The 9 December 1981 Order, finding defendants in contempt, is challenged by defendants on the grounds that the court lacked jurisdiction under G.S. 5A-23 to consider the issue of contempt. The contempt order reserved punishment of defendants until final disposition of the child custody matter. In its 21 December 1981 order, disposing of the child custody matter, the court, at the request of the plaintiff, elected not to punish defendants for contempt. Since defendants suffered no injury or prejudice as a result of the contempt order, their exceptions thereto and assignment of error are moot and will not be considered by us.
The 9 December 1981 Order awarding temporary custody of the minor child to plaintiff is challenged by defendants on the grounds that the evidence does not support the findings of fact made by the trial court. Any objections that defendants may have had to this order, interlocutory on its face, were made moot by the 21 December 1981 Order awarding plaintiff permanent custody of his minor child. We therefore will not consider them.
We move now to a consideration of defendants’ challenge to the trial court’s Order of 21 December 1981. Defendants’ several exceptions and assignments of error in this regard present the question of whether the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are supported by competent evidence.
Defendants first take issue with those portions of the trial court’s findings of fact that the best interest of the child would be served by placing him in the custody of plaintiff-father. We note that defendants do not contest the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s findings. Rather, defendants argue that certain countervailing evidence of record precludes the findings made.
In support of their argument, defendants refer us to the record and cite therein several instances of plaintiff’s prior conduct. These instances involve plaintiff’s criminal record of
shooting into a room occupied by his minor son, shooting into an automobile, and shoplifting. Defendants also cite an occasion when the child, after a visit with his father, allegedly was found to have marijuana seeds and a pipe in his pockets. At the hearing, plaintiff did not deny his
Defendants correctly point out that issues of witness credibility are to be resolved by the trial judge. It is clear beyond the need for multiple citation that the trial judge, sitting without a jury, has discretion as finder of fact with respect to the weight and credibility that attaches to the evidence.
E.g., Coble v. Coble,
Defendants contend that the favored status of the natural parent in child custody cases interfered with the court’s judgment regarding the credibility of certain testimony by plaintiff to the point that the trial judge abused his discretion. Based on our reading of the record and of the “example” set forth in defendants’ brief, this contention is patently groundless.
Moreover, defendants’ argument appears to be premised in part on the theory that evidence of past acts tending to show plaintiffs unfitness as a parent precludes a finding of present fitness. While evidence of past acts is relevant, the court’s primary concern, as noted above, is with the continuing welfare of
the child. “A judgment awarding custody is based upon the conditions found to exist at the time it is entered.”
Stanback v. Stanback,
Defendants next argue that there is not sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact regarding the physical accommodations at the home of Annie Smithwick, plaintiffs mother, where the child would be spending part of his time. Apparently contending that each finding of fact must be directly supported by competent record evidence, defendants have misconstrued the fact-finding function of the trial court. The trial court’s role as a finder of fact was recently discussed by our Supreme Court in
Quick v. Quick,
Rule 52(a) [requiring the trial court, when sitting without a jury, to make findings of fact] does not of course require the trial court to recite in its order all evidentiary facts presented at the hearing. The facts required to be found specially are those ultimate facts from which it can be determined whether the findings are supported by the evidence and whether they support the conclusions of law reached.
Id.
at 451,
Ultimate facts are those found in that vaguely defined area lying between evidential facts on the one side and conclusionsof law on the other. [Citations.] In consequence, a line of demarcation between ultimate facts and legal conclusions is not easily drawn. [Citation.] An ultimate fact is the final resulting effect which is reached by processes of logical reasoning from the evidentiary facts. [Citations.]
Id.
at 472,
Ultimate facts may be established by evidence that is direct and conclusive, requiring no more of the finder of fact than that it find the evidence credible. On the other hand, ultimate facts may depend on one or more circumstantial evidentiary facts which, even if wholly credible, would require the finder of fact to draw inferences therefrom in order to so find. Professor Brandis denominates such inferences “permissive presumptions.” Brandis, N.C. Evidence § 215 (1982).
While there is no evidence that directly supports the trial court’s findings of fact with respect to the physical accommodations at the home of Annie Smithwick, there are sufficient eviden-tiary facts from which to infer the ultimate facts found. Defendants’ contention in this regard is therefore without substantial merit.
The remainder of defendants’ exceptions and assignment of error that the trial court’s findings of fact are not supported by competent evidence amounts to an attempt to reargue the evidence in the hope that this Court will substitute itself for the trial court and accept defendants’ version of the evidence.
Beall v. Beall,
Defendants’ remaining challenge to the 21 December 1981 Order is that the conclusions of law on which the order is based are not supported by the findings of fact. Defendants’ arguments in this regard are essentially the same as those accompanying their exceptions to the findings of fact, to wit: that the evidence does not support the findings on which the conclusions are based. However, defendants fail to demonstrate that the conclusions of the trial court do not follow from the findings of fact. Inasmuch as we have found the findings of fact to be supported by the evidence, we also find that the conclusions drawn from those facts are sound and properly drawn. Defendants’ contention in this regard is without merit.
Defendants’ next assignments of error concern the manner in which the hearing was conducted by the trial judge. Defendants contend that the trial judge intimidated defendants and their witnesses and exhibited prejudice against defendants, thereby denying their right to a fair and impartial trial. As defendants do in their brief, we limit our discussion, though not our consideration, to those exceptions thought by defendants to be the most “flagrant” examples of intimidation or prejudice.
Exceptions 67 and 68 refer to a colloquy between the court, the attorneys, the parties, and spectators at the hearing. This colloquy occurred after the close of the first day of testimony and involved not the merits of the case, but an attempt to arrange visitation until the hearing could continue. We fail to see how the behavior excepted to is objectionable under the circumstances. Defendants’ contention is without merit.
Defendants’ exception to the judge’s comment on Mrs. Farmer’s testimony, to wit: that she was lying, is rendered groundless by the absence of any jury to be influenced by it. The proscription against the expression of opinion by the trial judge does not attach in a trial without a jury.
Defendants next argue that the trial court improperly excluded certain evidence regarding prior acts of plaintiff and plaintiffs family members. Defendants contend that such evidence is relevant to the question of the child’s best interest insofar as it relates to the custodial environment into which the child would be placed. Therefore, defendants argue, the evidence should have been admitted. For the reasons discussed above, evidence of past conduct is of limited concern of the court in matters of child custody. The primary concern being the welfare of the child, the court’s judgment must be based on conditions that exist at the
time the judgment is rendered.
Stanback v. Stanback,
Defendants assign as error the trial judge’s rulings on objections to certain questions and to the admission of certain testimony. We have considered defendants’ arguments and exceptions, where the questions objected to are in the record, and find them to be without merit.
Defendants’ final assignment of error, that the trial judge denied defendants’ counsel the right to preserve the record on appeal, is without merit.
The Orders appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.
