Warrington v. Warrington

684 S.W.2d 368, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4342
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 1984
DocketNo. WD 35208
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 684 S.W.2d 368 (Warrington v. Warrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warrington v. Warrington, 684 S.W.2d 368, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4342 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Judge.

This proceeding began upon appellant’s motion for modification of child support increasing the same for two minor children born of the dissolved marriage; for permission for appellant to remove the children to the State of California; for specifically defining and delineating visitation rights of the parties; and for attorney fees and costs incurred in the presentation of her motion. The relief requested by appellant was denied. The motion of respondent for custody of the children and abatement of child support, and to set visitation privileges, was sustained.

The parties were married on December 22, 1973. Two children were born of the marriage, a daughter on June 20,1975, and a son on November 9, 1976. The marriage was dissolved on December 1, 1981, and appellant was granted the care, custody and control of the children subject to respondent’s reasonable visitation rights. Respondent was ordered to pay $600.00 per month child support for the two children which amounts or more the trial court found that he had paid since the dissolution decree.

Appellant had done dental hygiene coun-selling for children in Sedalia, Missouri. After the dissolution she was employed as a secretary and receptionist in the office of Dr. Daniel Jolly, a dentist, at the Truman Medical Center, where she first became casually acquainted with Dr. William J. Beard (M.D.), who was then a patient of Dr. Jolly. Apparently, he and appellant met more formally in February, 1983, at which time they started dating. They decided to be married in March, 1983, at which time Dr. Beard was still married to his third wife, the dissolution of that marriage not being final until April, 1983. Appellant and Dr. Beard were married about the 9th of July, 1983, not having lived together before that time. At the time of trial, August 10, 1983, Dr. Beard was sixty years of age, and appellant was about thirty years his junior. At the time of his third marriage, the children of that wife were not involved, one being grown, one was in Guam with his father, and another was in college. Dr. Beard’s own four children were born during his first marriage of 23 years.

Dr. Beard had graduated from Cornell University in 1947, and had training in psychiatry and internal medicine. He taught general medicine and geriatrics at the University of Missouri at Kansas City College of Medicine, and he was medical director of the long-term care facility of the Truman Medical Center. On May 1, 1983, he resigned that employment to accept a position with a Health Maintenance Organization in Long Beach, California, as director training of geriatric medicine, with some patient care. Pursuant to that move he purchased a four bedroom ranch-style home in Long Beach. He testified that in the event of his death, he had made provisions that appellant would get that house and its contents, and appellant and he planned to move to it about August 20, 1983. Appellant filed her motion to modify the decree requesting permission to move the two children to California on May 24, 1983. The Long Beach home would have separate bedrooms for the children, a separate playroom building, a yard, a separate guest room, and a patio and grill in the back. Photographs show it to be a well-kept modern home.

[370]*370After Dr. Beard met the children he and appellant involved them in a number of social activities two or three weekends a month. They took them to Worlds of Fun, the Nelson Art Gallery, Swope Park, to dinner, and the children were participants in their wedding. He swam and played games with them, and he would read to them. Neither he nor appellant ever told the children to call him “Dad” or “Father”, and he was not trying to take their father’s place, or take them away from him. He testified that he loved the children and planned to make them a part of his life. They had never appeared to be mistreated or neglected; they were neat, clean, well dressed, healthy, mannerly and respectful, and minded appellant when she disciplined them. He observed the son’s poison ivy, which he testified is not ordinarily treated because it is self-limiting, and it was much worse when respondent returned him several weeks later, it having been treated with zinc oxide which makes it worse — it does not help. The best thing to do is to leave it open and bathe it frequently which was done after the children returned, and the condition improved. Dr. Beard had never bathed with the children and he thought it would be inappropriate to do so. There were appointments made with a pediatrics neurologist and a speech pathologist in the Long Beach area for the children following trial. Dr. Beard’s Long Beach home is in an area where professional people, physicians, attorneys, dentists, and people of that nature reside. The school system there is one of the best.

In support of her motion, appellant produced Dr. Roberta B. Hausman, a Ph.D. licensed to practice psychology in Missouri, with impressive professional credentials. She interviewed Dr. Beard for six hours and appellant for six hours on July 1, 1983, and a further two hour conference with them and the two children on July 7th. As to appellant, Dr. Hausman’s conclusions were that she was a woman with a very strong sense of responsibility for her children; somewhat dominant and self-assured; some insecurity about the custody fight; basic good health; socially active, reaching out to people; intelligence of a borderline genius level; some problem with anger, but tends to get over it rapidly; but basically, a very solid, very reliable human being.

Dr. Hausman concluded that Dr. Beard’s intelligence level was about the same as appellant’s, his strengths being complementary to hers. Both were extroverted and matched in neuroticism factors, and both had better than average common sense. There was no evidence that they would not be compatible.

On August 8, 1983, Dr. Hausman spent most of the day with the two children. She administered a series of psychological and intelligence tests to them, and found that their I.Q.s were in the very above average range. She observed an articulating speech problem with the son, indicating to her that minimal brain damage should be investigated, and she made appellant aware of that, and she did note that he had a problem with controlling his anger. Dr. Hausman asked the son if he was going to miss his daddy if he went to California, and he said “No”, and gave as a reason that he was not as kind as Bill (Dr. Beard). The son thought that Dr. Beard would make a good daddy because “he is nice and sweet”, gentle and loving. He did not think that he was too old. The son was very consistent, very strong, and very persuasive about wanting to be with his mother and Dr. Beard. The daughter expressed that Dr. Beard was nice and her father was okay, and her mother was nice. She did not think her other mom was nice and said that she did not like her. The daughter was asked, “ ‘Do you want to go with your father?’ And she said ‘no’. And I said, ‘Why?’ She said, ‘He is not that kind; he is not that nice.’ And she said, ‘Sometimes Mother gets angry at me for no reason but she is good, she loves me and I love her.’ ” During the interviews, the children were clean and neat, healthy looking and were appropriately dressed. They were very loving toward Dr. Beard during the interview, sitting on his lap, reaching for him and asking him questions. They had good [371]*371eye contact with him and with their mother. Both children were required to work with the father in his rehabilitation work on an old home in St.

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Bluebook (online)
684 S.W.2d 368, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warrington-v-warrington-moctapp-1984.