Savery v. Eddy

45 N.W.2d 872, 242 Iowa 822, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 407
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 6, 1951
Docket47811
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.W.2d 872 (Savery v. Eddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savery v. Eddy, 45 N.W.2d 872, 242 Iowa 822, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 407 (iowa 1951).

Opinion

*824 Mulroney, J.

Donald and Bernice Eddy, formerly of Atlantic, Iowa, are the parents of thirteen children. On January 24, 1946, the county attorney of. Cass County filed a" complaint under chapter 232, Code, 1950, wherein he alleged that Helen, Phyllis, Gerald, Sharon, Marilyn, Robert, Gloria, Beverly, Esther, and Charles Eddy were, to his best information and belief, “minors under the age of eighteen years; that the defendants are neglected.” The prayer asked “that the necessary steps be taken to investigate the charge herein preferred, as provided by law, to the end that such orders may be made as the court may deem advisable in the premises.”

The next entry in the record before us is an order of the trial court dated January 30, 1946, reciting that a hearing had been held that day in court with the parents of the minor children present. In the order the court found the ten minor children “are dependent and neglected children and that they should be placed under the jurisdiction of this court.” The order went on to direct that Gerald, Marilyn, Robert, Beverly, Esther, and Charles be placed in the care and custody of the American Home Finding Association of Ottumwa, Iowa, and that Helen, Phyllis, Sharon, and Gloria, be placed in the care of the Lutheran Welfare Society of Iowa. This order also ordered the father to pay $115 to the clerk for the support of these minors. If there was evidence introduced at the “hearing” referred to in the' foregoing order it was not reported. But it is perfectly clear, as will appear later, that this order was temporary and the custody award therein made was not intended to be final.

The next that appears in the filed record is an application for citation for contempt filed by the plaintiff on March 30, 1946, against Donald for his failure to make the payments he was ordered to make in the order of January 30, 1946. This is followed by-an abstract of the testimony introduced on the contempt hearing and the court order dated April 15, 1946, finding Donald guilty of contempt and sentencing him to sixty, days in jail but ordering the mittimus on the commitment to jail withheld “so long as the defendant Donald Eddy shall pay” $30 a week.

On June 14, 1946, the court entered-an order in. the case *825 transferring. Helen to the Iowa Juvenile home at Toledo, Iowa, “as a neglected minor.”

Subsequent orders appear in the record to the effect that on. June 1, 1946, Donald, being unable to work because of a broken- arm, was excused from payments under the contempt order during June and until July 27/1946. On July 18, 1947, the court made an order that Ramona Murray, Cass County’s welfare director, investigate .the parents’ home, then in: Omaha, Nebraska, “and malm a report to the court: upon the- advisability .of returning the children or some of them.to their home.”

In September of 1948, a hearing was .held and before- the hearing commenced -the. court made a statement “to preface the record in, this case.” The court stated that on January 30, 1946; he had entered an order “whereby the custody, of the children was removed from, the parents and the children placed with the Lutheran Welfare Society and American Home Finding Association of Ottumwa on the ground of giving you people [the parents] an opportunity to rehabilitate yourselves and have an opportunity to have the children back with you, and two years and nine months have expired, and I f-eel that in fairness to the children, some definite determination should be made at this time as .to whether or not you are in position to assume the responsibility of the. children.” The evidence on this hearing was reported (at the parents’ expense) and an abstract of the testimony is in the filed record. At this hearing the plaintiff offered no, testimony,, but rested immediately after the parents closed their case. On January 15, 1948, the court entered the .“final order” wherein it is recited that the order of January 30, .1946 was not final and that the parents w-ere at that time informed “that if, within a reasonable time they, would offer proof ..to this court that they had rehabilitated themselves and were in position to- give said children care, custody and control, that the court would return said children to the parents.” In the order the court “now finds that on the 30th day of January, 1946, the court found that [the children] were neglected and dependent children * * *.”■• The order goes on to find-that the parents had failed to show they could care, for the children and the order provided that the custody of the children was.“permanently taken from the parents” and the custody of the children was “perma *826 nently”' placed in the institutions where they were originally sent. On October 14, 1948, the defendants filed a notice of appeal from the above order in the clerk’s office.

Since the trial court’s order leaves the institutions free to give these eleven children away in adoption (section 232.22, Code, 1950) so the parents will be deprived of all rights to visit them, we can see the question here is of tremendous importance. The power of courts to- undo the custodial relationship of parents and their children should only be exercised upon convincing testimony that by so doing the best interests and welfare of the children are served. Because of the importance of the case we feel the evidence must be set forth in considerable detail. At the outset we will make a few general observations and, by way of background, some preliminary statements concerning the Eddy family. Much of the cross-examining of witnesses at the September 1948 hearing was by the court, and the record fairly shows the court was only anxious to find out if it would be for the best interest of the children to return them to their parents. Throughout he exhibited the utmost patience and concern in this most difficult case and we can well believe his decision was not easily arrived' at. No objections were offered to any testimony and we cannot help but feel the plaintiff at the September 1948 hearing was making little more than perfunctory resistance to an order returning the children to their parents. As stated, the plaintiff offered no testimony at that hearing and plaintiff’s brief in this court contains less than three pages of brief and argument with no analysis of the testimony. One puzzling thing in the record is that we are told throughout that the action involved eleven of the Eddys’ thirteen children. Deloris, the oldest girl, is not named in the original complaint or in any order. And yet the father testified she was taken away by the original order, and the parents seek her return. The two oldest children, admittedly not here involved, were Arnold (who seems to be called Harold) and John. These are the ages of all of the children in September of 1948: Harold 20, John about 18, Deloris 16, Helen 14, Phyllis 12, Gerald 11, Gloria 10, Sharon 9, Marilyn 7, Robert 6, Beverly Ann 5, Esther 4, and Charles 3.

Donald Eddy was forty-one years old in September of 1948. The family lived in Lewis (Cass County) Iowa prior to 1940 and *827 from 1940 until the original hearing in 1946 they lived in Atlantic, Iowa. Donald was a truck driver, driving trucks for a transfer line out of Omaha on long runs and was seldom home oftener than one night a week.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W.2d 872, 242 Iowa 822, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savery-v-eddy-iowa-1951.