Sherrill v. Bigler

276 S.W.2d 473, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 58
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 12, 1955
DocketNo. 7434
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 S.W.2d 473 (Sherrill v. Bigler) 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
Sherrill v. Bigler, 276 S.W.2d 473, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 58 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus by Harold L. Sherrill and Patricia Sherrill, the natural parents of a minor girl named Debra Sue, to obtain her custody.

The application states that the petitioners are the parents of Debra Sue Sherrill, a girl of the age of two years and ten months; that they surrendered possession and custody to defendants, John Cecil Big-[474]*474ler and Helen Elizabeth Bigler, and granted the. privilege of caring for and attending said minor during the time petitioners-were working in the state of Kansas; that in March, 1954, defendants moved from Kansas to Cedar County, Missouri, and petitioners consented .that their minor child be taken to Missouri with the definite understanding that defendants were to surrender custody when requested.

It states that while said child was in the custody ' of defendants, petitioners visited her and paid defendants for her maintenance and care; that they demanded custody from defendants which has been refused.

Defendants’ return pleads that they are husband and wife, tenant fanners living in Cedar County-, Missouri; that they have custody.;of Debra Sue Sherrill by virtue of' a court order made by the Juvenile Division of the Circuit Court of Cedar County, January 24, 1955.

It further pleads that petitioners relinquished all rights to care and custody; of said child Juh'e 20, 1953; that they told defendants they could have the child and they-did not want her and if they had ten others they could have all of them.

It pleads that defendants first met petitioners during the first two months of 1953 while living in the same apartment house in Wichita; that petitioners employed defendants to keep the child over week ends on two different occasions and paid them $5 each time; that they then gave defendants permanent custody of child and consented they bring her with them to Missouri. It pleads that petitioners have abandoned the child for a period of one whole year before the filing of this action; that they have contributed nothing to her support and evidence no interest in her welfare.

It pleads that defendants filed an action to adopt said child in the Circuit Court of Cedar County, Missouri, November 27, 1954; that the trial court, in a hearing on this petition, granted temporary custody of said minor to defendants.

The return pleads unfitness of petitioners to have the child because of immoral conduct.

The petitioners’ reply is a general denial as to the court order granting custody; that if the Circuit Court of Cedar County made any order as to the custody of this child it was illegal and void under section 453.070 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., because no investigation of either the child or the fitness of defendants to have her was made prior to such order. It denied generally all other allegations in the return and prayed for custody under their application for writ of-habeas corpus. -

The evidence disclosed that petitioners were married in Arkansas, in June, 1948, and moved to Wichita, Kansas, to make their home. Both were employed. There was born to this marriage a girl named D'ebra Sue, now 2 years and 10 months old. The father is 25 years of age and the mother is 22.

Petitioners and defendants first met about February, 1953, when both families occupied -an apartment in the same building in Wichita. Petitioners had marital difficulties and were separated for short periods three or four times, the last separation being in August, 1954, when Mrs. Sherrill sued her husband for divorce and custody of the minor child in Kansas. This difficulty, 'however, was settled and the evidence showéd that since September, 1954, they have been living peaceably together in Wichita.

The -evidence shows that petitioners kept their baby with Mrs. Sherrill’s mother and with others while working; that they employed defendants to care for her on two weeks ends and paid them $5 each time; that later they agreed to permit defendants the right to care for the child and, in March, 1954, consented that defendants bring the child with them to Missouri where they lived on a rented farm in Cedar County. Petitioners testified that defendants were paid $15 per week for caring for said child while they remained in Wichita and $10 per week in Missouri.

[475]*475Defendant, Mr. Bigler, testified that they were paid not in excess of $150 by petitioners during the time they had custody. Defendant denied that Mr. Sherrill had bought furniture for defendants and clothing for Mrs. Bigler but did admit they had bought some items of clothing for the child on different yisits to see her. He testified that Mrs. Sherrill visited her child only three times in their home in Missouri; that Mr. Sherrill visited the child some six or eight times and stayed over with them on some week ends. He said that petitioners gave defendants full possession of the child; that they did not care for her and told him that if they had ten more they would give them to defendants; that permanent possession was given on the 19th or 20th of June, 1953; that at the time defendants left Kansas for Missouri he said Mrs. Sherrill said, “If you love her enough, to take her and raise her as your baby you can have her.”

Defendant, Bigler, testified that when Mrs. Sherrill first came to the apartment in Kansas she was separated from her husband ; that for about a month visitors, both men and women, came to her apartment, in both daytime and at night; that Mrs. Sher-rill worked in a restaurant where they sold beer and was so working at the time they moved from Kansas. He testified that on one occasion when Mrs. Sherrill’s husband came home a man jumped out the bathroom window.

He testified that Mr. Sherrill associated with other women; that he drank. He said they were good friends to the Sher-rills while they lived in the apartment and at the time they left Kansas the Sherrills helped move them to Missouri; that defendants live on 120 acre rented farm and oversee 320 acres belonging to the county agent.

Defendant admitted that his wife had had clandestine relations with Mr. Sher-rill, which started back in Kansas in 1953 and continued until September, 1954, when he ordered petitioners to stay away from his home. He admitted that he suspicioned Sherrill and his wife while in Kansas because Sherrill was always hanging around after her and he admitted that at one time in his home he complained of the conduct of his wife and Sherrill one morning when he came in from milking; that on one occasion he told his wife if she wanted to go with Sherrill he would give her $300. He admitted about knowing of correspondence carried on between Sherrill and his wife and he said that his wife, in September, 1954, confessed her relations with Sherrill voluntarily.

Twenty letters were introduced in evidence, written by defendant’s wife to Sher-rill. These letters show an immoral relationship between Mrs. Bigler, defendant, and Sherrill. In them she talks about having had adultery with Sherrill. She makes derogatory statements as to his wife and clearly shows her enmity for Mrs. Sher-rill. The letters show not only the misconduct of Mrs. Bigler in her own home with Sherrill, but that she met him in Pittsburgh, Kansas, and was with him in a hotel room. The language used in these letters is so vulgar that the court refused to have them read in public.

Petitioner, Sherrill, testified that he started going with Mrs. Bigler while in the apartment in Kansas.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W.2d 473, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherrill-v-bigler-moctapp-1955.