrote his wife that he was going to send a registered nurse to Massachusetts to take the children back to Ohio. The wife replied that she would not allow the children to leave her but that he was free to visit them at any time. On May 31, 1963, Ruth’s attorney wrote Cels that she was “perfectly willing to allow you to see the children here in Massachusetts, provided that you give adequate notice as to when you would be coming.” In June, 1963, Cels wrote that he would call for the children at Mrs. Ridgeway’s house at midday on July 4 and take them with him for a few days to get acquainted with them. He had a week’s vacation. 1 On arriving in Boston Cels went to Mrs. Ridgeway’s house. Mrs. Ridgeway told him she did not know where the children were and that he should get in touch with Ruth’s attorney. Cels called the attorney’s office and was told the attorney was away for the holiday. The following day he obtained Ruth’s address from the Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex. 2 At the two family house where Ruth lived he learned from the woman in the upstairs apartment that Mrs. Cels would usually be with her mother. Cels drove back to Mrs. Ridge- *277 way’s house, and thereafter, having been told again that she did not know where the children were, he returned to Cleveland. Cels then talked to his attorney and thereafter withheld the payments for the support of the children.

Euth applied to the Malden Welfare Department for aid on December 3, 1963. The department notified Cels on December 4, and on December 5 Cel’s attorney communicated with the department. Correspondence followed. The payment of $397.69 for “total aid given Mrs. Cels through January 31, 1964,” was accompanied by a letter tending to indicate that Cels was following his attorney’s advice in withholding payments, there being “no alternative.”3

Correspondence between the welfare department and Cels and his attorney continued in the next several months. A letter from the attorney of July 6, 1964, supplied, as had been requested, copies of records as to the divorce and visitation rights, and asserted in effect that an Ohio court had upheld Cels’s refusal to pay unless he was allowed to see the children. 3 4

*278 The welfare department wrote on July 29,1964, in strong terms appealing to Cels’s conscience and sense of moral obligation and stating that Mrs. Cels “is a very ill woman.” Cels replied under date of August 8, 1964, expressing the view that the separation agreement had been deliberately violated in July of 1963. 5

On the evening of August 10, 1964, Cels received a telegram from Mrs. Ridgeway dated August 9, 1964, notifying him of Ruth’s death and that the funeral would be on August 11. Cels wrote Mrs. Ridgeway on August 11 that he was sorry to hear of Ruth’s death, that unfortunately he could not arrange his affairs in time to attend the funeral and “[n]aturally I want to bring my children back to Cleveland and my present plans are to pick them up at your home at 29 Locust Avenue on Saturday afternoon of August 22. Please let me know if these arrangements are satisfactory with you. I enclose a self addressed envelope for your convenience.” Cels also telephoned Mrs. Ridgeway. She told him he could not come Saturday as she had business to attend to. Mrs. Ridgeway then went, to the Probate Court and was appointed temporary guardian of the children, and on August 20,1964, telegraphed Cels that she had been granted temporary custody and suggesting that he “not come for children.”

Cels is about forty-one years of age, an industrial or research chemist employed by Union Carbide, earning $1,060 a month. On September 5, 1964, he married a widow and *279 they now live in a house with a large living room, kitchen, family room and three bedrooms. Mrs. Cels’s two younger children, two girls, respectively ten and fifteen years of age, live with them.

Cels’s children are now living with Mrs. Ridgeway in a six room house in Lexington, with Mrs. Ridgeway’s other daughter Eleanor and Eleanor’s son nine years of age at the time of the hearing. The grandson’s father visits at the house but never lived there. The children are happy and well adjusted. Mrs. Ridgeway was sixty-eight years of age at the time of the hearing. Her only income is a monthly social security check of $76.80. Eleanor’s income is $130 a week as secretary and she and Mrs. Ridgeway pool their resources to maintain the home. The house is subject to a $4,000 mortgage.

The judge’s findings included these: ‘ ‘ On August 9,1964, the mother died of cancer an illness of which she had been afflicted for a period of three years.

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Bluebook (online)
214 N.E.2d 31, 350 Mass. 274, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridgeway-v-cels-mass-1966.