Case ID: ark_256/html/0958-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Lyle Brown, Justice.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Dorothy EDGIL v. Roy Russell RAGSDILL Sr.
    74-65
    511 S.W. 2d 625
    Opinion delivered July 15, 1974
    
      Sarver <2? Scott by Bob Scott, for appellant.
    
      
      Gibson, Gibson & Gibson, Howell, Price, Howell & Barron by F. J. Howell, Jr., for appellee.
   Lyle Brown, Justice.

There are two issues on this appeal. The chancellor held that upon the death of the parent having custody of a minor child the court lost jurisdiction to make further orders relative to custody. The other issue stems from the denial of an attorney’s fee. In that connection the wife filed a second petition for divorce and before summons was served on the husband, the wife died. The wife’s attorney filed a petition for attorney’s fee for services respecting the second petition and the court held that its jurisdiction terminated with the death of the wife.

On December 12, 1972, the chancellor entered a decree on the petition of Roy Russell Ragsdill, Sr., and the counterclaim of Martha Kathryn Ragsdill. The decree denied a divorce to either party. Custody of a minor child, James Thomas Ragsdill, a mongoloid, was awarded the mother together with support money. The wife was given possession of the homestead in Little Rock, along with household furnishings. The wife’s attorney was awarded a fee of $1,000 plus $231.30 costs incurred.

One year later the wife filed a new petition for divorce in the same case alleging adultery. She died in about ten days after the filing. Shortly thereafter, Dorothy Edgil, appellant here, filed a petition to intervene, seeking custody of the then minor child and support money. The petitioner is an aunt of the child. The chancellor dismissed the petition to intervene on the ground that the court lost jurisdiction upon the death of the mother. Appellant’s single point for reversal is the alleged error in dismissing her petition.

The other principal point concerns the denial of an attorney’s fee to attorney Bob Scott. Shortly after the death of Martha Kathryn Ragsdill, Mr. Scott filed his petition for an attorney’s fee. The petition recited that Mr. Scott represented the mother continuously since the entry of the decree in 1972 until her death in 1973; that he spent a considerable amount of time in consultation with the mother; and that he had spent considerable funds for a private investigator preparatory to filing the second petition for divorce on grounds of adultery. The court denied that petition on the theory that it lost jurisdiction upon the death of Martha Kathryn Ragsdill.

Upon the death of the custodial parent we conclude that the chancery court lost jurisdiction to make further orders in the divorce and custody case concerning the custody of the child. Appellant filed her petition in the case styled Ragsdill v. Ragsdill, which was the divorce and custody case. We gather from undisputed statements in the briefs that Dorothy Edgil is a resident of Alabama; that the mongoloid child is living with her; and that Roy Russell Ragsdill, Sr., is a resident of Pulaski County. The action in which Dorothy Edgil filed her petition was in a suit in Jefferson County. The facts recited establish a practical reason for the law which we follow in disposing of the first point.

The nearest case in point cited by appellant is Brown v. Brown, 218 Ark. 624, 238 S.W. 2d 482 (1951). In fact Brown is cited by both parties to support their respective positions. In that case the mother was granted custody of the three minor children. Upon her death the husband sought modification of the custody award. The trial court entertained the petition and made an award, dividing the custody, two children to the father and the youngest child to an uncle and aunt. We reversed, placing custody of the three children in the father. It is clear to us in Brown that the jurisdiction of the court over the father’s petition for modification was not challenged. In the case before us, jurisdiction of the trial court was attacked on the specific ground that the trial court had lost jurisdiction upon the death of the custodial parent. In the case before us, and particularly in the light of the undisputed facts we have recited, we think the majority rule as stated in 39 ALR 2d, p. 278, § 7 (a) is decisive. There it is stated that when the custody of children is awarded in a divorce and custody decree and the custodial parent dies, “the custody provisions of the decree ordinarily come to an end, of necessity and because intended to operate only as between the parents (see § 3, supra), [and] it would seem that ordinarily upon such death occuring the jurisdiction of the divorce court to provide, in the divorce suit, for the custody of the children must also terminate. In fact that clearly is the majority view, notwithstanding the usual statutory provisions to the effect that the divorce court may change its custody provisions from time to time as circumstances require.”

Nothing we have said would prevent the filing of a custody proceeding in a court of competent jurisdiction.

In respect to the second point — the application for a fee by the attorney for the deceased wife — we must hold that the chancellor was correct in denying the fee on the ground that it had lost jurisdiction. 27A C.J.S. Divorce § 226. It should be remembered that the wife’s second petition for divorce had not proceeded beyond the filing of a complaint and a general denial. In fact there was no service of summons on the husband until after the wife’s death. In support of the general statement of law from C.J.S. we find such cases as Greer v. Greer, (Col. 1942), 130 P. 2d 1050; Sutphen v. Sutphen, (N.J. 1928), 142 A. 817; Rosenhouse v. Ever, (Fla. 1963), 150 So. 2d 732; Fitzgerald v. Williams, (D.C. 1961), 170 A. 2d 777.

Affirmed.