Voboril v. Voboril

214 N.W. 254, 115 Neb. 615, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 85
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1927
DocketNo. 25833
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 254 (Voboril v. Voboril) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voboril v. Voboril, 214 N.W. 254, 115 Neb. 615, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 85 (Neb. 1927).

Opinion

Goss, C. J.

Plaintiff sued for divorce on the ground of cruelty. Defendant filed an answer and cross-petition praying for a divorce. Defendant was awarded a decree with qualified custody of the minor child. Soon thereafter he applied for a modification of the decree as to the actual custody of the child. This application was denied. He appealed from the decree and the other final order; and plaintiff cross-appealed from the decree granting defendant the divorce.

Plaintiff and defendant were married February 25, 1920. The daughter, Betty, was born November 3, 1921. In 1923 plaintiff sued defendant for divorce and was awarded a decree. Some months afterward a reconciliation was had, the decree was set aside, and they resumed the relations of husband and wife until February 23, 1926, when she began this suit. On December 7, 1926, the court entered a decree finding that plaintiff had offered no evidence in support of her petition, that the evidence in her behalf to sustain the allegations of her answer to the cross-petition was not sufficient, finding generally for defendant, and finding specifically that the plaintiff was not a fit and proper person to have the care of the child, and that such was not for its best interest, but that the defendant was a fit and proper person to have such custody. Further finding that the parents of plaintiff, living near Ulysses, Nebraska, were fit and proper persons to have the temporary custody of the child and had expressed a willingness to do so, the court entered the order granting defendant the divorce, ordering defendant to deliver the child to the grandparents on or before December 15, 1926, at Ulysses, there to be kept by them until June 1, 1927, when they were to return the child to defendant, who was to have it during the summer, and that, just prior to September 1, 1927, a further hearing should be had with particular reference to school facilities for the child. In its findings the court further found that it was permissible for plaintiff to live at the home of her parents while the child was there, the evidence having shown the [617]*617intent of plaintiff to make her home with her parents. January 10, 1927, after issues joined and a hearing thereon, the court overruled the application of defendant for a modification of the decree as to the custody, and defendant appealed from the decree and from the order. Plaintiff cross-appealed from the decree of December 7, but not from the order of January 10.

It seems to us that no good purpose can be forwarded by a detailed recital of the evidence in this case. Doubtless chivalry as well as delicacy and good judgment led counsel and court in the pleadings and decree to restraint of language in the charges and findings. We are well content to emulate their good example and to state for the permanent records of the court only what seems necessary to an understanding of the case. We are so minded also in the hope that these two young people, with so many attractive qualities, with such an inducement as this little child and its future welfare to lead them, may again be reconciled and renew their vows. The child needs both a father and a mother. If there be a chance that the natural love of a father and a mother for flesh of their flesh may again bridge the gap between them, we intend that no words of ours shall necessarily widen that space. Plaintiff, herself, has admitted, as we find from the evidence, that she was indiscreet and foolish. Suffice it to say the evidence shows that the court was justified in granting the defendant the divorce. We are satisfied to let that part of the decree stand affirmed without further discussion.

The chief controversy between the parties concerns the order for the temporary custody of the child, pointing, as might appear from the evidence, as well as from the decree itself, to a possible, if not a probable, permanent decree assigning that custody to the grandparents. The defendant had had a difficult financial situation to contend with. • He obtained his present position where he is at the head of the used-car department of a well-known motor car distributor and earns an average income of several hundred dollars a month, depending on sales. The nature of the po[618]*618sition requiring exacting attention and his previous financial experiences spurring him, he devoted himself to hard work and long hours most commendably, but perhaps more assiduously than was conducive to his domestic welfare. He bought a home for $8,500, paying $500 cash and assuming a first mortgage of $5,000 and a second mortgage of $3,000, and in two or three years he has paid off the second mortgage and reduced the first mortgage to about $4,000, besides providing a good living for his wife and daughter. The home is in one of the best parts of the city, is equipped with all modern conveniences, including automatically controlled, oil fuel, hot air heat to all rooms, and is within a few blocks of the excellent Dundee grade and kindergarten school. 'The evidence shows, not only the industrious habits of the defendant, but his general good reputation was proved by his employer and others. It shows his unremitting love for and devotion to the welfare of the little daughter, and his plans to have his brother and the brother’s wife, who have no children, but who love them, to come and live in his home and aid in caring for the child. The grandparents, that is, the mother and stepfather of plaintiff, own a farm more than four miles from Ulysses and its schools and more than a mile from their district school. They likewise have a modern home with hot air furnace heat capable of heating all but one room, and expressed at the trial a willingness to take the grandchild into their family and to care for it. They expect also to provide a home for the plaintiff and were doing so since the separation and at the time of the trial. .They, too, are people of substance and character, as shown by the evidence. They offered on the hearing, in answer to questions on that subject, to see that the child was transported to and from the Ulysses schools, properly accompanied at school by one of their own children, and, if desirable, the child should be furnished a warm luncheon in town. The main objection to this arrangement, aside from the father’s natural claim to the custody of the child and his decreed fitness, was the presence in that home of the mother. While the decree on that feature of the [619]*619case was not permanently final, it looked toward the result; and temporarily, at least, the orders, appealed from by defendant took from him the custody of the daughter and gave it to her grandparents with the result that temporarily, if not permanently, it had the practical effect of assigning the custody to the mother. The findings and order in this respect are criticised as inconsistent, and it is suggested that the court misinterpreted, or misapplied, the general rule that the welfare of the child will be considered in decreeing its custody.

This requires us to seek the proper rule applicable to the particular situation heretofore sketched. The general rule, as well stated by the brief of the plaintiff, is that in divorce actions, in making disposition of the custody of a child of tender years, the policy of the law is to look to the welfare and best interests of the child. Feather v. Feather, 112 Neb. 315; Hammond v. Hammond, 103 Neb. 860; Nathan v. Nathan, 102 Neb. 59; Boxa v. Boxa, 92 Neb. 78.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 254, 115 Neb. 615, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voboril-v-voboril-neb-1927.