Duplechin v. Toce
This text of 497 So. 2d 763 (Duplechin v. Toce) 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
Janelle Marie DUPLECHIN, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
John Joseph TOCE, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*764 Daniel L. Landry, Lafayette, for defendant-appellant.
Glenn J. Armentor, Lafayette, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before GUIDRY, DOUCET and KING, JJ.
DOUCET, Judge.
This appeal arises from a personal injury action by a woman against her ex-husband for damages resulting from injuries inflicted during the marriage.
On August 16, 1980, an altercation occurred in the home of the parties which resulted in the hospitalization of the plaintiff for a period of 25 days.
The plaintiff first filed a petition for damages resulting from that incident on August 13, 1981. The defendant filed an Exception of No Right of Action to that suit, citing interspousal immunity as outlined in La.R.S. 9:291. The trial court granted that exception. On December 15, 1981, plaintiff was granted a divorce from the defendant. On January 5, 1982, plaintiff again filed a petition for damages resulting from the altercation of August 16, 1980. Defendant filed Exceptions of Prescription, Res Judicata, No Cause, and No Right of Action, each of which was overruled in turn.
*765 After a trial on the merits, a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the amount of $12,000.00 for past and future medical expenses, and $40,000.00 in general damages, as well as for all costs of court.
The defendant's motion for new trial was denied. The defendant then filed this appeal from the trial court's ruling on the Exceptions of No Cause and No Right of Action, as well as from the judgment of the trial court on the merits.
EXCEPTIONS OF NO CAUSE AND/OR RIGHT OF ACTION
The defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying its Exceptions of No Cause or Right of Action. The defendant asserts that the provisions of La.R.S. 9:291 creates an Interspousal Immunity which prevents suit for causes of action arising during the marriage. La.R.S. 9:291 provides that:
Unless judicially separated, spouses may not sue each other except for causes of action arising out of a contract or the provisions of Title VI, Book III of the Civil Code restitution of separate property; for divorce, separation from bed and board, and causes of action pertaining to the custody of a child or alimony for his support while the spouses are living separate and apart, although not judicially separated.
It is well settled that the interspousal immunity created by this statute does not destroy any cause of action which one spouse might have against the other. The effect of this statute is to bar the right of action which one spouse has against the other for any such cause of action. The question presented here is whether the right of action is forever barred as to causes of action arising during the marriage or whether, on the other hand, this statute merely suspends the cause of action until such time as the spouses may be judicially separated or the marriage ends in divorce. This issue was addressed only once previously by the First Circuit in Gremillion v. Caffey, 71 So.2d 670 (La. App. 1st Cir.1954). In that case, the court cited La.C.C. art. 159 and stated that:
Under the express terms of the above cited article the judgment of absolute divorce between plaintiff and defendant rendered on February 10, 1953 removed the relative incapacity of the plaintiff to sue the defendant for the tort he committed on August 22, 1952 or, stated in another way, ended the abatement of her right of action which had existed during the continuation of the marriage, although she enjoyed a cause of action under Article 2315, LSA-C.C. By the judgment of divorce, plaintiff and defendant were placed "in the same situation with respect to each other as if no marriage had ever been contracted between them."
Suits between spouses have traditionally been prohibited on the theory that such suits disrupt domestic tranquility. However, once the marriage is ended, this would no longer seem to be a valid policy. Enforcement of Rights by Spouses, 25 La. L.Rev. 186 (1964); Family Law The Bar to Interspousal Suit and the Maternal Preference Rule, 52 Tul.L.Rev. 422 (1978). Accordingly, we find that it is the time of the judicial proceedings which controls the application of the Doctrine of Interspousal Immunity rather than the time of the occurrence of the tort. Further, since prescription is suspended as between spouses during the marriage, the plaintiff has both a cause and a right of action against her former husband.
FACTUAL FINDINGS
The defendant further alleges that the trial court erred in not finding the plaintiff to be the aggressor in the altercation; in awarding excessive damages, and excessive medical expenses.
The trial judge rendered written reasons for judgment which we quote as follows:
"The Court has carefully weighed the testimony of the witnesses and observed the parties during the giving of the testimony and finds, to this point, that the *766 testimony of Mrs. Toce has the most veracity.
It is apparent that Mr. Toce pulled Mrs. Toce onto the bed, wrapped the telephone cord around her arms, beat her on the face with his fist, proceeded to strike her on the head with the telephone, bit her on the ear and shoulder. The struggle continued and they fell to the floor where the beating continued. Mrs. Toce, being tied with the telephone cord or a nylon cord was completely immobilized.
The beating caused Mrs. Toce to have wounds which bled. Mr. Toce poured alcohol on her to remove the blood. He told her he was going to kill her and no one would know that he had beaten her again would drag her to the pool, put a strap around her neck, and finish her in the pool. He would then hide her body and tell everyone she had returned to Arkansas.
ISSUES PRESENTED
(1) Is John Joseph Toce guilty of a battery upon Janelle Marie Duplechin?
(2) Was Janelle Marie Duplechin guilty of such provocation so as to excuse the battery by John Joseph Toce?
DISCUSSION
The evidence shows that Mr. Toce had a history of wife beating. Andrea Mouton, who was married to Mr. Toce in 1975, testified that approximately two (2) months after their marriage Mr. Toce twisted her arm, she moaned, he hit her because she could not take playing around. On another occasion she was awakened by his beating upon her. Mr. Toce testified he had struck her one (1) time when she threw a tantrum.
Janelle Marie Duplechin testified that two (2) weeks after their marriage, Mr. Toce struck her because she didn't listen to him as to his instructions on the use of the dishwasher. On another occasion while in Arkansas on a Thanksgiving visit to one of Mr. Toce's cousins, Mr. Toce struck her on the face numerous times outside of the cousin's mobile home. Later, in the mobile home, he struck her again, embarked in his vehicle returning to Lafayette leaving Mrs. Toce stranded in Arkansas. Subsequently, there was a third altercation with Mr. Toce wherein he tied her with a cord while she was in bed, struck her about the head. Mrs. Toce separated after this beating and finally returned to live with Mr. Toce around August 1, 1980.
Mr. Toce alleges that the actions of Mrs. Toce provoked him to such a degree that the ensuing battery was justified.
It is correctly stated in Alexander v. McCray,
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