*115 ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
Danny R. Grissom (Petitioner-Appellee below) seeks transfer after the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court and returned custody of his minor daughter, Megan, to the mother, Tina Eason (Respondent-Appellant below). In Re the Matter of Megan Renee Grissom (1991), Ind.App.,
The facts are as follows. Megan was born on October 28, 1987. On January 20, 1988, the trial court granted the joint petition for determination of paternity in which Grissom admitted being the father. At that time, Grissom ("father") and Eason ("mother") were living together and no custody order was entered. After the parties ceased living together, an agreed order was entered on November 4, 1988. Father and mother were granted joint custody of the child; mother was granted physical custody and father was given visitation privileges and ordered to pay child support. On February 6, 1989, father filed a petition for custody in which he sought custody of Megan. Father alleged in his petition that, in violation of the custody order, mother had left Indiana with Megan and failed to notify him or the trial court. Temporary custody of Megan was granted to father, and he was instructed to notify the court when he located the child and to return her to Indiana. Father found mother and Megan at the home of Megan's maternal grandmother in Illinois. He returned with Megan to Indiana. Thereafter, a hearing took place on father's petition for custody. In awarding custody to father, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law to the effect that since the paternity order of January 1989, mother, without notice, had changed her residence from North Dakota for one month, to Missouri until March 28, 1989, and then to the home of her mother in Illinois. Following special findings regarding the home environments available to the mother and father in which to care for Megan, the trial court concluded that "in the best interest of Megan," custody should be placed with father and that mother should have visitation of one week each month until Megan reached school age. Mother appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court and returned custody of Megan to mother after concluding that the trial court had applied an incorrect standard when it ordered the change of custody. Noting that "[i]t would appear at first blush that the standard for custody modifications arising out of paternity actions is different from the standard for those arising out of marriage dissolution actions,"
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the court proceeded to apply the dissolution standard which requires a "substantial change of circumstances."
The differing standards for changes in custody were first noted in Griffith v. Webb (1984), Ind.App.,
Six years later, Walker v. Chatfield (1990), Ind. App.,
Courts do not interpret statutes which are clear and unambiguous on their face. Superior Construction Co. v. Carr (1990), Ind.,
Accordingly, we hold that on matters relating to change of custody in paternity actions, the standard to be applied is whether the modification would serve the best interests of the child.
Application of Standard to This Case
Our review of the trial court's judgment is limited to determining whether there is a clear abuse of discretion demonstrated by the record. Marshall v. Reeves (1974),
Based upon our review of the record, we find substantial probative evidence to support the modification order.
*117 Conclusion
Accordingly, we now grant transfer, vacate the opinion of the Court of Appeals, and affirm the trial court.
Notes
. The relevant statute pertaining to changes of custody in paternity actions is found in Ind. Code § 31-6-6.1-11(e), which provides: "The court may modify an order determining custody rights whenever modification would serve the best interests of the child." By contrast, the statute pertaining to changes of custody in dissolution actions is found in Ind.Code § 31-1-11.5-22(d), and provides: "The court in determining said child custody, shall make a modification thereof only upon a showing of changed circumstances so substantial and continuing as to make the existing custody order unreasonable."
