Carter v. Melchior

90 So. 652, 150 La. 289, 1922 La. LEXIS 2564
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 6, 1922
DocketNo. 24051
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 So. 652 (Carter v. Melchior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Melchior, 90 So. 652, 150 La. 289, 1922 La. LEXIS 2564 (La. 1922).

Opinions

PROVOSTY, J.

Plaintiff filed this suit in December, 1918. He alleges that he was married to defendant in January, 1911; that there was born to the marriage a boy now six years old; that during the last six years the conduct of his wife towards him has been cruel in the extreme, the cruelties consisting in constant quarreling and bickering on her part, her sole desire being to obtain a divorce from him; that during the war she refused to sign his questionnaire unless he would consent to give her the house they lived in, and money and a divorce; that on October 15, 1918, she left the matrimonial domicile, taking the child with her, and thereafter denied to him the company of the child; that in November, 1918, she went to their house, broke open same, and took all the furniture, leaving only one iron bed without bedding; that she has done and said things which he dislikes to disclose but which he will “with sorrow in his heart” disclose if so. ordered, and has constantly associated with immoral characters; that notwithstanding- said acts of his wife he has been contributing not less than $60 per month towards her support, on account of the child; that she is an unfit person to have custody of the child. He prayed for a separation from bed and board, and to be awarded the custody of the child.

Defendant,' in her answer, denied the cruelties; admitted having left plaintiff, alleging that it was with his consent, and that she had ' gone to live with relatives; alleged that her reason for refusing to sign the questionnaire was that it contained incorrect statements to which she could not subscribe; she denied the “truth of the deduction her husband draws from” her said refusal; denied his not having been allowed to see the child often; alleged that she had taken the child to his office three times a week since their [291]*291separation, which was oftener than he had seen the child when they lived together; admits taking the furniture, hut says that it was with his consent, and that she left for his use an entirely equipped bed, a washstand, chairs, and an oil heater, and an art square on the floor; that she has received only $12 a week from her husband since their separation, but that he has also bought some clothes for the child; she denies having associated with immoral characters; alleges that her husband has a violent temper and habitually uses improper, vulgar, and profane language, so that he is an unsuitable custodian for the child. She prayed that the suit be dismissed.

On November 12, 1019, she filed a motion asking that he be ordered to show cause why he should not pay her alimony at the rate of $83.50 per month.

Two days thereafter he filed a supplemental petition alleging as follows:

“(1) Petitioner shows that his wife, Inez Melchior, openly and publicly boasts that she has ‘a man,’ and makes purchases for him; and particularly shows that during the month of October, 1919, his said wife said she was buying a necktie for her ‘man,’ and further boasted Openly and publicly that she was getting rid of a no-account husband, referring thereby to your petitioner.

“(2) Petitioner further shows that his said wife has been guilty of acts of adultery committed with various men at various timos and places; and particularly charges that on March 19, 1919, a man known as Oliver I-Iinglo did enter the residence of petitioner’s said wife at No. 4137 St. Peter street, in this city, at 9:50 p. m., and remained there until after 12 o’clock that night; that on October 25, 1919, an unknown man promenaded Canal street, in this city, with petitioner’s said wife, and, after a car ride, entered the residence of petitioner’s said wife, No. 4137 St. Peter street, at 6:55 p. m., while petitioner’s wife and the said unknown man were the only people in the said premises, and the said unknown man there,remained for hours; petitioner shows that on the occasions set forth herein his said wife' committed adultery with the said men.

“(3) Petitioner further shows that his said wife has written letters to her female friends telling them how to commit abortion; which said letters petitioner will produce and exhibit at the trial of this cause.

“(4) Petitioner further shows that on account of his said wife’s shameful conduct she is not a proper person to rear and care for their minor child, James Francis Carter, Jr., and that petitioner is therefore entitled to the permanent care and custody of their said minor son.”

The prayer was for a divorce, for the custody of the child, and for an injunction enjoining her from bearing his name.

Defendant filed an answer to this petition denying all its averments, and alleging that all she knows of the letters in question on the subject of abortion is that at one time she did under dictation of her husband write on a piece of paper something about abortion; she alleged that he had constantly insulted, and often publicly defamed her, always wantonly and maliciously; that he had always tried to cut her off from every friend and even from acquaintances by abusing them to her and to others, by forbidding her to associate with them and insulting them; that he has constantly tried to influence her little son against her; that—

“For almost a year now that he has employed detectives to shadow her and watch her house, and follow any one who comes to her house; that they have questioned her servant and endeavored to interview her neighbors, so that it has amounted to a persecution.

“Par. 4. That in both the original and the supplemental petitions that he has made under oath and filed herein he has made false allegations against her and drawn defamatory inferences therefrom, all of which was wantonly and maliciously done with the intention of injuring his wife, and constitutes public defamation also.”

She prayed that his suit be dismissed, and that she have judgment against him for separation from bed and board and for $83.50 permanent alimony, and for the custody of the child.

On December 1, 1921, the court entered a judgment condemning defendant to pay [293]*293plaintiff alimony at tlie rate of $10 a week beginning November 21, 1919.

On March 20, 1920, after trial, the court rendered judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit, decreeing in favor of defendant a separation from bed and board, awarding the custody of the child to defendant, and condemning plaintiff to pay defendant alimony at the rate of $25 a week from the date of the judgment and to continue until judgment of final divorce, unless a reconciliation should in the meantime have taken place.

Plaintiff testified that he was a “doctor of dental surgery and radiologist,” and had been practicing since 1909 in the city of New Orleans; that when he requested his wife to sign his questionnaire she answered that for a long time she had been wanting to get him and that now she had him; that she would not sign unless he gave her the house and $S0 a month and let her “frame” a divorce on him and not contest the ease; that he made complaint to the Department of Justice, and that an agent was sent with him to investigate the matter, and that his wife made the same statement before this agent (the agent, by the way, corroborates him); that his wife removed the furniture after she had asked his consent to her doing so and he had refused; that she left “almost nothing, an iron bed and no covering”; that one of the immoral characters with whom his wife associated was her sister. (This sister is shown to have been a disreputable woman.) Plaintiff testified further:

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Related

Vice v. Vice
190 So. 111 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 652, 150 La. 289, 1922 La. LEXIS 2564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-melchior-la-1922.