439 S.W.2d 290 | Ark. | 1969
This is a petition filed by the appellant, Shirley Grumlin, against her former husband, the appellee Janies Gray, by which Mrs. Grumlin seeks to regain the custody of their four children. Three of the children are girls, the oldest now being fourteen years old. The youngest child is a boy of seven. Mrs. Grumlin appeals from an order by which the chancellor refused to disturb an earlier order vesting custody in the father.
Our review of the record convinces us that the preponderance of the testimony is clearly in Mrs. Grumlin’s favor. Inasmuch as our decision in this case is not apt to be of marked value as a precedent, no two child custody cases being alike, we shall not attempt to narrate all the facts in detail.
The original divorce decree is not in the record. It appears, however, that the appellant was awarded the divorce in the State of Texas in 1963. The decree vested the custody of all four children in the mother. The father, either then or later on, was directed to pay $25 a week for the support of the children.
After the divorce proceeding the appellant moved to California with the children. For some time she supported the children herself, with practically no assistance from the appellee. In December of 1965, however, the appellant was afflicted with a serious disease and was no longer able to work. She had no recourse except to send the children to their father in Fort Smith, Arkansas, bat she explained in a letter to Gray that she was not giving up the children permanently and wanted to have them hack if she should regain her health and he able to take care of them.
After the children arrived in Fort Smith the appellee went to the chancello]' and obtained an order terminating his obligation to make support payments. In the same order the court, without notice to the mother, vested the custody of the children in the father. We mention the fact that there has apparently never been any judicial finding that Mrs. Grumlin is unfit to have the children in her care.
By 1967 Mrs. Grumlin liad married her present husband, had completely recovered from her illness, and had begun her efforts to regain the children. For a year or so she lived in Ohio, but her former husband was not co-operative either in permitting her to communicate' with the children or in facilitating her efforts to have them visit her. Eventually Mr. and Mrs. Grumlin moved to Fort Smith, where they apparently intend to make their permanent home. Upon the record there can be no serious suggestion that Mrs. Grumlin has abandoned her children or that her steadfast devotion to them has wavered.
At the hearing in the court below the proof indicated that it is to the best, interest of the children that their custody be transferred to their mother. The children have not fared too well while they have lived with their father and his present wife. The home, is cramped for space. Both Mr. and Mrs. Gray are employed. The four youngsters are looked after during the day by the present Mrs. Gray’s two children by a former marriage, neither of whom seems to be an ideal person to stay with the young Grays. The Gray children are also decidedly in need of dental care, one of them having eleven cavities in her teeth at the time of the hearing.
Mrs. Grumlin lives with her mother in a home that appears to be a desirable place for the children to live. At the. time of the trial Mrs. Grumlin was not working and was free to look after the children during the day. Grumlin is employed and is able to support his wife’s family. The couple attend church regularly.
We are convinced by the record before us, as we. said at the beginning, that custody should be vested in the mother. It should be added that in reviewing the case we have been greatly handicapped by having no information about the reasoning that led the chancellor to deny Mrs. Grumlin’s petition. The chancellor stated his ultimate conclusions in a letter-opinion to counsel, but lie did not detail the factual basis for his decision, lie did say — and this is perhaps a clue to his thinking— that he had talked with the children privately in chambers and had reviewed a Welfare Department report, which is not in the record. We can attach no weight, however, to undisclosed information that rests only in the breast of the trial judge. The difficulty is not only that the litigants have no opportunity to rebut such matters, but also that it is impossible for this court to review a case on any basis except the evidence in the record. Walker v. Eldridge, 219 Ark. 594, 243 S.W. 2d 638 (1951).
The decree must be reversed and the cause remanded for the entry of a decree vesting custody of the four children in Mrs. Grumlin, with reasonable visitation privileges in Mr. Gray, and for such further proceedings as may be appropriate.