Rоbert C. HECKLE, Respondent, v. Elizabeth B. HECKLE, Appellant.
20177
Supreme Court of South Carolina
March 1, 1976
223 S. E. (2d) 590 | 266 S.C. 355
Messrs. Bryant, Fanning & Yarborough, of Orangeburg, for Appellant, in Reply.
March 1, 1976.
LEWIS, Chief Justice:
The issues in this appeal concern the respective rights of the respondent (husband) and the appellаnt (wife), now divorced, to the custody of their three year old daughter.
Thereafter, the present action was instituted on September 17, 1974 by the respondent in the Family Court for Orangeburg County upon the same grounds and seeking the same relief as sоught in the prior action brought in the county court. The answer of appellant denied the allegations of misconduct and sought an increase in the amоunt of the child support payments. Appellant also moved to dismiss the action, in so far as it affected child custody, on the ground that the county court retained jurisdiction of the issue.
After hearings in the early part of December 1974, the Family Court granted a divorce to respondent upon finding appellant guilty оf adultery, held that appellant was not entitled to alimony, refused to dismiss the action for child custody, and granted custody of the child to respondent, the fаther.
Appellant does not contest the decree of divorce nor does she seek alimony. However, she has appealed the award of custody. In view of the exceptions challenging the jurisdiction and authority of the Family Court to determine cus
The order of the county court of June 24, 1974, awarding custody of the child to appellant, entered pursuant to the voluntary agreement of the parties, constituted an adjudicatiоn by the court that such was for the best interest of the child. We have held that, in order to change the custody so fixed by an order of court, there must be a showing of changed circumstances accruing subsequent to the entry of the decree, which would warrant modification for the best interests of the child. Pullen v. Pullen, 253 S. C. 123, 169 S. E. (2d) 376; Mixson v. Mixson, 253 S. C. 436, 171 S. E. (2d) 581.
Since we сonclude that the evidence failed to show a material change in circumstances since the order of the County Court of June 24, 1974, so as to authorize a change in custody as fixed by that order, we find it unnecessary to determine whether the Family Court had jurisdiction of the issue of custody. For, irrespective of thе question of jurisdiction, the judgment of the Family Court must be reversed for lack of adequate evidentiary support, leaving the previous order of the County Court of June 24, 1974, in effect.
The parties have been before this Court upon petitions for supersedeas, resulting in the development of certain evidentiary mаtters occurring since February 20, 1975, the
The record shows that respondent instituted an action for divorce on April 18, 1974 on the ground of adultery and for custody of the child. This action ended in an agreement, approved by the court, for the appellant to have custody of the child. The record is replete with testimony that respondent knew of the affair of аppellant with another man, when he agreed on June 24, 1974 for her to have custody. This affair was the basis for the allegations of adultery, upon which the aсtion for divorce was instituted on April 18, 1974. The record shows that this relationship of appellant with the other man continued and was the basis for the divorce grаnted in this action on February 17, 1975. Appellant and her paramour have since married.
We find no reason to set forth a detailed statement of the faсts and circumstances. Respondent, in bringing this action, did not allege any change in circumstances to justify a change in custody and there was no proof of any such change. Neither was there proof that the appellant had failed to properly care for the child, nor that the best interests of thе child required removal of her custody from appellant.
We find nothing in this record to justify a change in the custody of the child as ordered by the County Court on June 24, 1974, nоr any reason why the jurisdiction of the issue of custody, assumed by that court, should not be continued for the entry of such orders touching custody as may from time to time be proper in the exercise of the continuing jurisdiction of that court.
NESS and GREGORY, JJ., and JOSEPH R. MOSS, Acting Associate Justice, concur.
LITTLEJOHN, J., dissents.
LITTLEJOHN, Justice (dissenting):
I respectfully dissent and would affirm the order of the lower court.
The majority оpinion concludes that there has been no showing of a change of conditions between the time of the order of the Orangeburg County Court on June 24, 1974, and thе time of the order of the Orangeburg Family Court on February 17, 1975. It is patent from the record that the order of June 24, 1974, did not involve a judicial determination of what was in the best interest of the child. Although the settlement and dismissal of the case between the husband and the wife took on the nature of a judicial decree, it was obviously a rather summary disposition of the case solely because of an agreement reached between the parties. In my view, only the judge of thе Orangeburg County Family Court has inquired into the question of what is in the best interest of the child.
In my view, a change of circumstances between the times of the two orders hаs been shown by the evidence. At the time of the first order, the wife and husband were still married, with at least some possibility of reconciliation although they were living apart; she was suspected of adultery but the same had not been adjudicated.
At the time of the second order, here on appeal, the chаrge of adultery had been proven, she was divorced1 and had been guilty of much misconduct between the time of the first order and the second.
I would affirm the order of the lower court.
