Sims v. Sims
Sims v. Sims
Opinion
This is a child custody modification case.
The parties to the present litigation were divorced on January 9, 1985. Custody of the parties' only child, a four-year-old son, was awarded to the mother.
On August 19, 1985 the father filed a petition to modify the divorce decree to place permanent custody of the boy in himself. The father also filed a pendente lite petition seeking temporary custody of the boy pending a final determination on his petition to modify. The trial court entered an order on the father's pendente lite petition granting temporary custody to the father pending a final determination of the case.
On March 5, 1986 the father filed a second pendente lite petition alleging that the mother had picked the boy up and refused to return him. The trial court held an ore tenus hearing on the father's petition to modify on June 5, 1986. At the close of the June 5, 1986 hearing, the trial court entered an order allowing the original pendente lite order to remain in effect pending *Page 2 a final determination on the issue of custody. The court finally entered an order granting permanent custody to the father on August 19, 1986.
The mother now appeals the trial court's final order and contends that the trial court erred in awarding permanent custody to the father. The father, on the other hand, argues that the trial court's final order regarding custody is supported by the evidence and that the mother failed to provide sufficient evidence during the final hearing to allow her to overcome the burden placed on her by the case law of this state.
In Ex parte McLendon,
As previously stated, the McLendon rule is activated any time a custodial parent seeks to regain custody lost due to either voluntary relinquishment, see, Davis v. Moody, supra, or prior judicial decree. See, Prince v. Prince,
The temporary custody awards dealt with in theChandler and Davis cases, however, are far different from the pendente lite order in the present case. For one thing, such temporary custody awards are generally intended to last until one of the parties petitions the court to modify the decree granting temporary custody. See, e.g., Willette v. Bannister,
A third reason that pendente lite orders are distinguishable from temporary orders is that a trial court's judgment in a final decree following a pendente lite order must be determined on the basis of evidence submitted to the court in support of the final decree. It cannot be based on evidence of changed circumstances submitted in a hearing to modify a temporary decree. See, Sizemore v. Sizemore, supra. Thus, the burden of proof in final decrees following *Page 3 pendente lite orders is different from the burden of proof required to modify a previous temporary decree.
We believe that the above mentioned distinctions are significant enough for us to say that the McLendon rule does not apply to pendente lite orders. Therefore, we hold as a matter of law that pendente lite orders, unlike other temporary orders or decrees, do not activate the McLendon rule.
We now proceed to apply the law as construed above to the facts in the case at bar. Those facts reveal that the mother was initially awarded custody of the minor child at the time of the parties' divorce in January 1985. Subsequently, the father obtained custody of the boy through the entry of the trial court's pendente lite order. At the final hearing, therefore, the applicable burden of proof still required the husband to prove that he was a fit parent and that the benefits of another change in custody outweighed any potential disruptive effects of such a change in custody. See, Ex parte McLendon, supra.
The trial court, in its final order, expressly stated that the evidence revealed that both parents were equally fit to raise the minor child. However, because the trial court improperly applied the McLendon rule, it placed the burden of proving that the change in custody would materially promote the child's best interests on the mother, rather than the father. The trial court granted custody to the father because it found that the mother had failed to meet the McLendon rule burden of proof. The trial court, therefore, erred in its application of the law to the facts.
In situations where a trial court conducts an ore tenus hearing and serves as a fact finder, as it did here, this court clothes the judgment below with a presumption of correctness and will not reverse the trial court's judgment unless it is so unsupported by the evidence as to be plainly or palpably wrong.Nicholas v. Nicholas,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gina Elaine Jarvis Sims v. Marty Lynn Sims.
- Cited By
- 80 cases
- Status
- Published