Kissinger v. Kissinger
Before: Schottky
SCHOTTKY, J.
This is an appeal from an order modifying a final decree of divorce by changing the custody of William, the minor child of the marriage, from the father to the mother.
[739]
Kenneth Kissinger, appellant herein, was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce from his wife Georgena Mae Kissinger on January 25, 1954. The care, custody, and control of the couple’s son William, a boy about
2y2
years of age at the time of the interlocutory decree, was awarded to the father. A final decree of divorce was entered on March 24, 1955, and the provision of the interlocutory decree as to the custody of the child was incorporated in the final decree.
In April, 1958, respondent mother commenced proceedings to obtain an order modifying the custody provision of the divorce decrees and giving her the custody of the child. Following a hearing at which the respondent and appellant, their present spouses, and the paternal grandparents of the parties’ minor child all testified, the court made its order modifying the interlocutory and final decrees herein by granting the custody of the minor child to the respondent with reasonable right of visitation in the appellant.
It appears from the record that respondent wife has been remarried for several years and has a child by said second marriage; that she now has a good home; that her present husband is desirous of having the child in the family; and that they are financially able to provide for the child. It also appears that appellant husband had his mother care for the child for a year and a half after the interlocutory decree was granted and that appellant then placed the child in another home until his remarriage in 1957. There was evidence that the stepmother and appellant were very strict with the child and that this made the child nervous. There was also evidence that the child was being taken to a psychologist for treatment in connection with problems of stuttering and bed wetting. Appellant's mother, the grandmother of the child, testified that appellant and his wife were too strict with the child and that the wife struck the boy. She also testified that while the child was in her care he had no trouble with bed wetting or stuttering or any need for a psychologist.
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