Talbot v. Talbot

181 P.2d 148, 120 Mont. 167, 1947 Mont. LEXIS 25
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1947
Docket8716
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 181 P.2d 148 (Talbot v. Talbot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talbot v. Talbot, 181 P.2d 148, 120 Mont. 167, 1947 Mont. LEXIS 25 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding in habeas corpus seeking custody of a minor child, Lowetta Gene Talbot.

The record discloses that petitioner and defendant, Kenneth G. Talbot, were intermarried on December 26, 1941, at Seattle, Washington. At the time of their marriage they both resided in Montana. Of this union Lowetta Gene was born on September 16, 1942. In December, 1942, Kenneth entered the armed forces. Petitioner was in Montana when Lowetta was born and went to work in Seattle in December, 1943, first as a waitress and later at a cigar stand.

In December, 1945, petitioner commenced an action for divorce in King county, Washington. The defendant, appellant here, was served with process in Seattle on the day that he obtained his discharge from the armed forces. He thereupon entered into a property settlement agreement with his wife, by the terms of which, in addition to certain property, she was to have the care, custody and control of Lowetta. When that *169 action was commenced and the property settlement agreed upon, Lowetta was living in Montana with her maternal grandmother, with whom she had lived nearly all the time since her birth, pursuant to an arrangement made by petitioner with her mother.

After the divorce action was commenced and the property settlement made, petitioner took Lowetta to Seattle to live with her. In March, 1946, and before the trial of the divorce action in Seattle, Kenneth took Lowetta from Seattle to Corvallis, Montana, and to the home of his parents, the other defendants above named, where the child has since remained.

The divorce action was tried in June, 1946, resulting in an interlocutory decree in favor of plaintiff. The decree recites that defendant did not appear in person but was represented by counsel and evidence was presented in his behalf in the form of depositions. The court found the defendant guilty of cruelty to plaintiff, approved the property settlement agreement, found plaintiff a fit and proper person to have the custody and control of Lowetta and awarded custody to her with the right of defendant to visit the child at reasonable times and places and to have the child live with him at least one month during the summer vacation.

When Kenneth brought the child to Montana he commenced a divorce action in Montana, which is still pending.

This proceeding was commenced in September, 1946. The petition alleges that petitioner was awarded the custody of the child by decree of the Washington court, which has not been revoked or modified; that the child was with her in the state of Washington for several weeks after the divorce action was commenced and that on March 23, 1946, the father, without petitioner’s consent, took the child to his parents in Montana; that she has demanded the return of the child but defendants refuse to surrender the child to her.

The answer of defendant Kenneth Talbot alleges that neither he nor petitioner was a resident of the state of Washington at the time of the Washington decree but both were residents. *170 of the state of Montana and that Lowetta at all times was domiciled in Montana; that it is for the best interest of the child that its custody be awarded to him; that the Washington decree was procured through fraud in that petitioner, plaintiff in the divorce action, was not a bona fide resident of the state of Washington and that the child was not in Washington at the time the complaint was filed nor at the time the decree was ¿ntered.

He further alleges in his answer that after he returned to Seattle from overseas,, he lived with petitioner in her apartment in Seattle until the day he went to Camp Lewis on the 28th day of December to receive his discharge; that prior to leaving her apartment to go to Camp Lewis, she requested him to advise her as soon as he had received his discharge and to come back to her apartment and that if she were not there he should wait until she arrived; that he consented to follow out her directions; he obtained his discharge and returned to her apartment, finding her absent therefrom; while awaiting her arrival he was served with the divorce papers; that petitioner and her attorney in Seattle induced him to make the property settlement agreement; that thereafter and on January 22nd, petitioner returned to Montana where defendant Kenneth then lived “and assumed reconciliation was affected in so far as defendant was concerned” and they returned to Seattle, she and the child going by airplane and he taking the bus; that because of information acquired while in Spokane, he returned to Montana and instituted a divorce action, which is still pending.

Defendant alleges that he is a fit and proper person to have the custody of the child and is in a position to have her educated and alleges that the petitioner is not a fit and suitable person to have the child. He denies that he took the child on the 23rd day of March without the consent of petitioner.

The court, after hearing evidence, made findings of fact and conclusions, of law, the essential parts of which may be summarized as follows: That the petitioner, the plaintiff in the *171 divorce ' action, had continuously been a resident of- Seattle, Washington, for more than one year immediately preceding the commencement of the divorce action; that the property settlement agreement was made in which it was agreed that petitioner should have the care, custody and control of the child and that the Washington decree so provides; that there was no evidence showing a change of circumstances or conditions since the rendition of the Washington decree; that the child, by arrangement between the petitioner and her mother, Mrs. Charles Tidwell, has lived and been domiciled in the state of Montana for all of her life with the exception of the time between the latter part of January, 1946, and the latter part of March, 1946; that the child by her actions and words in open court demonstrated her strong and unusual affection for her maternal grandmother and constantly sought her company in preference to all others; that Mrs. Charles Tidwell is a well-qualified and fit and proper person to care for the child as she has done in the past and expressed her willingness to care for her.

The court made conclusions of law to the effect that the Washington court had jurisdiction over both parties to the divorce action and that the jurisdiction was acquired without fraud by either' party and that the decree is entitled to full faith and credit; that there has been no change in the circumstances or conditions of either party since the entry of that decree; that the best interests of the child will best be served by granting the prayer of the petitioner and directing that the child be left by her mother in the care of Mrs. Tidwell. The 'decree directed that the child be taken from the custody of the defendants and “restored to the custody of the petitioner Marguerite Jane Talbot in accordance with the said Washington decree.” .

The'court further ordered that “until further order by the said Washington court or by this court, the petitioner, Marguerite Jane Talbot, is directed to leave, as she has done in the past, said minor child in the care of Mrs. Charles Tidwell *172

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Bluebook (online)
181 P.2d 148, 120 Mont. 167, 1947 Mont. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbot-v-talbot-mont-1947.