Smith v. Smith

544 S.W.2d 888, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2332
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1976
DocketNo. 28462
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 544 S.W.2d 888 (Smith v. Smith) 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
Smith v. Smith, 544 S.W.2d 888, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2332 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

ANDREW JACKSON HIGGINS, Special Judge.

Appeal from adverse ruling on motion to modify dissolution decree with respect to custody of children! The question is whether Thanom P. Smith “was entitled to custody of the children as a matter of law.” Affirmed.

On November 12, 1974, William Francis Smith filed his petition for dissolution and [889]*889alleged: That he and Thanom P. Smith were married August 31, 1966, in Thailand and were separated November 4,1974; that he was residing at Whiteman Air Force Base and she was residing in Festus, Missouri; that the marriage was irretrievably broken; that Herbert William, age 6, Cheryl Lynn, age 5, and Terri Katherine, age 3, were children of the marriage and were in the “actual custody” of William Francis Smith. He prayed, among other things, for a decree of dissolution of the marriage and for custody of the children.

There is no question with respect to the service obtained upon Thanom P. Smith, and she filed no responsive pleading.

On December 31, 1974, the petition came on for hearing with Thanom P. Smith in default. The petition was supported in all respects by the testimony of William Francis Smith.

The court found the marriage was irretrievably broken, and that William Francis Smith was “the proper person to have care and custody of the three minor children” and the clerk was “directed to forward a ten day letter” to Thanom P. Smith advising her that “absent objection from said party being filed within ten days after date of mailing that a finding the marriage is irretrievably broken and an order of dissolution of the marriage may be entered of record.” See Section 452.320, RSMo 1969.

There is no question with respect to receipt of this notice by Thanom P. Smith.

On January 13, 1975, the court decreed the indicated dissolution and awarded custody of the children to William Francis Smith, all in accordance with the findings of December 31, 1974.

On June 4, 1975, Thanom P. Smith filed her motion to modify the decree and alleged: That on the date the decree was entered, December 31,1974, and on the date it became final, January 10, 1975, “actual custody of said minor children * * * was not in said William Francis Smith and was actually in Thanom P. Smith”; that the case proceeded to hearing by default; that she is a native of Thailand, her ability to read and to understand English is limited, she was unaware of this country’s customs and did not understand the implications of the papers and proceedings against her and the necessity to seek an attorney; that the order of custody was “improperly given because the information furnished to the Court by Petitioner relating to custody was untrue and improper”; that the best interests of the children would be served if they were with their natural mother; that the father has remarried, the children do not know the stepmother, and the circumstances are not in the best interests of the children under such conditions.

On August 18,1975, the motion to modify was heard.

Thanom P. Smith, age 33, a Thai, was living with her ex-husband’s parents in Fes-tus, Missouri, and was working as a cleaning lady earning $125 per month. She did not speak English at the time of her marriage August 31, 1955, in Thailand to William Francis Smith. She denied telling her husband she wanted to return to Thailand, and stated she did not want to return to Thailand although her husband had tried to get her to return. She desired to have the children and denied telling her husband she did not want them.

Herbert Wilson Smith, age 50, father of William Francis Smith, lived in Festus, Missouri. He was employed five days a week, 7:00 a. m. to 4:00 p. m., as a greens superintendent at a golf course in Herculaneum, Missouri, and earned $8400 per year. His wife was employed six days a week, 6:30 a. m. to 12:00 noon, as a bakery clerk and earned $5000 per year. They lived in a “five room house, three bedrooms, living room, kitchen, and bathroom, and basement.” During the time Thanom and the children were there, he and his wife occupied one bedroom, their 19-y ., ' son occupied another, the three ehil&3.r¡ the third, and Thanom slept on a daybed in the living room. He had known Thanom since 1968, and she had lived in the Festus home since November 4, 1974. Thanom’s work was in [890]*890the evenings, four hours on Mondays and three hours on Saturdays. She was also going to Jefferson College three hours an evening on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Tha-nom had also lived-in the Festus home for the year 1969, and from Fall, 1971, to Summer, 1973, and was welcome to continue living in the Festus home with or without the children. Thanom and the children were brought to the Festus home November 4,1974, by her husband, his mother, and his friend. The children were enrolled in Festus schools November 6,1974. The children remained in the Festus home until April 27, 1975, when Terri left with her father, and May 29, 1975, when the other two went with their father upon writ of habeas corpus issued by the court of appeals in St. Louis pursuant to the custody decree. His son filed an earlier divorce proceeding in Texas, which was dismissed because “his wife obtained a lawyer in Festus, to contact his lawyer in Texas * * The present divorce papers were brought to the Festus home and delivered to Frances Katherine Smith, mother of William Francis Smith. Mr. Smith (Herbert) read the papers to Thanom. He told Thanom her husband was trying to take the children; he did not advise her she needed an attorney “by my wife’s request.” He talked to his son December 24, 1974, in Festus, and his son advised that he (William Francis Smith) would have actual and legal custody of the children and that they would be left in Festus. Mr. Smith was aware of the receipt of the statutory notice of the decree of dissolution and called the Clerk of the Johnson County Circuit Court December 31, 1974. He learned that the proposed decree would vest custody of the children in William Francis Smith, and he communicated such knowledge to Thanom.

Frances Katherine Smith, age 48, mother of William Francis Smith, corroborated the testimony of her husband and Thanom. She went to Whiteman to talk to her son November 3,1974, when Thanom called and said “Bill was going to kill himself.” She talked to her son about a divorce and “told him that he couldn’t have the children because of the way he lived his life, and that he could make his Father and I Guardians over the children.” That was agreeable to him, but later “he said * * * Mr. Fitzgerald [his lawyer] told him that he could not make us Guardians; that either he got the children or she got the children. * * He said she definitely would not get custody of the children * * * because he did not want to have to pay support money to her. * * * later on I told him that I was going to let him get custody of the children by default, because that’s the way he wanted to get the divorce.” She received the divorce papers; she did not advise Thanom to get a lawyer.

Movant also adduced testimony from Mrs. Martha Brown, Mrs. Marie Chevalier, and Mrs. Henrietta Bernier, neighbors of Thanom when she lived with her husband at Whiteman, that she was a good mother and housekeeper.

William Francis Smith, a 12-year career Air Force Staff Sergeant, described the events of early November, 1974. “ * * * my Mother had come down on the 3rd, and said to me that Thanom had called her and said I was going to kill myself, which I hadn’t, and I immediately got mad and jumped Noy about it, my former wife.

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Bluebook (online)
544 S.W.2d 888, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-moctapp-1976.