Court Opinion

ID: 7953073
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:38:56.145112+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:13.519466
License: Public Domain

Btjtzel, J.-
On December 23, 1947, in tbe divorce suit brought by Dorothy Jane Kennedy, plaintiff, against Robert H. Kennedy, defendant, on stipulation of parties, an order withdrawing defendant’s an*640swer was signed and filed and an interlocutory decree was entered awarding plaintiff a divorce from defendant. At the same time an order of reference was made to the friend of the court for taking of testimony in regard to the alimony and property. The calendar entry indicates that the friend of the court had made a previous report as to the custody of 2 minor children, both boys, one born July 30, 1942, and the other on November 16, 1943. A third child died several years before the suit was begun.
On June 16,' 1948, the court entered a decree nunc .pro tunc as of December 23, 1947. It was filed on June 22, 1948, and became final on June 23, 1948. The provisions of the decree were as follows: It gave plaintiff a divorce and the custody of the 2 minor children until they reach the age of 17 or until the further order of the court, subject, however, 'to a right of visitation, but giving plaintiff the right to take the children out of the State of Michigan, provided she reported to the friend of the court the addresses where the children were staying. Defendant was ordered to pay the friend of the court for the plaintiff the sum of $25 a week for the support of each child, and to pay plaintiff $5,000 as a property settlement, he havjng a net equity valued at $10,000 in a house purchased with his funds. Further details appear in the record on file in this Court in Kennedy v. Kennedy, 325 Mich 613, referred to herein as the original divorce case.
On June 15,1948, defendant by new counsel moved to set aside the stipulation and order withdrawing answer which preceded the interlocutory decree of December 23, 1947. The motion was denied on June .22, 1948. On July 6, 1948, 14 days after the final decree was entered, defendant filed a claim of appeal.
On Spetember 8, 1949, we held in 325 Mich 613, that the record showed neither jurisdiction nor cruelty. The difficulty arose through the neglect to *641make the proper and necessary showing in a pro confesso divorce case. The decree was reversed, the case remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings, and defendant was permitted to contest the granting of a divorce. In the opinion we referred to the fact that the plaintiff married 4 days after June 23, 1948, when the decree by its terms became effective, and had taken the 2 children with her to Trinidad, British West Indies, outside the jurisdiction of the United States and of this Court.
Upon the remanding of the case, defendant filed a cross bill charging plaintiff with neglect of the children, with extravagance, intoxication, and principally, with her living in a married state in Trinidad with Mr. X, whom she married before the time to appeal from the decree had expired, in fact, only 10 days before an appeal was taken. Mr. X was later identified as Mr. Morrow. An answer to the cross bill denying all charges therein was filed. Plaintiff also filed an amended bill charging defendant with extreme cruelty consisting of excessive and unreasonable demands for cohabitation and contrary to the order of her physician forbidding it, because of a physical breakdown while carrying her first baby; that she was refused medical care which she was in need of after having given birth to 3 children in 3 years; with cruelty and indifference toward the children; with intoxication on frequent occasions; penuriousness; inadequate support forcing her to do sewing for others to obtain money and remaking worn clothes for herself; and, after their separation, with vile and abusive curses and threats. We shall not elaborate on the charges and counter charges appearing in a record of 660 pages. Suffice it to say that the testimony disclosed that defendant was guilty of extreme cruelty, as found by the trial judge.
*642Defendant contends that plaintiff’s actions subsequent to the first decree constitute extreme cruelty, but disclaims any other reflections upon her conduct in that respect. Plaintiff, before marrying Mr. Morrow, consulted a judge in California who told her that she could remarry at that time. She appears to have done so in good faith. She subsequently returned to Michigan with her 2 sons, but after the first decree was reversed, she again took .the children to Trinidad in November, 1949. Plaintiff testified that she went back to Trinidad partly because the older boy had suffered most severely from asthma and that he was free from it in Trinidad, his general health having noticeably improved. She also testified that while in Trinidad she earned a living working in a dress shop and also in radio work which is not available to her in the United ■States; that she returned to Morrow’s apartment only as a temporary measure as she was unable to find other suitable lodgings in Trinidad; that she and Morrow conducted themselves properly during the latter sojourn in Trinidad. Disinterested witnesses also testified that she always conducted herhelf properly during this time. The trial court so found, notwithstanding the testimony of one “investigator” whom the court did not believe. We shall not disturb its finding. It is fully supported by the testimony.
We conclude, therefore, that the divorce was propferly granted to plaintiff. An independent examination of the record shows that a reconciliation is almost impossible.
:' The trial court in its second decree decreased the award to plaintiff from $5,000 to $1,000 for property settlement and alimony. Plaintiff is clearly entitled to this amount.
The most important question is the custody of the-2 minor children and what is best for them. In the *643first decree, the trial judge held that plaintiff might remove them from its jurisdiction by notifying the friend of the court. In the present decree, the court ordered that this could only be done with the permission of the court or agreement of the parties. He gave defendant and cross-complainant the right of visitation and temporary custody of the children for a period not to exd'ééd 6 weeks during the months of July and August. Otherwise plaintiff was given the custody ’of the children and defendant and'' crósspláintiff was ordered to pay the friend of the court the sum of $12.50 a week for each child and after 3 years the sum of $15 a week for each child. These provisions are proper. The plaintiff has always been a good mother and devoted to the children. She has looked after their secular and religious education, and kept them well cared for. The defendant and cróss-plaintiff has shown a certain amount of indifference towards the children, as particularly shown by the motions made in this Court, for he did not take advantage of the opportunity of taking the children for a protracted period during the summer, of 1951 when they were offered him, nor did he observe their birthdays or Christmas after the parties were separated.
The children were given the name of Morrow when they were taken to Trinidad. Since their return to Michigan, they have been enrolled in school under the name of Kennedy and are so known. We have béen assured at the oral argument that there will be no further attempt to change their name. The court retains its jurisdiction to determine what is best for the children during their minority. .
The decree is affirmed, but without costs.
North, C. J., and. Dethmers, Carr, Btjshnell, Sharpe, Boyles, and Reid, JJ., concurred.