This is an appeal by the plaintiff mother from an order of the Superior Court granting a motion brought by the defendant father to modify the award of custody of two minor children to the plaintiff mother.
The court made a finding which is attacked by the plaintiff. The attack revolves upon the court’s failure to find'specific facts claimed by the plaintiff and the finding of a fact which is claimed to be inconsistent with other facts found.
*402 The plaintiff claims the trial court erred in failing to find the facts contained in the draft findings which showed that maintaining custody in the plaintiff was in the best interests of the children and that no material change in circumstances affecting their welfare had taken place. She also assigns as error the trial court’s failure to accept as undisputed the testimony of Jacqueline Buck, the plaintiff’s expert witness. The plaintiff claimed that, as an expert, Mrs. Buck testified to matters about which a layman could have no knowledge.
The draft findings that the plaintiff claims were erroneously omitted are based on the plaintiff’s testimony or that of Charles Dunleavy, her fiance. The credibility of such testimony was for the court to determine. It was not error to refuse to include those draft findings in the finding. The ones that relate to the plaintiff’s desire to retain custody, however, are undisputed and material and therefore we add them to the finding.
Simons
v.
Simons,
Those draft findings which relate to the opinion of Mrs. Buck, the chief social worker at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where the plaintiff is employed, even if such evidence is considered as expert testimony, are not binding on the court.
Sibley
v.
Middlefield,
The plaintiff argues that the court erred in refusing to admit evidence concerning the character and actions of the parties before the middle of 1975. Unfortunately, she has failed to comply with Practice Book, 1978, § 3028, and, as a result, the record is defective. The only reference to rulings in this regard is a paragraph in the finding: “Evidence prior to the time of dissolution was disallowed.” In the absence of compliance with the specific provision of Practice Book, 1978, § 3028, requiring that “[w]hen error is claimed in rulings on evidence the draft finding and finding shall state in each instance . . . the question, the objection, the answer if any, and the exception,” there is no basis on which we can consider the merits of that assignment of error.
John Meyer of Norwich, Inc.
v.
Old Colony Transportation Co.,
The plaintiff did brief her claim that the court erred in admitting into evidence the report of the family relations officer as a business record. Again the record indicates that there is no compliance with Practice Book, 1978, § 3028. The only reference in the finding to this item of evidence is: “Family Relations Officer Mark Patterson’s report was admitted either as a business entry or as a court-ordered report.” The plaintiff’s brief refers to three pages of her appendix. All these pages show is that the report was offered as a business entry
*405
and that no reason is given for the objection except reference to an earlier objection. The eonrt asked for some explanation. None appears. The plaintiff’s appendix to her brief indicates that the objection was that the report was hearsay. The court specifically stated that “[i]f counsel has objection to certain facets of that ... I would apply the same reason that counsel would have the right to object to certain hearsay . . . it’s incumbent upon the objector on that to bring that factor out.” There is no indication that the plaintiff’s counsel objected to specific sections of the report. The evidence printed in the plaintiff’s brief supports the admission of the report under General Statutes § 52-180. Portions of the report were inadmissible because they contained hearsay statements. The court had informed counsel that it had not read the report but invited objections to any specific portions if they contained inadmissible evidence. The plaintiff, however, persisted in objecting to the entire report. This court has held: “Under these circumstances, if any portion of the report is admissible, such a general objection would not be sufficient. It was incumbent on the defendant to point out the inadmissible parts with specificity and to give reasons why the specified parts were not admissible. ... It was not the court’s duty to separate the inadmissible parts of the report from the admissible parts.”
State
v.
Palozie,
*406 The finding, 2 as amended by this court in accordance with the above discussion, reveals the following : A divorce was entered in favor of the plaintiff on February 9, 1973, with custody of the two minor children awarded to her and rights of reasonable visitation to the defendant. The two minor children are William B. Stewart, born December 27, 1966, and Timothy D. Stewart, born October 14, 1970. On January 23,1976, after the defendant had picked up the children for his visitation, the plaintiff informed the defendant that the children were his. On February 6, 1976, the defendant moved for the custody of the children. The defendant kept both children for three weeks, but then took Timothy to stay with his paternal grandparents because the defendant did not have enough room in his home. A short time thereafter the plaintiff picked up Timothy from his grandparents and brought him home with her. Since then the boys have been separated: William has lived with his father and Timothy with his mother. They are, however, together on weekends.
The defendant has remarried and lives in a condominium in Rocky Hill. The plaintiff remarried in March, 1974, but was subsequently divorced. She now resides with her fiance in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Since January, 1976, she had been treated by a social worker specializing in psychiatric and social problems. Both homes have adequate facilities for the children. The plaintiff filed a motion for temporary custody in the Massachusetts Probate Court for Norfolk, but this was denied on April 12, 1977. The parties agreed that Alan Marks, a psychiatrist selected by the plaintiff, would examine the family and make recommendations concerning custody and *407 that the parties would be bound by his decision. The plaintiff refused to abide by his recommendation that the defendant should have the children. A family relations study was ordered concerning the custody of the children. The report 3 recommended that custody of the children be awarded to the father. The social worker, connected with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where the plaintiff is employed, recommended that Timothy should remain with the plaintiff.
The court’s conclusion was that it was in the best interests of both minor children that custody be awarded to the defendant father.
The plaintiff claims that there were no facts found or conclusions reached which showed material changes which adversely affected the children’s welfare and best interests.
In
Sullivan
v.
Sullivan,
The trial court had advantage of observing the witnesses and the parties. Moreover, it is vested with broad discretion in determining what is in the best interests of the children. A difference of opinion or judgment cannot justify an intervention by this court. “Nothing short of a conviction that the action of the trial court is one which discloses a clear abuse of discretion can warrant our interference.”
Morrill
v.
Morrill,
There is no error.
Notes
Practice Book, 1963, § 397, was amended on July 1, 1978; Practice Book, 1978, §479; making family ease study reports admissible if the author is available for cross-examination. This rule was not in effeet when this case was heard.
The exhibits, including the family relations report, are a part of the finding.
The family relations report gives a detailed account of the activities of both parties and of the children. The report is a full exhibit aid by discretion of the court was made a part of the finding. Practice Book, 1978, § 3027.
