Although the Chancery suit seeking a divorce was filed by Dorothy Drewry, and her husband, Walter, was willing that the decree be granted, each sought custody of Peggy Jo — born in June 1943, while the father was with the armed forces overseas.
Dorothy and Walter were married in May 1941 and lived tpgether nearly thirteen months before he enlisted. While serving in New Zealand and other Pacific areas communication with Dorothy was interrupted, although there is testimony that during the first few months of separation she wrote four or five times a week. For a short period after enlisting Walter was stationed at Ft. Oglethorpe, Georgia, where Dorothy and Walter’s mother saw him. This was the last time husband and wife were together until November 9, 1945, Walter having sailed June 6, 1943. Thirteen days later Peggy Jo was horn. Dorothy was then living with Mr. and Mrs. G. 0. Drewry at Osceola. They are Walter’s mother and father.
When the child was four or five months old Dorothy left it with Walter’s parents and procured employment at the Blytheville Air Base. She was then drawing an “allotment” of $80 per month and claims to have paid Mrs. Drewry $30 per month for taking care of the baby. The grandparents contend that when Dorothy took the position at Blytheville she told them to keep the baby— she wanted them to have it “as their own.” This is disputed.
Before the war Walter was a telegraph operator and was stationed at Turrell, Ark., when he and Dorothy married. At the time the divorce action was tried he was employed at Aliceville, Alabama. In the meantime his father, a section foreman for the St. Louis, San Francisco Railroad, had moved with his wife to Portageville, Mo. None of the testimony reflects upon the character of 'Walter’s parents.
Testimony relating to essential facts is not contradictory in any sweeping sense, although the construction each principal places upon it obviously serves self-interest. Emphasis by witnesses follows the usual pattern of cases similar to this.
Walter says that news of the baby’s birth reached him at Yeti Vuvu Island in a message from his father February 10, 1943, and three weeks later his wife’s letter came. For a short period he was in a casualty camp at Leyte, one of the Philippine Islands where some of the hardest fighting in the Pacific occurred.
After Dorothy started to work at the Air Base her letters contained references to matters not compatible with assurances formerly made, and finally infrequency of communication and unfounded accusations convinced Walter that something was wrong. Even so, according to Walter’s version of the relationship, he determined to make the best of it, thinking that with his return to Blytheville and a resumption of the marital status they would be able to maintain unity as a family.
Upon arriving in California October 23,1945, Walter telegraphed Dorothy, mentioning the day he expected to arrive at Blytheville, and asking her to meet him with the baby he had not seen. In making this request he reiterated what he had said to Dorothy when he left her in 1943 for an undisclosed destination and an unforeseeable destiny. . . .
When Walter reached Portageville and went to his father’s home at four o’clock in the morning, the baby was with its grandparents, but Dorothy was not. He then went to the Blytheville residence of Mrs. J. W. Wright, where Dorothy boarded. Mrs. Wright’s daughter testified that during the two-year period Dorothy roomed at her mother's, Dorothy consistently kept engagements with men, one of whom was “Bob.”1 Walter had testified that Dorothy mentioned “Bob” in her letters after she became remiss as a correspondent.
Following conversations with Mrs. Wright, Walter left, bnt returned at 1:30 a. m. From a distance he saw Dorothy get ont of a car bearing a Missouri license. The “fellow” drove off before any words were spoken, and Dorothy went into the house. At first she refused to see appellee, but later the two went to a cafe. When Walter received no encouragement, they returned to the Wright home, where the husband says he stood in front of the house “. . '. and cried and begged her to come on and live with me so we could make a home for the baby, that we were the ones to rear it, but she replied, ‘You can take the baby and go to hell with it’ ”. Continuing the testimony, the witness said: “I then asked, ‘Are you completely through with both of us?’, and she said, ‘Yes, hell yes’ Walter’s testimony relating to a subsequent effort at reconciliation is printed in the footnote.2
Dorothy denied most of the things Walter says she told him, and she heatedly resented the inference of improper conduct with Lawrence. The only admission in this respect was that “Bob”, as a friend, had driven her to and from work for several months.
In an amendment to her divorce action — filed December 8, 1945 — Dorothy alleged three years of separation without cohabitation, and in her testimony contended that time ran from the date she left the home of Walter’s parents in September 1944. In a former pleading the allegation was that separation took place May 26, 1942— the day Walter left for Ft. Oglethorpe. Undisputed proof is that at the time Dorothy later asserted the separation occurred, the young couple fondly embraced and expressed words of endearment.
While the suit was pending, Dorothy went to Port-ageville and arbitrarily assumed custody of the child. For a time it was kept with Dorothy’s sister who operates-a liquor Store for her husband. The husband was addicted to drink, at times became boisterous, and husband and wife were not congenial.
Seemingly, in an effort to offset environmental inferences and the suggestion even a lawfully conducted liquor store was not an appropriate place for Peggy Jo, Dorothy procured employment as a beauty shoppe operator, rented an apartment, and undertook to care for the child by taking it to work with her, or sometimes employing another to assist.
None of the witnesses thought the arrangements made by Dorothy were conducive to juvenile welfare; nor does it appear that Walter is in a position to bestow upon the child the attention it deserves. The record does not show that the mother was immoral, nor was she without maternal love. Perhaps apparent necessity caused her at' times to choose the easier way — a way not best for Peggy Jo. But, in so far as his baby is concerned, Walter has never had a chance. A volunteer in his. country’s service, a private serving nearly half the earth’s girdle away from home, he was honorably discharged only to find that, without fault of his own, some intervening intangible had made shipwreck of his plans for home and family.
Dorothy’s only complaint is predicated upon the oft-repeated assertion that Walter was a mother’s boy, completely under the domination of the parent, to the exclusion of the consideration to which she was personally entitled. She was not willing to experience inconveniences, a measure of comparative poverty, and lonely rural life during the period "Walter followed the flag.
The decree of divorce was granted on Walter’s cross-' complaint, based upon a finding that Dorothy had deserted him.
After hearing evidence copied in more than 250 pages of typewritten matter, the Chancellor concluded that Walter was entitled to custody of Peggy Jo during nine months of each year, and that Dorothy should have her for three months. We are not willing to say the result of this decree is not a just determination of the issues; but we would emphasize what the trial Court must have had in mind; that is, that the child should be kept by the grandparents, with appropriate guarantee for surrender of custody during the annual periods expressed in Dorothy’s behalf. The cause is remanded for a supplemental order to this effect, but in other respects the decree is affirmed.
1 Walter Drewry testified that when he went to. Mrs. Wright’s 9, Wright said to him, “Son, I don’t intend to tell you a lie, because I have a daughter of my own; your wife has been going, and is still going, with a fellow by the name of Robert Lawrence, of Steele, Missouri.” (It was shown, that Lawrence was “a family man” — presumptively married, but separated from his wife.)
The testimony was: “I went hack to see her the next night. I got there about 6:30 and knocked on the door. Just as I knocked the telephone rang. Mrs. Wright started to answer it, but Dorothy said she would answer it. She was all dressed up to go out. Í said ‘Dorothy, I would like to talk with you.’ She said she didn’t care anything about seeing me, that the answer was given last night ‘and it still stands.’ I told her I came back to ask her to live with me so we could make a home for the baby. She said she didn’t care any more about the baby than she did for me. I told her we could make a good home for the baby if we were both willing, and I told her I was willing and that I wanted us to live together and make a home for the baby. She said she had to leave, so I left and caught a bus back to Portageville.”