Wilson v. Wilson
Citation | 450 So.2d 102 |
Parties | John Roger WILSON, Jr. v. Kathryn Lynne Hyde WILSON. Civ. 3498. |
Decision Date | 08 June 1983 |
Court | Alabama Court of Civil Appeals |
Vaughan Drinkard, Jr. of Drinkard & Newton, Mobile, for appellant.
Herndon Inge, III, Mobile, for appellee.
This is a child custody case.
The father, John Roger Wilson, Jr., and the mother, Kathryn Lynne Hyde Wilson were divorced on August 31, 1982. The divorce decree granted custody of the parties' two minor children to the mother. The father appeals the custody provision.
The first issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court erred by conducting an in camera interview with the minor children of the parties, outside the presence of counsel and without making a record. The father requested the in camera interview, but specifically requested that a court reporter be present to record the interview. The mother objected to the interview, but does not appeal.
The in camera questioning of children in a child custody proceeding was addressed by the supreme court in Ex parte Berryhill, 410 So.2d 416 (Ala.1982). Based on the Bill of Rights and Rule 43, A.R.Civ.P., the court rules that such an examination, without the consent of the parties, was error. The court said:
In the present case, the father not only consented to the in camera interview; he requested it. The father does not claim on appeal that the court committed error in granting the interview; he claims error in the court's failure (although inadvertent) to comply with his request that a court reporter be present.
A situation similar to the present one was addressed in Stinnett v. Gilchrist, 419 So.2d 238 (Ala.Civ.App.1982). There the father of minor children also claimed that the trial court had committed error in conducting an in camera interview off the record. Both parties to the proceeding consented to the interview. The father contended that he was not cognizant of the fact that it would not be of record. Information obtained from the interview was made part of the record by a statement of the trial court in summary of the interview. This court held that the proceeding "comported with due process as defined by our supreme court in Ex parte Berryhill." 419 So.2d at 239.
The present case is distinguished from Stinnett in that the father specifically requested that a record be made of the interview; no such request was made in Stinnett. Due process does not require that the proceedings be recorded, but the question remains of the effect of the trial court's failure to honor the father's request. The court should have had a reporter present (See § 12-17-275, Code of Alabama 1975), according to the request, but was the failure to do so reversible error?
We conclude not. As in Stinnett, the court in the present case made a statement summarizing the interview for the record. In that statement, the court made it clear that nothing had been said by the children in preference to either parent. We find ample evidence in the record to support the court's finding without considering the in camera interview. Had there been a record made of the interview, it would not have been available to the parties prior to judgment. We perceive no...
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Ex parte Wilson
...Inge, III, Mobile, for respondent. BEATTY, Justice. This Court granted certiorari to determine whether the Court of Civil Appeals, 450 So.2d 102, correctly found that the trial court did not commit error by conducting an in camera, off the record interview of minor children in a custody dis......
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Wilson v. Wilson
...Judge. Whereas, on April 6, 1984, the Supreme Court of Alabama, 450 So.2d 104, entered judgment reversing the judgment of this court, 450 So.2d 102, entered June 8, 1983, and therein remanded the case with It is accordingly the judgment of this court that the judgment of the trial court is ......