Affirming.
The appellant, Nancy Nadine Hettie, and the appellee, Cecil V. Bard, Jr., were formerly husband and wife. They had one child, Cecil Jake Bard, who was less than two months of age when the appellee obtained a judgment of divorce on July 19, 1941. The judgment made no provision as to the custody of the child. The appellee entered the military service of the United States on January 12, 1942, and was discharged on January 14, 1946. On July 9, 1943, the mother of the child instituted a habeas corpus proceeding in the Harlan Circuit Court against the child's paternal grandparents in which she asserted her right to possession of her son, then two years of age. The Circuit Court entered a judgment directing the grandparents to surrender possession of the child, and on appeal to this court the judgment was affirmed. Bard v. Bard, *Page 9
"The foregoing is not nor shall it be taken as conclusive or as reflecting in any way on the right of the husband and father, now in the Armed Service, to assert any claim he may choose either to the custody or right of visitation to the child. The judgment below only went to the extent of holding that as between appellants and the mother the former should surrender custody to the mother, and as so rendered is now affirmed."
After obtaining possession of the child, appellant returned to Troy, New York, where she had been living with her married sister. In January, 1945, she married Michael K. Hettie, who was employed in Albany, New York. She continued to permit the child to visit his grandparents in Harlan, Kentucky. Cecil V. Bard, Jr., father of the child, also married in January, 1945, while he was in military service, and after his discharge in January, 1946, established it home in Harlan, Kentucky, where his parents lived. On March 30, 1946, he instituted the present action in the Harlan Circuit Court. He alleged in his petition that appellant was not a fit and proper person to have custody of the child, and he asked that custody be awarded to him. At the time the petition was filed the child was living with his paternal grandparents in Harlan. He had been with them since December, 1945. The appellant filed an answer traversing the allegations of the petition, and a counterclaim in which she sought to have custody of the child awarded to her. The answer and counterclaim were filed August 21, 1946. Considerable proof was heard, and on October 29, 1946, a judgment was entered dismissing appellant's counterclaim and awarding custody to the appellee. The judgment was based on the court's finding that appellant is not a fit and suitable person to have custody of the child, and that the welfare of the child will be best served by awarding his custody to the father. This appeal was filed November 7, 1947. The proof shows that appellant, since her marriage *Page 10 in January, 1945, has spent much time in Jellico, Tennessee, though her husband is employed in Albany, New York. She spent most of the year 1946 in Jellico where her brother and other relatives live. She claimed that she went to Jellico with her husband's consent to care for her brother and sister-in-law who were ill. Three witnesses, including the police judge and the chief of police of Jellico, testified to facts which, if true, show that appellant is not a suitable person to have the custody of the child. Appellant denied she was guilty of the conduct attributed to her by these witnesses and asserted it was a case of mistaken identity, but her testimony is not convincing. Her principal contentions on this appeal are that the petition did not state a cause of action, and the chancellor should not have considered the testimony of the witnesses who testified concerning improper conduct on her part.
The petition did not set out the facts upon which the plaintiff based his charge that the defendant was not a suitable person to have custody of the child, and Roberts v. Roberts,
It is next argued by appellant that the testimony of the witnesses concerning improper conduct on the part of appellant should not have been considered by the court, since there was a total failure to comply with KRS
Judgment is affirmed.