Schmitt v. Schmitt

362 P.2d 884, 83 Idaho 300, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 186
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1961
Docket8959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 362 P.2d 884 (Schmitt v. Schmitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmitt v. Schmitt, 362 P.2d 884, 83 Idaho 300, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 186 (Idaho 1961).

Opinion

SMITH, Justice.

Appellant, by her action commenced during March 1960 in the district court in Gooding county, seeks the custody and control of the two minor children of the parties, the children having been previously awarded to respondent by a decree of the Superior Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Alaska in its Civil Case No. 10663. The district court sustained respondent’s motion to dismiss *302 appellant’s complaint • without leave to amend and entered judgment' of dismissal.

Appellant appealed from the judgment, assigning as error the trial court’s ruling that' the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can he granted, and in dismissing the complaint without leave to amend.

Respondent cross-appealed from the judgment, assigning as error the trial court’s denial of respondent’s motion to dismiss, on the ground, as respondent asserts, that as appears on the face of appellant’s complaint, the court lacks jurisdiction of the subject matter in that there is another action pending between the same parties .for the same cause (referring to the action in the Alaska Superior Court wherein respondent was granted the custody of the children).

Respondent moved this Court to dismiss appellant’s appeal on the ground that she had waived and abandoned her right to appeal from the trial court’s judgment of dismissal. In support of his motion to dismiss the appeal, respondent contends that, after the trial court granted respondent’s motion to dismiss the complaint, appellant invoked the jurisdiction of the Alaska Superior Court by filing therein her motion for an order modifying the decree under which that court had awarded the sole custody and control of the minor children to respondent with reasonable rights of visitation to appellant; and that such court granted appellant temporary relief by allowing the children to visit her in Boise, Idaho, during the month of August 1960, and then continued the motion; and that thereafter on September 8, 1960, appellant filed her notice of appeal herein from the trial court’s order of dismissal.

At the outset it must be borne in mind' that appellant’s district court action instituted in Gooding county relates to the custody of the children, independent of the previous action in the Alaska Court and its decree entered October 28, 1959. Appellant’s complaint is based upon a general allegation of changed conditions and circumstances occurring after entry of the Alaska decree and upon the basic premise that the interests and welfare of the children would best be served by awarding their custody to appellant, with reasonable visitation privileges accorded respondent.

In Civil Case No. 10663 in the Alaska Superior Court it appears that on October 28, 1959, that court, in addition to dissolving the bonds of matrimony between the parties, decreed that respondent, the father, have the sole care and custody of the two minor children, subject to “reasonable right of visitation” by the mother, appellant -herein; that on July 27, 1960, appellant filed in the Alaska case her “Motion For Order - Amending Judgment *303 and Decree” in which she sets out that the decree entered October 28, 1959, awarded the care and custody of the children to respondent father, subject to appellant mother’s right of visitation; that the children reside at Fairbanks, Alaska, with the father, who refused to permit the children to visit appellant mother at her place of residence in Boise, Idaho, although she offered to defray all visitation expenses of the children. Appellant then alleges that for such reasons she was being deprived of her reasonable right of visitation of her children; that she desired the children to visit her at her place of residence in Boise for the remainder of the month of July and the month of August, 1960, and until the next school term opened at Fairbanks, Alaska; and she prayed that the decree be amended to provide that she be allowed to visit the children and to have the children visit her at reasonable times and for varying lengths of time. The Alaska court on August 4, 1960, upon receipt of assurance that appellant would return the children to Fairbanks prior to the commencement of the school term, entered an order allowing the children to visit appellant in Boise, Idaho, for the period from the date of the order until commencement of the 1960 school term in Fairbanks, the cost of the children’s transportation to be borne by appellant, and then continued appellant’s motion.

The record shows that dispute arose between the parties as to the meaning of appellant mother’s “reasonable right of visitation” with her children; that she interpreted such right to include the right to visit the children ^and to have them visit her for reasonable times and lengths of time; and that respondent’s refusal to permit visitation of the children with appellant at her Boise, Idaho, residence, during a portion of the 1960 summer school vacation, precipitated appellant’s application for a court order allowing such visitation, as well as clarifying her “reasonable right of visitation” accorded by the original decree.

We are unable to accede to respondent’s position that the action of appellant in seeking this visitation’ of her children and clarification of her right of visitation, in the Alaska Superior Court action, constituted any acquiescence of appellant in the Gooding county district court judgment, or that she waived or abandoned her right of appeal from that judgment. This is true simply because appellant, in the Alaska Court action, seeks clarification only of her visitation rights; and noteworthy, the decree in that case has not been modified in any proceeding that can be classified as seeking modification.

Appellant in her complaint, filed in the Gooding county district court, alleges that both she and her minor children are residing in and residents of the State of *304 Idaho; she alleges the decree rendered October 28, 1959, by the Superior Court in Alaska, whereby the marriage of appellant and respondent was dissolved, and that respondent, the father, was awarded the sole care and custody of the minor children subject to appellant’s reasonable right of visitation. She then alleges that since the entry of the Alaska Court decree, conditions have substantially and materially changed, — alleging certain factual situations, — which make it necessary and advisable that the care, custody and control of the children be awarded to her, with reasonable visitation privileges accorded respondent, to the end that the best interests and welfare of the minor children may be served.

Cole v. Cole, 68 Idaho 561, 201 P.2d 98, 105, presents a case analogous to the situation here. In the Cole case divorce was obtained in the State of Utah; later the mother of the children commenced habeas corpus proceedings in Idaho to require defendant father to produce the children to the end that she, the mother, be awarded custody of the children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 P.2d 884, 83 Idaho 300, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmitt-v-schmitt-idaho-1961.