Samuels v. Samuels

713 S.W.2d 865, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4457
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1986
DocketWD 37540
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 713 S.W.2d 865 (Samuels v. Samuels) 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
Samuels v. Samuels, 713 S.W.2d 865, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4457 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Presiding Judge.

The husband, Gregory Samuels, sued the wife Ramona Samuels for dissolution of the marriage. The wife brought a cross-petition, sought the custody of the two children of the marriage, support money for the children, a division of the marital assets, and an attorney fee. The court dissolved the marriage, granted custody of the children to the wife, awarded a sum for child support, and an attorney fee to counsel for the wife, but denied the request of the mother to remove the children from Missouri for residence. The wife appeals the order to deny the removal of the children to New York for purposes of residence, and the failure to enter an award for her maintenance.

Gregory Samuels met Ramona Samuels in Barcelona, Spain in 1977. He was in the military service, and she was a native of the country. They married a year later in the United States, and established a home in St. Joseph, Missouri. Two boys were bom to the marriage, Jeremy, now five years of age, and Joshua, not yet two. She remains a citizen of Spain. The husband is employed at the Quaker Oats plant and earns $10.48 per hour for a usual 40-hour week. The wife worked at Barbosa as a cook, but not steadily. The husband drank *867 to excess frequently, and after about a year, discord developed between the couple. He worked an early-morning shift, so that they did not see each other regularly. He, in turn, was not pleased with her domestic performance, and arguments became common, and sometimes turbulent. He battered her on several occasions, so that she sought refuge in a shelter. It was while in the shelter that she gave birth to the second son, Joshua in November of 1984.

The wife made a visit to the parental home in Spain in 1982, and took Jeremy [then, the only child] with her, and remained there for forty days. The couple separated in October of 1984, the wife was then expectant. The child, Joshua, as noted, was bom the next month at the shelter, where the wife resorted after the husband assaulted her. The husband refused her access to their home, so after four days in the shelter — and the advent of the second son — the wife moved into an apartment. [There was evidence, and the court found in the course of the discursive formulation of judgment, that the husband was enmeshed in a liaison with another woman.] The wife was without family in St. Joseph, or means, and the work at Barbosa was not sufficient to sustain her, so she went to live with her sister in Rhinebeck, New York. She remained there with the children for some six months. She made application for employment there, among them, to the Culinary Institute in Hyde Park, for work and instruction as a cook. She engaged in no remunerative employment during that period, however. She instituted an action in the courts there for custody of the children and for their support. It was in that manner that the husband learned of her address. The wife did not tell the husband where the children were, but sent him Easter card greetings on behalf of the children during that period. The wife returned to St. Joseph with the children, and the action for dissolution ensued.

The marriage was adjudged irretrievably broken, and dissolved. The marital property — the residence, a lot, and a jeep — were awarded to the husband, and the husband was ordered to pay the wife $6,000 as her share of the equity in the marital home. The wife was granted the custody of the two children — “with the specific limitation that [the wife] cannot remove the minor children from the State of Missouri” — and the husband was granted reasonable visitation right, as well as during the other times specified in the decree. The husband was ordered to pay $75 per week for the support of the children, and to pay counsel for the wife a fee of $1,400. The court decreed, also, that “no maintenance be awarded either party, as it has been waived by [the husband and the wife].”

The wife alleges two errors on appeal: (1) the order that the wife, as custodial parent, not remove the children from Missouri to New York for residence, and (2) the failure to award the wife maintenance.

The first contention, more amply stated, argues that — granted, the best interests of the child remains the paramount concern in any matter of custody — the enactment of § 452.377, RSMo Supp.1984, enables the principals to modify the decree of dissolution without a court decree, and so manifests a legislative policy to facilitate the removal of a child by the custodial parent from the state of rendition of decree. The wife describes the statute as the consummation of a gradual repudiation of the quondam policy to forbid removal of a child to another state [e.g. Baer v. Baer, 51 S.W.2d 873 (Mo.App.1932) ] to the acceptance of a new policy — prompted by the reality of a society in motion — that does not rigidly confine custody to the state of decree [e.g. Pender v. Pender, 598 S.W.2d 554 (Mo.App.1980) ]. That provision, enacted into the Dissolution of Marriage Act in 1984 as § 452.377, [RSMo Supp.1984] recites:

A person entitled to the custody of a child shall not change the residence of the child to another state or remove the child from this state for a period of time exceeding ninety days except upon order of the court or with the written consent of the parties with custody or visitation rights. Where the noncustodi *868 al person has been given visitation rights by the custody decree, such court permission may be granted only after notice to the person having visitation rights and after opportunity for hearing. Violation of a court order under this section may be deemed a change of circumstance under section 452.410, allowing the court to modify the prior custody decree, [emphasis added].

The text, indeed, confirms the legislative intention to disencumber the courts from the duty to sanction, in every case, the removal of the child from Missouri for a prolonged time by the custodian, and allows that action upon the written concurrence of those with rights of custody or visitation. The decree entered, however, does not enable the wife to remove the child from Missouri, but expressly forbids it — nor was any written consent of the wife and husband formulated or presented. Thus, the initiative § 452.377 allows a custodian and others in interest to agree to a change in the residence of the child [and so “modify the dissolution decree without court order,” as the wife aptly describes that feature of the law] was never exploited, and neither statutory condition for the removal of the child for residence in New York was met. Craighead v. Craighead, 710 S.W.2d 501 (Mo.App.1986).

The wife argues, nevertheless, that another intendment of § 452.377 requires the court to grant the custodial person permission to remove the child outside the state simply upon motion, provided only that the court adjust the visitation rights to accommodate that modification. The argument refers to the later component of § 452.377:

Where the noncustodial person has been given visitation rights by the custody decree, such court permission may be granted only after notice to the person having visitation rights and after opportunity for hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
713 S.W.2d 865, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuels-v-samuels-moctapp-1986.