McKissick v. McKissick

Argued September 30, affirmed Oetober 14, 1919.

On the Merits.

(184 Pac. 272.)

BURNETT, J.

4. Notwithstanding the contention of the defendant, this is an appealable order, a& held in another feature of this same case reported, ante, p. 644 (174 Pac. 721). The court had jurisdiction of the persons and subject matter involved in this suit and rendered a decree respecting the custody of the child. This was final and conclusive as to all matters occurring before the rendition of the decree, for Section 756, L. O. L., speaking of the decree of a court having jurisdiction as aforesaid, says:

“In case of a judgment, decree or order against a specific thing, or in respect to, the probate of a will or the administration of the estate of a deceased person, or in respect to the personal, political or legal condition or relation of- a particular person, the judgment, decree or order is conclusive upon the title to the thing, the will or administration, or the condition or relation of the person.”

Nevertheless, as stated by Mr. Chief Justice Moore in Gibbons v. Gibbons, 75 Or. 500 (147 Pac. 530):

“The welfare of these infants is paramount to the rights of any person. * * The court granting the decree of divorce is authorized to modify it at any time so as to provide for the care, custody and support of the minors, and may impose such burden upon either ór both parties to the suit.”

5. The motion before us is in the nature of a new proceeding based necessarily upon matters occurring since the former decree. We cannot, in the absence of an appeal, go behind the former adjudication and make gleanings from the evidence upon which the suit was there determined or the custody of the child adjudicated. The court then determined, with the evidence before it, that considering the best interests of the child the mother was the proper custodian and that *650she was best fitted for that purpose. If the defendant would procure a new adjudication on that subject, different from the former one, he must assume the burden and show either that the plaintiff is not a suitable custodian of her own child, or that the best interest of the latter requires that it§ care and custody be given to him. In other words, the burden is upon him to disturb the status established by the original decree.

In his affidavit supporting his motion he says that the plaintiff took the child to Ashland but that he has no knowledge about what disposition was made of it or in whose keeping it has been placed. He then states that about January 1, 1918, the plaintiff returned to Portland and since about the twentieth of that month has been living and cohabiting with one Frank W. Moore, 'as husband and wife, residing at 358 Thirteenth Street in that city. He alleges upon information and belief that the plaintiff and Moore are husband and wife and that Moore is able to care for and support her. Further deposing on information and belief, he avers that the plaintiff has abandoned the child and has shown by her acts since the filing of the decree that she is not a fit person to have the custody of the child; and, lastly, that he himself is ready, able and willing to support it. He then produces the affidavit of Mrs. Rankin, the keeper of the rooming-house at the address named, to the effect that about January 20, 1918, a man and woman giving the name of Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Moore and representing themselves to be husband and wife, rented a single room with but one bed and were registered in a book kept by the affiant as a register of all tenants, and that they occupied said room continuously until March 12th. She further relates in substance that on the last-named date someone inquired by telephone for Mrs. Moore, whom *651she. called from her room to the telephone; that later in the afternoon three men called and inquired for Mrs. Moore and she let them inspect the register referred to. Then one of the men, who introduced himself as Mr. McKissick, produced two photographs of the woman, which she recognized as pictures of Mrs. Moore.

Douglas Lawson gave his affidavit to. the affect that on March 12th he inquired hy telephone for Mrs. Moore and when she came to the instrument speaking, he recognized the voice as that of the plaintiff, Mrs. McKissick. He further states that afterwards on the same date the defendant and he met the plaintiff, whereupon the former addressed her as “Mrs. Moore” and she replied, “I am not Mrs. Moore. I am Mrs. McKissick.” He also narrates the circumstance of going to the rooming-house and his conversation, and the exhibition of the photographs as stated.

Another affiant gives a statement about the interview with Mrs. Rankin and the inspection.of the register. There are other affidavits about inquiring of other individuals for the address of Mr. and Mrs. Moore, and information given in answer to such inquiry although not in the presence of the parties. An insurance agent deposes about the application of Frank W. Moore for insurance, representing himself to be a married man, residing at the address of Thirteenth Street.

The plaintiff filed her counter-affidavit, denying categorically that she had ever occupied any room with Moore or cohabited with him at any time or place. She complains that almost continually since they separated, and ever since the divorce, the defendant has followed and annoyed her so that she was compelled to change her place of residence and that on account *652of being afraid of him she bad some of her fellow-employees accompany her and also bad Moore act as her escort on numerous occasions. She says that her friends frequently gave false addresses respecting her residence when be would inquire of them for her. In substance she says the arrangements for the room on Thirteenth Street were made for the purpose of throwing the defendant off her track and that she never gave any other name than McKissick except as a ruse to elude him. She states that the defendant has never inquired concerning the child, has never shown any interest whatever in her and that during all the child’s life the plaintiff’s parents and herself have had the entire care and custody of the infant. The plaintiff claims that when she came to Portland she did not know how long she would remain, and that owing to her ill health she has not been able to spare the money to bring the child to Portland, and consequently she left her with her father and mother until she could decide what she should do.

Another affiant speaks very highly of the plaintiff’s parents and of their ability to take care of the child, whom they have had almost all of her life. She speaks in the warmest terms of the plaintiff’s attachment to the child and of the plaintiff’s good character.

Moore states that he made the application for insurance at the request of the defendant himself and that it was a fake application. He expresses contrition for his dissimulation in the matter and states that as soon as the plaintiff began her work at the Hazel-wood store the defendant began shadowing the place and followed and accosted the plaintiff on the streets, frequently stopping and annoying her, so that to avoid him she often had some of -the girls, her fellow-employes, to accompany her. The defendant never re*653ferred to the child or inquired about its welfare. Moore denies that he ever cohabited with or stayed at the room of the plaintiff and say's that he never knew her to conduct herself otherwise than as a true and virtuous woman. He says that for some time from January 20th he was confined to his home at 427 Salmon Street by an attack of fever. In this he is corroborated by the owner of the Salmon Street address, who declares that Moore had not resided at any other address during the time mentioned in the affidavit of Mrs. Eankin.

Mrs. Eankin supplies an affidavit on behalf of the plaintiff, denying that she kept a register at her house. She declares that she supposed that matter had been stricken from her affidavit which she was asked to sign on behalf of the defendant; that Moore was on the premises only a few times after renting the room and that she knew Mrs. McKissick was ill for some time while rooming there. This is substantially the showing made in the matter before us.

6. We remember as the cardinal principle that the best interest and welfare of the child are paramount to the rights or privileges even of the parents. By innuendo the defendant charges his forfaer wife, the-mother of his child, with unchaste conduct. He does not pretend to give evidence of any act in -flagrante delicto. The landlady, it is true, says that Moore and a woman represented as his wife occupied her room from January to March. The effect of that affidavit is greatly weakened by the subsequent declaration of the same affiant, denying important statements made therein. Moreover, both Moore and the plaintiff deny any meretricious relations between them. The plaintiff had divorced the defendant and owed him no duty. *654She had a right to keep company with Moore and to receive his legitimate attention. From the weight of the testimony, we conclude that it is much such a case as described by Mr. Justice McBride in Matthews v. Matthews, 60 Or. 451 (119 Pac. 766), thus:

“It appears that the plaintiff is not an adultress and that she is a woman of good moral character who has been guilty of certain indiscreet conduct which age and experience will no doubt correct.”

7. So far as the custody of the child is concerned, the decree has given it to the plaintiff. She is not bound to have it in her arms or by her side continuously. She is within her rights and duty if she provides for it a suitable home and surroundings. There is no dispute that she has done this in leaving the child with its grandparents, who have had the care of it almost its entire life. The defendant, although the affidavits on his side of the case describe him as a clean, moral and truthful gentleman, fit and proper to have the care and custody of his minor child, has not shown that he could do better than to leave it in the care of some other person. It cannot, be said that the plaintiff has abandoned the child. Even if the defendant had the little one, it might become necessary to send her to some boarding-school or to place her in some family where she could have the benefit of home surroundings. It seems that the plaintiff found it necessary to take employment to support herself, and it is far better for the interest of the child that it should be with its own people, who know it so well, than to be a burden' upon its mother for its personal care, much to the detriment of both mother and child.

8. The defendant, who is the moving party, has not. shown that the mother is unfit to have the care of the *655child, or that the latter’s condition would be improved over its present surroundings.

The court was right in denying the motion and its decree is affirmed.

Affirmed.

McBride, C. J., and Benson and Harris, JJ., concur.