191 S.W.2d 92 | Tex. App. | 1945
J. R. Spell was granted a decree of divorce from Virginia Spell in the district court of Orange County in September, 1943. In that judgment the custody of their daughter Barbara Ann, who was then seven years of age, was given to Mrs. Lucille Morris of Orange County, the aunt of said child. In the judgment the court further ordered that "the child be permitted to visit its mother, Virginia, during the summer months of each year when she is not attending school." In June, 1945, J. R. Spell and Mrs. Lucille Morris, joined by her husband, Herman Morris, residents of Orange County, Texas, filed a motion in the same cause in the district court of Orange County, complaining of Virginia Spell, who had remarried and was now Virginia Spell Green, the wife of Robert Green, alleged to reside in Cass County, Texas, and in the motion alleged that since the date of the judgment the child had been constantly under the care of a physician, and was at the time of the filing of the motion receiving special treatment from the doctors to overcome a nervous condition. They prayed that the court "reopen and reform the judgment in the case of J. R. Spell v. Virginia Spell and place the full custody and control of said child in Mrs. Lucille Morris, petitioner. Virginia Spell Green, and her husband Robert Green, filed their plea of privilege, alleging that they did not reside in Orange County, Texas, but resided in Cass County, Texas, that no exceptions to exclusive venue in the county of one's residence provided by law existed in said cause. J. R. Spell filed a controverting plea in which he simply alleged that the district court of Orange County had exclusive venue and jurisdiction over the suit, that by virtue of the judgment of that court it acquired jurisdiction over the custody of the minor, and that "the custody and control of this child can not be taken from beyond the jurisdiction of this court." The motion, the plea of privilege and the controverting affidavit were all verified. On July 2, 1945, the plea of privilege was heard by the court and overruled, and from the order overruling such plea Virginia Spell Green has perfected her appeal.
On the hearing, it was stipulated that Virginia Spell Green and her husband were not residents of Orange County, Texas, nor of the First Judicial District of Texas; that all parties were present in court; that the child was in the care and custody of Mrs. Mary Lucille Morris in Orange County, Texas. The only testimony introduced on the hearing was that of Mrs. Morris who testified that she lived *93 in Orange County, Texas; that the child was living with her in Orange on June 6, 1945; that the child was placed in her custody by the district court of Orange County; that she had had custody of the child two years except for the summer months of 1944 when she went with her mother.
It is noted that the original divorce decree gave the care, custody and control of the child Barbara Ann to its aunt, Mrs. Lucille Morris, and that the decree also provided that the child be permitted to visit its mother during the summer months. It is seen that by the terms of the decree custody of the child was given to the aunt, Mrs. Morris, and that the only right the mother, Virginia Spell, had was that "the child be permitted to visit its mother during the summer months, etc.," with the right also to visit the child at reasonable times. At the time the motion was filed the child was in Orange County with her aunt. Under Lakey v. McCarroll,
The order of the trial court overruling the plea of privilege is reversed, and the case *94 is remanded with instructions that the plea of privilege be sustained and that the motion to change judgment be transferred to the district court of Cass County, Texas, for disposition.