Opinion
The appellant (father) appeals from orders of the superior court granting certain specified visitation privileges to the respondents (grandparents) of the minor child.
Custody of the minor child, Benjamin, had been awarded jointly to the parents and the actual physical custody to the maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Curl, at the time of the divorce in February 1964. The mother of the child had suffered from a mental illness for some time and was unable to care for the child. Benjamin had been residing with the grandparents since September 1961, and continued to do so until November 1966.
In August 1966 appellant filed a petition for change of custody of the minor child. A stipulation was entered into between the appellant (father) and defendant (mother) and the respondents (grandparents), through their attorneys, whereby it was agreed that the actual physical custody would be in the appellant, with rights of reasonable visitation to the grandparents.
In October 1966 an order modifying the judgment pursuant to this stipulation was entered. On June 3, 1968 on motion of the grandparents, the trial court entered an order granting the grandparents the right “to a visitation of Benjamin at the home of petitioners in Ohio during the month of July 1968. . . .” The order also provided in part as follows: “It is further ordered that in addition to the foregoing, at least once during each winter or spring vacation, upon prearrangement, the petitioners may visit said minor in California and have him with them for a period not exceeding three days.”
On July 17, 1968 an order was entered changing the time of the Ohio visit from the month of July to the period, August 1 to August 30, 1968. The appellant has appealed from the June 3, 1968 and the July 17, 1968 orders.
The briefs of the appellant and respondents are devoted to the propriety of the orders as they relate to the visitation in Ohio during the months of *222 July and August 1968. Whether or not the child made the trip to Ohio in 1968 is not clear but obviously there is nothing this court can do about the visit now and that issue is moot. The order of June 3, 1968, however, does contain the provision relative to the grandparents visiting in California and having the child with them for a period not exceeding three days. This part of the order is still effective and the contentions of appellant, as they relate to it, will be considered.
The appellant contends that the court was without jurisdiction to enter the order of June 3, 1968. With the issue of the out-of-state visitation rights now being moot, this case is very similar to
Benner
v.
Benner,
In the present case Benjamin lived with the grandparents for over five years. The right to reasonable visitation was granted to the grandparents by stipulation at the same hearing at which appellant , was granted *223 custody. The court, in effect, found in making the order that it was for the best interest and welfare of the child. In light of Benner the court clearly had jurisdiction of the appellant and the child (the grandparents had submitted to the jurisdiction of the court) and the provisions of the order granting rights of visitation within California to the grandparents was proper.
The appellant’s contention that the stipulation in the present case “was between Appellant, the husband, and Defendant, the wife” is without merit. This contention ignores the fact that Mr. and Mrs. Curl are specifically mentioned in the stipulation, the stipulation is signed by two attorneys on behalf of the grandparents and is also signed by Robert S. Curl. The fact that the court’s order of October 26, 1966 states “Pursuant to stipulation of the parties . . .” does not exclude the Curls.
Stipulations are to be given a reasonable interpretation, just as in other contractual matters.
(Estate of Howe,
The clear language of the stipulation refutes appellant’s contention that the stipulation was only between Daniel and Rhoda Bookstein. It is also obvious that when the court issued the order modifying the judgment, pursuant to the stipulation of the parties, the term “of the parties” referred to the parties to the stipulation, including respondents Mr. and Mrs. Curl, and not merely the parties to the divorce action, i.e., Daniel and Rhoda Bookstein.
Appellant further contends that there is no substantial evidence to support the orders. Appellant contends that the evidence strongly shows that the home environment of respondents was unhealthy for a child. Respondents contend that the factual issue before the court was whether visitation in their home was for the best interest and welfare of the child and that there is evidence to support the trial court’s determination that “the mental health of the child will be better, knowing that he is part of a family even if he has infrequent contacts with them” and that no emotional harm resulted from the child’s last visit with respondents.
The court is guided by what it thinks will be in the best interest of the child. (See, e.g.,
Brasher
v.
Brasher,
This court was pleased to note, in appellant’s brief, that Mrs. Bookstein, appellant’s wife, stated on direct examination “I have no objection to them visiting at our house or near our house with Benji. We’d like to establish a grandparent and family relationship with them.”
The other contentions of the appellant relate to the order of July 17, 1968 or the visitation to Ohio, so need not be discussed.
The appeal from the orders of June 3, 1968 and July 17, 1968, so far as they relate to the visitation of the minor child to the State of Ohio in 1968, is dismissed. The remainder of the orders is affirmed.
Draper, P. J., and Brown (H. C.), J., concurred.
