Ahlers v. Ahlers
This text of 384 So. 2d 474 (Ahlers v. Ahlers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Mary Knight AHLERS, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Joseph Richard AHLERS, Jr., Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*475 Roland V. McKneely, Jr., Bossier City, for defendant-appellant.
Peters, Ward, Bright & Hennessy, by J. Patrick Hennessy, Shreveport, for plaintiffappellee.
Before PRICE, MARVIN and JONES, JJ.
JONES, Judge.
Plaintiff, Mary K. Ahlers, who is domiciled in Bossier Parish, sues her ex-husband, Joseph R. Ahlers, Jr., to accrue past due alimony in a divorce judgment. She also requests attorney fees. Defendant excepts to jurisdiction of the Bossier Parish Court to enforce the Orleans Parish judgment, which exception was overruled. He also excepts to the accrual of any alimony payment due for more than three years. This exception was sustained. The ex-husband then filed against his former wife in Bossier Parish a rule to show cause why the alimony should not be terminated, why the custody of the son (the remaining minor) should not given to the father, and why the mother should not be ordered to pay child support to the father. The mother filed a declinatory exception to this rule, and the exception was sustained by the trial court. The trial court rendered judgment against defendant, ordering him to pay plaintiff $5825 in non-prescribed alimony payments. He appeals, and plaintiff answers the appeal requesting attorney fees. We amend to allow the defendant credit on his alimony for sums paid by him for the education of his daughter and further amend to award plaintiff attorney fees, and as amended affirm.
Plaintiff and defendant were divorced in 1968 in Orleans Parish. The judgment of divorce ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $200 per month as alimony and granted plaintiff custody of the two minor children, a son and a daughter. The husband paid monthly $175 of his $200 per month alimony obligations until June 1977 when his son came to live with him in Waco, Texas. The daughter, now a major, began college in September 1977 and defendant paid at least 75% of her college expenses. Defendant stopped paying his daughter's college expenses in May 1979 because of her poor grades and because of her refusal to move into the dormitory. In June 1979 plaintiff instituted this suit to recover the past due alimony. Defendant, a Texas resident, was personally served in Bossier Parish. Defendant also received service under the Long-Arm Statute by registered mail, receipt of which he refused.
Defendant's first contention is that the Bossier Parish court was without jurisdiction to accrue the alimony payments and make them executory because LSA-CCP art. 3941[1] makes venue exclusive in Orleans *476 Parish. As can be seen by a casual perusal, Article 3941 does not refer to suits to enforce the payment of alimony.
The record reveals that defendant received by registered mail citation and a certified copy of the petition, as per LRS 13:3204[2] of the Long-Arm Statute. Jurisdiction was obtained over defendant under the Long-Arm Statute by application of the recent amendment to LRS 13:3201 which added Section F to the statute and which reads as follows:
"A court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident, who acts directly or by an agent, as to a cause of action arising from the nonresident's ...
(f) Non-support of a child or spouse or a former spouse domiciled in this state to whom an obligation of support is owed and with whom the nonresident formerly resided in this state."
The fact that defendant refused to receive the registered mail service does not affect its validity, for defendant will not be allowed to defeat proper service by simply refusing acceptance of the letter. See Thomas Organ Co. v. Universal Music Co., 261 So.2d 323 (La.App.1st Cir. 1972); Howard Ave. Realty Corp. v. McIntosh, 352 So.2d 348 (La.App.4th Cir. 1977). As stated in Thomas Organ at p. 327:
"Under the clear wording of the abovequoted statute, all that is necessary to constitute service upon a non-resident under the `Long-Arm' statute is that counsel for plaintiff send a certified copy of the citation and of the petition in the suit to the defendant by registered or certified mail (or actually deliver it in person). There is ... no requirement for a signed return receipt ...
To allow a defendant to defeat service of process by refusing to accept a registered letter ... would make a mockery of R.S. 13:3204 and render it completely ineffective."
Venue in a Long-Arm Statute case is proper at plaintiff's domicile. See LRS 13:3203[3].
The defendant cites Dupuy v. Dupuy, 357 So.2d 23 (La.App.3d Cir. 1978); Caldwell v. Gilbert, 253 So.2d 639 (La. App.3d Cir. 1971); White v. White, 272 So.2d 469 (La.App.3d Cir. 1972); Dupre v. Pelotto, 336 So.2d 329 (La.App.1st Cir. 1976); and Hopkins v. Hopkins, 300 So.2d 661 (La.App.3d Cir. 1974), as authority for the proposition that only the Orleans Parish Court has authority to enforce the nonresident defendant's obligation to pay alimony to his former spouse. All of these cases dealt with an attempt to modify a judgment by a court other than the court wherein the judgment was rendered. Only Dupuy v. Dupuy, supra, contained an attempt to enforce past due alimony and the husband there was not domiciled out of state and the Long-Arm Statute was not there applicable. In this case there is no attempt being made by plaintiff to modify the alimony award in the Orleans judgment and the Long-Arm Statute is applicable because defendant is a Texas domiciliary and for these reasons the cited cases are not applicable. Defendant's objection to the venue or the jurisdiction of Bossier Parish over the present subject matter is inappropriate because the assumption of jurisdiction by Bossier Parish is sanctioned by the Long-Arm Statute.
*477 Defendant further contends that if he must pay the accrued alimony, then he should receive credit on payments since June 1977 because his son has lived with him since that time. The testimony of both plaintiff and defendant as well as the trial court's finding of fact reveals that plaintiff and defendant agreed that the $200 per month payment (denominated as permanent alimony awarded plaintiff in the divorce decree) was actually intended to be for the children's support. Plaintiff agreed to call the payment alimony so as to get an uncontested divorce and to allow defendant to get a tax deduction on the alimony payments. Defendant would have us read into the divorce decree this agreement so that he may obtain credit on this alimony (which he would have us call "child support") for the time his son has spent with him. Such a change in substance of the Orleans judgment is forbidden by LSA-CCP art. 1951[4] (which prohibits changes in substance) as well as by our jurisprudence. This same problem was presented in McGee v. McGee, 157 So.2d 312 (La.App.4th Cir. 1963), in which the divorce decree provided the permanent alimony was for the wife and two children. The evidence reflected that the husband had agreed to pay alimony only to the children and not to the wife, and the husband sought to change the judgment because of this evidence. The Fourth Circuit held this was a change in substance, not allowed by LSA-C.C.P. art. 1951, and the judgment had become final as it applies to the wife, and therefore she cannot now be deprived of her alimony. See also Arcemont v. Arcemont, 162 So.2d 813 (La. App.4th Cir. 1964);
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