Opinion
No. 24130.
Decided December 8, 1969.
Divorce action. From order awarding custody of 3-year-old daughter to father, mother brought error.
Affirmed.
1. DIVORCE — Custody — 3-Year-Old — Best Interests — Award — Father — Discretion — Propriety. In custody proceeding, where trial court after evidentiary hearing concluded that mother was not fit and proper person to have custody of 3-year-old daughter of the parties, and that child's best interests required that she be placed with father for at least a year after which matter of custody might be reviewed upon request of either party, held, in so concluding, trial court acted properly and did not abuse its discretion.
2. Custody — 3-Year-Old — Best Interests — Award — Father — Record — Evidence — Findings. In proceeding involving custody of 3-year-old child which trial court awarded to father concluding that mother was no fit and proper person to have custody and that child's best interests required that she be placed with father for at least a year after which matter of custody might be reviewed upon request of either party, reviewing court is of the view that record reflects ample competent evidence to support court's findings.
3. APPEAL AND ERROR — Findings — Abuse of Discretion — Review. Trial court's findings will not be disturbed on review in the absence of a showing of a gross abuse of discretion.
4. Custody — 3-Year-Old — Best Interests — Award — Father — Visitation — Across State Lines — Lack of Obstacle. In custody proceeding, where trial court awarded custody to father, an out-of-state resident, based upon its overriding concern for 3-year-old child's welfare, held, distance of father's residence, even though across state line from mother's in-state residence, does not present unreasonable obstacle to exercise of visitation rights by mother with her child.
5. Custody — Modification — Best Interests — Child. An order of custody in a divorce case may be modified at any time upon a showing of circumstances warranting modification or change in the best interests of the child.
Error to the District Court of Jefferson County, Honorable Roscoe Pile, Judge.
Earl J. Hower, William M. Caldwell, for plaintiff in error.
No appearance for defendant in error.
Plaintiff in error, Catherine Constance Harrison, hereinafter referred to as "Catherine," seeks to reverse an order of the District Court of Jefferson County, Colorado, which awarded custody of her 3-year-old daughter Deona to defendant in error, Graydon Eugene Harrison, father of the child, hereinafter referred to as "Graydon."
A decree of divorce was awarded to Graydon on December 12, 1966. Catherine was given custody of the infant daughter, Deona, by agreement of the parties. Thereafter, in October of 1968, Graydon filed his Motion for Changing Custody and for Cessation of Support Payments, alleging that Catherine was unfit to have the further care, control and custody of Deona and that the child's best interest would be served by placing her in her father's custody. After an evidentiary hearing, at which six witnesses presented testimony concerning the character of the parties, their economic circumstances, and their capabilities to provide a suitable home for Deona, the court concluded that Catherine was not a fit and proper person to have custody of the child and that the child's best interest required that she be placed with Graydon for at least a year, after which the matter of custody might be reviewed upon request of either party.
A petition for rehearing or new trial was filed and denied.
Counsel for Catherine urged reversal on the grounds that the court abused its discretion in awarding custody of Deona to Graydon under the circumstances of this case, particularly in view of the child's tender years. We do not agree, and therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.
[2,3] The question for our determination is whether there was sufficient evidence to support the trial court's judgment that the child's best interests under all the circumstances would best be served by the custody order entered herein. We find ample competent evidence to support the court's findings, which will not be disturbed on review in the absence of a showing of a gross abuse of discretion. Saucerman v. Saucerman, 170 Colo. 318, 461 P.2d 18; Kelley v. Kelley, 161 Colo. 486, 423 P.2d 315; Kane v. Kane, 154 Colo. 440, 391 P.2d 361; Averch v. Averch, 104 Colo. 365, 90 P.2d 962.
Counsel also contended that because the father had become a resident of Cheyenne, Wyoming, to permit the child to be removed from Colorado to Wyoming would presumably interfere with the mother's visitation rights, contrary to the policy of our law. Again, we find the overriding concern to be the welfare of the child. Tanttila v. Tanttila, 152 Colo. 445, 382 P.2d 798. Here, the distance of Graydon's residence, even though across the state line, from Catherine's residence in Jefferson County, does not present an unreasonable obstacle to the exercise of the visitation rights by the mother with her child, and the trial court in this connection was particularly solicitous in directing liberal visitation rights in favor of Catherine during the summer months.
As suggested by counsel, an order of custody in a situation such as we are here considering has no quality of irrevocability and it may be modified at any time upon a showing of circumstances warranting modification or change in the best interest of the child. Wiederspahn v. Wiederspahn, 146 Colo. 214, 361 P.2d 125. The trial court was cognizant of this principle when it indicated that an early review of the custody situation would be desirable and could be had upon motion of either party.
We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court's order awarding custody of Deona to her father, Graydon.
The judgment is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE McWILLIAMS and MR. JUSTICE PRINGLE not participating.