This case is before us on appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County continuing custody of four children in thе appellee, their father, and finding appellant, their mother, in contempt of court for violating the custody decreе. On July 14, 1965, the father was granted a divorce from the mother on grounds of adultery. The divorce decree awarded custody of the couple’s four children to the father. On April 25, 1966, the circuit court modified its decree and allowed the appellant Saturday visitation rights. In October, 1966, these rights were extended to include Friday and Saturday. During one of these visitation periods, the appellant decided not to return the children to the appellee. She believed that the appellee had administered a sevеre beating to them and feared for their safety. She had the father arrested on assault charges and he was found guilty of this chargе in the People’s Court of Prince George’s County.
On August 28, 1968, the appellee filed a petition asking the court to find the mother in contempt for refusing to obey the custody decree. The mother filed a bill asking that the custody decree be reconsidered. After a hearing, Judge Mathias found the mother in contempt for failing to return the children and continued the custody of the children in the father.
The appellant raises two issues before us on appeal. The first is whether the chancellor erred in awarding *438 custody tо the appellee. The second issue is whether the court must hear evidence concerning events which occurred prior to the present custody decree. We will discuss these issues in order.
The legal standard for determining custody is well settled in Maryland. As we stated in
Shanbarker v. Dalton,
In making a сustody determination the Court will give great weight to the chancellor’s findings of fact. The reason for this is well stated by Judge Collins in
Sibley v. Sibley,
The second issue is whether the lower court erred in refusing tо hear testimony concerning events prior to the original custody decree which would tend to establish that she was not an unfit mother. If this is tantamount to an assertion that the entire case history must be presented at each custody hearing, it obviously cannot stаnd. While custody decrees are never final in Maryland, any reconsideration of a decree should emphasize changеs in circumstances which have occurred subsequent to the last court hearing.
Taylor v. Taylor,
Although it does not clearly appear from the record, the testimony which v/as excluded apparently went to the issue of the character of the wife’s present spouse. The court refused to hear the testimony of a clergyman who was familiar with the parties. The other evidence con
*440
cerned the import of a letter which the father had sent to a welfare worker in answer to the initial report from that department and which concerned the wife’s present husband and of which letter the appellant claims she was unaware. The court viewed all of this as an effort to retry the original custody order and would not allow the appellant to pursue this line of testimony. It is true that
Raible v. Raible,
Order affirmed, appellee to pay costs.
