Brumfield v. Brumfield

477 So. 2d 1161
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1985
Docket84-CA-0741
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 477 So. 2d 1161 (Brumfield v. Brumfield) 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.

Bluebook
Brumfield v. Brumfield, 477 So. 2d 1161 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

477 So.2d 1161 (1985)

Rosemary BRUMFIELD,
v.
H. Alva BRUMFIELD III.

No. 84-CA-0741.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 8, 1985.
Rehearing Denied November 8, 1985.
Writ Denied December 20, 1985.

*1163 James W. Pierce, Baton Rouge, Michael O. Hesse, St. Francisville, for plaintiff-appellee Rosemary Brumfield.

Charles S. McCowan, Pamela C. Walker, and John Dale Powers, Baton Rouge, and Kenneth Rigby, Shreveport, for defendant appellant H. Alva Brumfield, III.

Before EDWARDS, LANIER and JOHN S. COVINGTON, JJ.

EDWARDS, Judge.

This is a suit by Rosemary Meyers Brumfield (Rosemary) against her former husband, H. Alva "Beau" Brumfield III (Beau), in which she sought to have declared null and void a marriage contract executed by them on December 19, 1968, the day before they were married. Mrs. Brumfield also prayed for other relief in her petition, resulting in a decision by this court reported in 415 So.2d 520 (La.App. 1st Cir.1982). The case presently before us concerns only the validity of the pre-nuptial agreement, other contentions between the parties having been disposed of elsewhere.

The facts and events surrounding the execution of the contract are in dispute. Beau Brumfield, an attorney, testified that the agreement was signed by Rosemary and himself on the day before their wedding, at his law office, in the presence of a notary and two witnesses. Rosemary, on the other hand, denied that it happened that way at all. She said she was ill that entire day and stayed at home, at her parents' house, in the company of family and friends. She testified that Beau and his secretary, Linda Nugent, brought the contract over for her to sign.

By Rosemary's account, Beau first presented her with the document in the living room. She asked to read it but he said no, that it was legal and she would not understand it. At that point she was "really in kind of a huff" and went to her bedroom.

Beau followed her there and they continued their conversation. Beau said the document was very important and had to be signed before they were married the next day. Rosemary again asked to read it but Beau refused, again telling her it was a legal paper and that she would not understand it. She said she would not sign, whereupon Beau said he would not marry her. At that point she angrily told him to leave the house. "... Then he started begging me to sign it. He said it was very important, that it had to be signed, that it protected our community property."

She went on to testify that Beau never referred to the paper as a marriage contract or as a contract of any sort. He said it was based on inside information that he and his father, also an attorney, had concerning the legal future of community property in Louisiana. The Supreme Court, Beau told her, was going to "knock down" the community property laws of the state, but this document had been drawn in such a way as to protect the community between the two of them regardless what the Supreme Court did. He made no further explanation. Finally, she signed the contract without reading it.

Her testimony continued to the effect that she put the incident completely out of her mind, saying nothing about it to her family or friends. Then, about seven or eight years later, she had occasion to speak with Beau's legal secretary at that time, Betty Wilkinson, about Betty's marriage contract. Betty said she had signed such a paper without knowing what it was, and had defeated it in court.

"... In listening to her conversation," Rosemary testified, "I remember telling her that I signed some kind of paper but that mine protected community property... "I remember she either said that you are crazy if that is what you think it is, or something like that.... From what she said, I got the idea that it probably wasn't what I thought it was."

By now, Rosemary testified, she was sufficiently awakened to get a draft copy of *1164 the contract she had signed and to confront Beau with it.

... I read it and the second paragraph is the one that I was concerned about. I faced Beau with it that night and said you know, this is not what you told me it was, and I understand this second paragraph clearly, and it does not say it protects our community property. He told me at that time that I still did not understand it, then he had told me that I would not understand the legal jargon or whatever, and that I would misunderstand it, and that was why he had not let me read it originally and that I still misunderstood it. The next night he came in with legal sheets of properties that were ours.

They talked about the list of properties, Beau persuading her that there was a community and that these holdings were part of it. He repeated that she had misunderstood the agreement. "We never really talked about it again, but I was really confused," she testified. "I wasn't ever — I didn't really know whether to believe him or not."

Beau finally revealed the truth to her, she said, on the day they separated in January of 1981.

The Saturday that he told me he was moving out, at the end — he had a long discussion and at the end he said, `By the way, that contract you signed says you own nothing, absolutely nothing. I have lied about it all these years and you don't so much as own the clothes on your back, so get your kids and get a job and get out of this house,' is what he said.

Rosemary's testimony concluded with this exchange:

Q. I want to know why you signed this contract without reading it.
A. I loved him and I trusted him and he was an attorney and I knew nothing about legal matters. I guess the main reason was that I loved him very much and I trusted him.

The contract in question was introduced into evidence by both sides. Defendant produced a greatly enlarged photocopy measuring three (3) feet across and two and one-half (2 ½) feet in length. It was placed upon a stand facing the jury and remained there through three days of testimony. Many of the witnesses referred to it as they answered questions.

The second paragraph, which Rosemary testified had troubled her, was clear and direct, totally free of ambiguity:

... [S]aid intended husband and wife shall be separate in property. Accordingly, they hereby formally renounce those provisions of the Revised Civil Code which establish a community of acquets and gains between husband and wife.

It was signed by R.C. Meyers III and by John Jeffries as witnesses; H. Alva Brumfield III and Rosemary Meyers; and by Sylvia Roberts, notary public.

The witnesses to the contract split their testimony, one testifying for each side. John Jeffries, an attorney who had known Beau for many years, said he signed with Rosemary and Beau at Beau's law office. Richard Meyers III, Rosemary's brother, said he signed the paper in blank, at his parents' house, with no one present other than himself and Beau Brumfield.

Sylvia Roberts, an attorney who shared space in the Brumfield law office, served as the notary public. She testified that everything had been done properly, with all parties in her presence as recited in the agreement. She testified further that she had great reverence for the duties and responsibilities of a notary and that she had never notarized anything unless the persons involved were present, signing before she did.

Rosemary testified about other matters besides the signing of the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
477 So. 2d 1161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brumfield-v-brumfield-lactapp-1985.