266 N.W. 331 | Mich. | 1936
This appeal is from a decree of divorce granted plaintiff upon charges of nonsupport, extreme cruelty and illicit relations. Considerable property of disputed value is involved, which the trial court divided between the parties, having in mind the needs of their three minor children.
Appellant questions the admissibility of certain testimony of plaintiff, tending to support the charge of illicit relations, which, if disregarded entirely, still leaves sufficient factual basis for the divorce decree upon the ground of nonsupport.
We are not inclined to substitute our views for those of the trial judge so far as the division of the property is concerned, nor do we feel that we can arrive at any better result. The court below aptly characterized the financial situation as a "bankrupt estate" and attempted to preserve a part of what might still be saved for the benefit of the children.
However, we do not feel that the property awarded to Mrs. Chadwick should be incumbered with a trust. The decree stated that the trust should continue until the minor children shall respectively *228 attain the age of 17. This real estate and the map business heretofore conducted by the defendant should be awarded to her as permanent alimony without any trust qualifications whatever and the decree below is so modified.
Despite our concurrence with the findings of the court, either in whole or in part, as to the material facts charged in the bill, we do not agree with the following:
"It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said defendant, Clifton W. Chadwick, on account of his past misconduct and immorality, may have the privilege of visiting said children only at such reasonable times and places as may be mutually agreeable to the parties hereto, but that he shall have the right to communicate with them by letter without interference on the part of the plaintiff."
Notwithstanding defendant's present incarceration, as the result of a criminal conviction, the law does not preclude repentance, reformation and forgiveness.
Furthermore, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12739, provides that:
"The court may, from time to time afterwards, on the petition of either of the parents, revise and alter such decree concerning the care, custody and maintenance of the children, or any of them and make a new decree concerning the same, as the circumstances of the parents, and the benefit of the children shall require."
The court should have exercised its statutory power to fix the time and place of the visits and in the future whenever circumstances require, upon proper proof, may change the conditions thereof.
"The rule is universal that a child of divorced parents is a ward of the court and that, in providing *229
for its care, custody, maintenance, and education, the paramount consideration shall be its welfare. To that welfare, the claims and personal rights and desires of the parents and even the wishes of the child must yield. Corrie v. Corrie,
"Access to the child by the parent denied custody is an important right. * * * That privilege is not an absolute right but one which must yield to the good of the child.Waldref v. Waldref,
In Schell v. Schell,
In the instant case the language of the decree leaves too much to whim and caprice. It should be modified, made clear and explicit on this question. The defendant may visit his minor children between the hours of 1 p. m. and 4 p. m. on the first Sunday of each calendar month unless the trial court may change the conditions of such visits in the future should circumstances require. With the foregoing modifications, the decree is affirmed, with costs to appellee.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, EDWARD M. SHARPE, POTTER, and TOY, JJ., concurred. *230