Connell v. Connell

316 So. 2d 421
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1975
Docket4937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 316 So. 2d 421 (Connell v. Connell) 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
Connell v. Connell, 316 So. 2d 421 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

316 So.2d 421 (1975)

Michael Lee CONNELL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Vergie Dell CONNELL, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 4937.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

July 3, 1975.
Rehearing Denied August 28, 1975.

*423 Joseph Greenwald, Asst. Dist. Atty., Lake Charles, and Philip R. Riegel, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

William L. McLeod, Jr., Lake Charles, for defendant-appellee.

Before HOOD, CULPEPPER and MILLER, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

Dr. Michael Lee Connell seeks a judgment ordering a partition of the community which formerly existed between him and the defendant, Mrs. Vergie Dell Connell. The defendant answered and filed a reconventional demand in which she prayed for substantially the same relief as that sought by plaintiff. After trial, judgment was rendered by the trial court condemning plaintiff, Dr. Connell, to pay to defendant, Mrs. Connell, the sum of $21,798.16. Plaintiff appealed, and defendant answered the appeal praying that the amount of the award be increased.

A number of issues were presented in the district court and are presented here. The trial judge ruled on each such issue, and the judgment which he rendered obviously was intended to effect a partition of the community which formerly existed between the parties.

No inventory and appraisal of the assets of the community has ever been made, however, and no Detailed Descriptive List of the property which belonged to the community has ever been filed. Neither party makes an issue of that circumstance, and ordinarily we would be inclined to overlook it. The evidence, however, fails to establish some facts which we feel are essential to warrant a judgment finally partitioning the community property between the parties. For that reason we have decided that the judgment appealed from must be reversed and the case remanded for additional evidence and for a partition of the community property in accordance with what we consider to be the applicable law. Despite the fact that the judgment of the district court ultimately must be reversed and the case remanded, we nevertheless will determine all of the issues presented which we feel can be disposed of in this proceeding.

Dr. and Mrs. Connell were married in Orleans Parish on June 20, 1970. It was the second marriage for each of them.

*424 About 19 months later, on January 24, 1972, Mrs. Connell instituted a separation suit against her husband in Calcasieu Parish, and judgment was rendered in that suit on April 7, 1972, decreeing a separation from bed and board between the parties. That judgment had the effect of dissolving the community of acquets and gains which formerly existed between the parties on January 24, 1972, that being the date on which the separation suit was instituted.

Dr. Connell's first marriage was terminated by a judgment rendered on May 5, 1970, decreeing a final divorce between him and his first wife. In that judgment Dr. Connell was ordered to pay his first wife "$1200.00 per month alimony, for the support of his wife and minor children, beginning on the first day of May, 1970 and every month thereafter, until terminated or modified by further orders of Court." He later filed a rule to have thatalimony reduced, and in response thereto judgment was rendered on January 22, 1971, reducing the alimony "for the support of his wife and minor children" to $1,000.00 per month, effective February 1, 1971. Dr. Connell made substantial payments to his first wife pursuant to the above decrees while he was married to the defendant in this suit.

Dr. Connell also made other payments from funds belonging to the second community, including payments to a partnership in which he had an interest prior to his second marriage, investments in a Keough Trust Fund and in mutual stock funds, payments in settlement of the community claims of his first wife and premiums on life insurance policies taken out before his second marriage. Mrs. Connell contends, and the trial judge found, that the doctor was obliged to reimburse the community or Mrs. Connell for some of those expenditures.

As already noted, the trial judge ultimately concluded that Dr. Connell must pay Mrs. Connell $21,798.16 in order to effect a partition of the community. He arrived at that figure by determining that Dr. Connell was indebted to the community for funds spent for his separate estate in the amount of $57,990.46, but that the community was indebted to him for $12,733.99. He found that Mrs. Connell was indebted to the community for $6,097.00, but that the community owed her $4,186.00. He computed that Dr. Connell thus owes defendant $21,798.16.

We have concluded that the trial judge erred in some of the conclusions which he reached.

1.

One issue presented is whether Dr. Connell is obligated to reimburse the community the amounts which he paid to his first wife as alimony, and for the support of his children who were born of his first marriage, from funds which belonged to the second community.

The trial court found that Dr. Connell paid to his first wife for these purposes the aggregate sum of $27,946.45 from funds belonging to the second community. He concluded that plaintiff's obligation to pay all of those amounts were separate debts, owed by plaintiff's separate estate, and that his separate estate is bound to reimburse the community for all of said payments. We disagree.

Articles 2403 and 2408 of the Louisiana Civil Code provide:

"Art. 2403. In the same manner, the debts contracted during the marriage enter into the partnership or community of gains, and must be acquitted out of the common fund, whilst the debts of both husband and wife, anterior to the marriage, must be acquitted out of their own personal and individual effects."
"Art. 2408. When the separate property of either the husband or the wife has been increased or improved during the marriage, the other spouse, or his or *425 her heirs, shall be entitled to the reward of one half of the value of the increase or ameliorations, if it be proved that the increase or ameliorations be the result of the common labor, expenses or industry; but there shall be no reward due, if it be proved that the increase is due only to the ordinary course of things, to the rise in the value of property, or to the chances of trade."

The payments of alimony and child support made by Dr. Connell did not enhance the value of his separate estate, so LSA-C.C. art. 2408 clearly is not applicable. The issue presented is whether the alimony and support payments that accrued and became due and payable to his first wife during the existence of the second community, were "debts" of the husband "anterior to the marriage," which must be acquitted out of his separate estate under the provisions of LSA-C.C. art. 2403.

Defendant, in arguing the correctness of the trial court's holding that the alimony and support payments which became due during the second community were his separate debts, relies on the cases of Fazzio v. Krieger, 226 La. 511, 76 So.2d 713 (1954); White v. Klein, 263 So.2d 496 (La.App. 1 Cir. 1972); Morace v. Morace, 220 So.2d 775 (La.App. 1 Cir. 1969); Lytell v. Lytell, 144 So.2d 925 (La.App. 4 Cir. 1962), and Creech v. Capitol Mack, Inc., La., 287 So.2d 497 (1974).

Plaintiff contends that the obligations imposed on him to pay alimony and child support were not "debts" within the intendment of LSA-C.C. art. 2403, but that they were obligations imposed by law during the second marriage which may be paid with funds belonging to the second community.

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