Court Opinion

ID: 1320546
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:28:10.974668+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:33:31.764953
License: Public Domain

602 P.2d 1127 (1979)
43 Or.App. 379
Pauline G. DOWHANIK, Respondent,
v.
Marvin DOWHANIK, Appellant.
No. 78-5436; CA 14711.
Court of Appeals of Oregon.
Argued and Submitted October 26, 1979.
Decided November 26, 1979.
*1128 Stephen J.R. Shepard, Lane County Legal Aid Service, Eugene, argued the cause and filed the brief for appellant.
No appearance for respondent.
Before BUTTLER, P.J., and GILLETTE and ROBERTS, JJ.
BUTTLER, Presiding Judge.
This is a proceeding brought under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, ORS 109.700 to 109.930. The father filed a petition asking the Oregon court to exercise its jurisdiction, and to modify the 1973 North Dakota decree, which dissolved the parties' marriage, by changing the custody of one of the children of the parties from the mother to the father. The trial court "declined" jurisdiction. The father appeals. We reverse and remand.
In Smith and Smith, 40 Or. App. 257, 259, 594 P.2d 1292, 1294 (1979), we emphasized that
"When a petition is filed under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act to modify the custody decree of a court of another state two separate and distinct questions are presented which must be resolved in order: (1) does the Oregon court have jurisdiction under the Act, and (2) if so, should the Oregon court exercise its jurisdiction. Settle and Settle, 276 Or. 759, 764-65, 556 P.2d 962 (1976), Williams v. Zacher, 35 Or. App. 129, 581 P.2d 91 (1978). * * *"
In this case, as in Smith, the trial court had sufficient information to determine that Oregon may exercise jurisdiction, but not enough to determine whether Oregon should do so.
Oregon may exercise jurisdiction because, at the time of commencement of this proceeding, this state was the "home state" of the child, who had lived in Oregon with his father for more than a year. ORS 109.730(1)(a); 109.710(5).
However, on the record made before the trial court, the court should have gone no further than to determine that Oregon has jurisdiction: it needed more information to decide whether it should exercise its jurisdiction, a decision which turns on the best interest of the child. Smith and Smith, supra, 40 Or. App. at 261, 594 P.2d 1292. We reverse and remand so that the court may obtain the needed information, noting, as we did in Smith, that the Act authorizes the use of a variety of procedures for gathering the information, including the taking of testimony in another state. ORS 109.880, 109.890.
Reversed and remanded.