Affirming.
Appellee was granted a divorce from appellant in the year 1934. In that judgment appellee was denied alimony, because she had an estate of her own sufficient for her maintenance. An award of Fifty Dollars ($50) per month was entered against appellant, to be paid to appellee for the maintenance of their only child, who, at the time of the rendition of the judgment, was two and one-half years of age. The decree of the Chancellor was affirmed by this Court in an opinion rendered February 25, 1936, Beutel v. Beutel,
The correctness of the decree in raising the allowance for maintenance depends upon the evidence in respect to change of conditions. KRS 403.070; Boyers v. Boyers,
Although appellee's departure from Kentucky might be sufficient ground for modifying the decree in respect to reasonable visitations, it did not entitle appellant *Page 759
to have the decree set aside; especially in view of the fact that, although both he and his child have been living in Louisville since the divorce was decreed, he has made only two attempts to visit the child, and it does not appear that either of these were calls during the hours allocated to him by the Court. He admits that for the past several years he has neither communicated with the child nor made any endeavor to see her. Virtually all courts, in proper circumstances, will permit a child to be taken out of their jurisdiction; indeed, in the circumstances therein involved, such was permitted by this Court in Duncan v. Duncan,
The judgment is affirmed.