Wackerman v. Wackerman

493 P.2d 928, 16 Ariz. App. 382
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedFebruary 16, 1972
Docket1 CA-CIV 1532
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 493 P.2d 928 (Wackerman v. Wackerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wackerman v. Wackerman, 493 P.2d 928, 16 Ariz. App. 382 (Ark. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

STEVENS, Presiding Judge.

There was a formal written order changing the custody of a 3jdj year old child and this is an appeal from that order. There must be a better way to handle these difficult child custody problems, but we are not in a position to suggest a reasonable alternative solution.

The principals have each experienced three marriages. Because of the many names involved, we will refer to the parties before this Court as the father, the mother, and the child.

Some years ago the father married his first wife. A son was born to the marriage. The marriage ended in divorce and the first wife remarried.

The mother, at the age of 16, experienced her first marriage. It was short-lived, ended in divorce and no children were born from that union.

*384 The father was horn on 19 December 1923. The mother was born on 17 January 1946. They were married to each other on 8 September 1964. The child, a .son, was born on 16 March 1966. The father filed his complaint for divorce in Maricopa County which complaint was assigned cause number D-97970, the complaint having been filed on 1 August 1967. He sought a decree of divorce and the ■custody of the child. The wife filed an .answer and a counter-claim for divorce wherein she sought custody of the child. The file contains a two-page report from a psychiatrist relative to the wife. The report is dated prior to the final hearing of the divorce action. The file also contains an 11-page, single-spaced, legal size paper report by a Superior Court social worker relative to the father, the mother and the ■child. Numerous persons were interviewed as reflected by this report. The social worker’s report was dated prior to the final hearing of the divorce action. The ■divorce action was heard by Commissioner James S. Riggs on 31 October 1967. Fourteen witnesses were sworn and testified. There was a stipulation as to the division of the property of the parties including a provision whereby the house trailer which the father and mother had used as their residence was to be awarded to the mother. The trial court approved the stipulation. The decree of divorce was signed and filed on 14 November 1967. The decree dissolved the marriage and neither was “awarded” a divorce. This form of decree is recognized by our Supreme Court in the case of Brown v. Brown, 38 Ariz. 459, 300 P. 1007 (1931). The custody of the child was awarded to the mother with reasonable visitorial privileges to the father who was ordered to pay $65 a month ■as and for child support. At the time of the marriage and at all times subsequent thereto, the principal residence of the father and of the mother has been Wickenburg, Arizona.

The mother’s parents, she being an adopted child, and her younger adopted brother also lived in Wickenburg. During the period of the marriage the mother’s parents had extensive contacts and associations with the child.

For a period of time after the divorce and though the exact dates are not wholly clear, apparently in late 1968 and early 1969, the mother worked as a waitress in Glendale, Arizona, a city approximately 45 miles from Wickenburg. The child remained in Wickenburg with his maternal grandparents and was frequently visited by the mother. From and after about 1 May 1969 the mother lived in Wickenburg. This date was the approximate date that the mother’s parents sold their home and, “as a temporary measure”, moved into the mother’s trailer so that for a time those who resided in the trailer were the mother, the child, the mother’s parents and the 17-year old brother of the mother.

The father married his third wife on 4 June 1968. The exact date of the birth of the third wife is not completely clear from the record and this Court estimates that the probable year of her birth was the year 1943. She underwent a hysterectomy in January or February of 1969. This was her second marriage. Her first marriage was in 1962, a daughter was born of that marriage in 1963 and she was divorced in 1964. Although she lived in Wickenburg as did the paternal grandmother of the daughter, it was clear to the paternal grandmother that she was not welcomed.

The father worked as a cook and manager of a Wickenburg restaurant. After the marriage to his third wife she also worked in the restaurant, working approximately four nights a week from six in the evening to ten in the evening during which periods of time the daughter was with the third wife’s mother.

The mother met her third husband while she was working in Glendale. He had been married and divorced. At the time of this meeting the mother and her third husband were both divorced persons. Five children were born of the third husband’s first marriage and following the termination of that marriage by divorce he was *385 paying $300 a month child support. In March 1969 the mother was aware that the prospective third husband was the father of her unborn child. It was thereafter that the mother returned to the family trailer in Wickenburg. The mother and her third husband were married on 12 September 1969.

During the marriage of the father and the mother he held two jobs. After the father’s third marriage he held but one job and the combined income of the father and his third wife was less than his income during his marriage to the mother. The father and his third wife, largely with borrowed funds, purchased and furnished a good and modest home in Wickenburg. They owed debts in addition to the indebtedness on the home.

The third husband of the mother earned his livelihood by driving a truck between Arizona and California. By virtue of his driving to the greatest extent available to him, his income was substantially the same as the father’s income during the marriage to the mother, subject of course to his obligation to pay child support. At the time of the hearing in question he had substantial savings. The father did not pay child support to the son of his first marriage nor did his third wife receive child support for the daughter born of her first marriage.

On 3 September 1969 the father filed a petition for modification of the divorce decree whereby he sought the custody of the child and it is this petition which is now in question. All had not been serene from the time of the divorce on 14 November 1967 to the issuance of the order to show cause following the filing of the above petition for modification. In January 1968 by way of garnishment, the mother collected some of the monies which the father was obligated to pay under the decree. Generally, the father lived up to his financial obligations as specified in the decree. The application for the writ of garnishment was accompanied by the mother’s petition seeking among other matters a television set which had been awarded to the mother and which the father continued to retain. At the time of the hearing in question the television set was used by him and his third wife.

The mother visited in California for a period of time without taking the child with her. Generally no problems arose as a result of the father’s exercise of his visitorial privileges. Frequently someone other than the father called for the child. At one time he secured temporary possession of the child and failed to return the child causing considerable anxiety on the part of the mother.

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Bluebook (online)
493 P.2d 928, 16 Ariz. App. 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wackerman-v-wackerman-arizctapp-1972.