Vilas v. Vilas

42 S.W.2d 379, 184 Ark. 352, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 12, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 379 (Vilas v. Vilas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vilas v. Vilas, 42 S.W.2d 379, 184 Ark. 352, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 190 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

Smith, J.

On February 5, 1930, Mrs. Susan Wharton Vilas obtained, in the Garland Chancery Court, a divorce from her husband, L. A. Vilas. The court found in that case that the parties had agreed ‘ ‘ as to the rights of the plaintiff in and to the property of the defendant,” and that, pursuant to this agreement, the defendant had created a trust fund of $100,000 for the plaintiff’s benefit.

The court was asked to award the custody of the children — three in number and all minors — to the plaintiff, but this was not done. Upon the subject of the custody of the children, the decree recites that “the care and custody of said minor children of plaintiff and defendant is left to the agreement of the parents, and, they failing at any time to agree upon the care and custody of said children, the same shall be subject to the future determination of this court by appropriate order,” and that “the court doth retain jurisdiction of this cause for the purpose of making such other and further orders as may be necessary from time to time with reference to the custody, maintenance, support and education of the infant children of the plaintiff and defendant.”

By the 29th of September, 1930, the defendant, Mr. Vilas, had obtained possession of all three children and was about to sail with them on a trip to Europe, when Mrs. Vilas filed a petition in the Garland Chancery Court praying that the permanent. custody of the children be awarded to her, and that the defendant be restrained from carrying the children out of the jurisdiction of the court. This petition was heard before the court on oral testimony. The trial began on October 30, 1930, and was concluded November 8, 1930.

A decree was rendered in which the custody of all the children was awarded to the father, but it was provided that “the plaintiff be permitted to visit said children at all convenient times, wherever they may be at such times residing; and that said minor children be permitted, if they desire, to visit plaintiff at the expense of the defendant, for a period of thirty days during- the summer vacation period, and during one-half of the Christmas holiday vacation period, and if said minor children do not desire to visit the plaintiff during such periods, she, the plaintiff, be permitted to visit them at some suitable place, and that the defendant provide suitable quarters outside of his. home for the plaintiff to visit said minor children during such periods, and that the defendant use all reasonable means to facilitate plaintiff’s visiting said minor children.”

The court was requested to modify these directions to require the father to send the children on the visits there provided for to their mother, whether the children wished to go or not, but the court declined to impose the requirement that the father compel the children, over their protest, to make these visits.

In an oral opinion delivered before the rendition 'of this decree the chancellor stated that his conclusion in regard to the custody of the children was largely controlled by the wishes of the children themselves. At the time of the trial in the court below, Ariel, the oldest child, a daughter, was 16 years.old; Jack, the second child, a son, was 14 years old, and Susan, the youngest, a daughter, was 12 years of age.

These children were all examined and cross-examined at great length before the chancellor. The examination of these children appears to have required . about three days, and a large part of the voluminous record before us covers their examination and cross-examination. The testimony of the youngest child covers 186 pages of the record, of which 157 are devoted to her cross-examination.

This testimony makes the fact perfectly clear that all the children have not only a decided partiality for their father, but have also acquired an antipathy for their mother. Mrs. Vilas says that Mr. Vilas is responsible for this unnatural feeling, and this is no doubt true. Indeed, we are convinced that each parent attempted to prejudice the children against the other parent, aud that this has been the fixed purpose of each since the rendition of the divorce decree, which did not award the custody of the children to either parent. Much of the examination and of the cross-examination of the children was devoted to the development of the activities of the parents in this respect.

The rupture between Ariel, the oldest child, and her mother appears to have occurred before there was an estrangement on the part of the other children. Mrs. Vilas testified that the attitude of Ariel was induced by her insistence that Ariel go to school and be obedient to the authority of herself and of Mr. Vilas. On the other hand, the maid, who was herself a grandmother and who had been employed in the Vilas home for the seven years immediately preceding the separation, testified that Mrs. Vilas had said before the divorce that she did not care what Ariel did so that she did not have a baby. The witness was asked on her cross-examination when and where this remark was made and in whose presence, and she answered that it was made to her by Mrs. Vilas in the kitchen of Mrs. ’Vilas’ home and that the cook was present. The cook was not called as a witness.

Mrs. Vilas denied categorically that she had made any such statement, or that she entertained any such feeling towards her daughter. But, whether she made the remark or not, it is evident that Ariel has convinced herself that her mother is indifferent to her, and the breach between Ariel and her mother appears to be complete and irreconcilable.

Mrs. Vilas was asked what she would do with the children if their custody was awarded to her, and she answered that she very much desired the care and custody of Jack and Sue, but that Ariel was an uncertain quantity, and was unwilling- to mind, and was very antagonistic, and we are impressed that, while she would accept the custody of Ariel, this would be done only as an inducement to have the custody of the other children awarded to her.

Ariel testified that she was 16 years old on the 15th of July, 1930,- and she will therefore in July of next year, be 18 years of age, a woman of full age for all purpossess under the laws of this State. Section 4986, Crawford & Moses’ Digest. Jack, the son, testified that he was 14 years old on September 26, 1930, and he is therefore now more than 15 years old. Sue, the youngest child, was 12 years old on August 11,1930, and she is therefore now more than 13.

The examination and cross-examination of Jack, the son, does not disclose the same bitter feeling manifested by Ariel towards her mother, but he repeatedly stated, in effect, in answer to many questions, that he had but little affection for his mother and preferred to live with his father, and that “my legal custody I want to be with my father. ’ ’

The testimony of Sue was substantially to the same effect.

All three of the children had been in the custody of Mr. Vilas for a few months immediately preceding the trial from which this appeal comes, and it is certain that in this interval he had been assiduous in his attentions to the children, and that it was a part of his purpose to estrange them from their mother. Indeed, it is the insistence of Mrs. Vilas that this estrangement has been accomplished by the persistent overindulgence of the children by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 379, 184 Ark. 352, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vilas-v-vilas-ark-1931.