State ex rel. Obrecht v. McClane

256 S.W.2d 955, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1953
DocketNo. 6269
StatusPublished

This text of 256 S.W.2d 955 (State ex rel. Obrecht v. McClane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Obrecht v. McClane, 256 S.W.2d 955, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2306 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is a habeas corpus action involving the custody of a minor child born on August 20, 1949. Relator, David F. Obrecht, joined by his wife, the child’s mother, Helen McClane Ashlock Obrecht, filed this action against his wife’s mother, Mrs. Adona McClane, alleging the said respondent was unlawfully detaining the child and sought its custody. Respondent, Mrs. Adona McClane, joined by her husband Fletcher McClane, answered seeking custody of the child on the alleged grounds that she and her husband had supported it and cared for it most of its life,' without which it would have been a neglected and dependent child. She further alleged that the child had been ill treated and neglected during the short time it had been in the custody of relators and its life would be placed in jeopardy if . its custody were awarded to relators.

The case was heard on March 19, 1952, by the trial court without a jury, with all interested parties being present and giving sworn testimony. The trial court took the matter under advisement until May 21, 1952, when it found, as recited in its judgment, that relators, David F. Obrecht and his wife Helen Obrecht, were not fit and proper persons to have the child’s custody, that respondents, Adona McClane and husband Fletcher McClane, were fit and proper persons to have its custody and that it would be for the child’s best interest if its care, custody and control be awarded to respondents. Therefore its custody was awarded to respondents by an order duly entered from which order relators have perfected their appeal to this court. At the request of relators further findings and conclusions were filed by the trial court and according to the record relators have not excepted to such findings and conclusions.

Some of the controlling issues were controverted but, in determining the sufficiency of evidence, it must be examined in a light most favorable to the trial court’s findings, disregarding all evidence to the contrary. When that is done there is sufficient evidence of probative force to support the material findings made and filed by the trial court. Its findings reflect that the child’s mother first married Lloyd Ash-lock in the summer of 1947 but they were soon thereafter separated and the whereabouts of Lloyd Ashlock thereafter is not reflected by the record. After her separation from Lloyd Ashlock, Helen Ashlock moved in the home with her parents, respondents, in Amarillo, Texas, and lived with them continuously most of the time until a short time before this proceeding was filed. On August 20, 1949, the child here involved was born to Helen Ashlock and it was given the name Linda Diane. The marriage relationship between the child’s mother and Lloyd Ashlock was subsisting on the date of the child’s birth and there was no direct testimony in this action tending to show that Lloyd Ashlock was- not the father of the child here involved; nor was lack of cohabitation or access shown. On November 21, 1949, Helen Ashlock was divorced from Lloyd Ashlock and she was thereafter on December 15, 1949, married to relator, David F. Obrecht, at Santa Rosa, New Mexico, but David F. Obrecht returned her to the home of her parents, respondents, in Amarillo and both she and her child continued to live with respondents until on or about September 22, 1951. On June 8, 1950, David F. Obrecht filed an annulment proceedings in the District Court of Carson County, Texas, seeking to have his marriage to Helen Ashlock annulled and in the alternative asking for a divorce. He there alleged fraud and trickery on the part of Helen Ashlock which resulted in their marriage and that no child or children were born to their marriage. The case was duly tried and he was there denied any relief. In that action he also denied fatherhood of ■the child here involved. Thereafter David Obrecht and wife Helen sought to patch up their differences and live together. From September 22, 1951, until December 24, 1951 (some three months) Helen [957]*957Obrecht and her child lived with David F. Obrecht in the home of his aged parents on a farm in Carson County* Texas. On December' 24, 1951, David F. Obrecht brought his wife and the child back to the home of respondents and again left them there. On that occasion both relators were under the influence of intoxicants. Soon thereafter in January of 1952 David Obrecht filed a second suit in Carson County, Texas, seeking a divorce from his wife, Helen, alleging cruelty and that one child was born to their marriage, namely, Linda Obrecht, a girl, but he was willing for its mother to have custody of it. Defendant, Helen Obrecht, answered in that suit by filing a verified petition of date March 6, 1952, only eleven days before this action was filed. She there pleaded, in effect, that David F. Obrecht had previously denied fatherhood of the child and she asked that the custody of the child, Linda Diane, be awarded to her parents, Adona McClane and Fletcher Mc-Clane, respondents here, in case a divorce be granted, since her parents had cared for and almost reared the child to date and they were the proper parties to continue rearing and educating it. That suit was pending when this action was filed and the same was not dismissed until the trial court herein refused to hear this action because the custody of the child here involved was then being litigated in another court of competent jurisdiction. However, the divorce action pending in Carson County between the relators herein was then dismissed only one day before this action was heard. Except for the sum of $25 given, to respondents by the child’s mother, respondents have supported the child, as well as its mother, practically all of the child’s life and its maternal grandmother, respondent, Mrs. Adona McClane, had the care and responsibility of the child all of its life except for the three months it spent with re-lators late in 1951. Upon its return to respondents on that occasion, after spending approximately three months with relators, the child’s body was unclean, ill-kept, and it was sick and bruised, showing ill treatment. David Obrecht testified that he had recently punished the child for not obeying but' he did not think the child was bruised as 'a result of the punishment inflicted. The child’s grandmother, Mrs. Adona Me-. Clane, took the child immediately to a doctor for treatment, which was administered. The child’s mother left its care, almost wholly with her mother. Relator never contributed anything toward .the support of the child or its mother, except during the short period of time that he and its mother lived together and kept the child with them. The original birth certificate of the child gave it the name of Linda Diane Ashlock and showed it to be the child of Lloyd Ashlock and Helen Ashlock. But the certificate had been changed upon the affidavit of some undisclosed person at some undisclosed date to show that relator, David F. Obrecht, was the father of the child and the amended birth certificate had been filed by relator, David F. Obrecht, with his Selective Service Board at Borger, Texas. The trial court further found, based upon testimony given by Helen Obrecht’s older half-sister, Mrs. Robert M-. Walker, and their own mother, that while Helen lived in the home with her parents, respondents, and while she was married, she frequently went out on dates with other men, stayed out late hours at night and frequently returned home under the influence of intoxicating liquors.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W.2d 955, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-obrecht-v-mcclane-texapp-1953.