Etter v. Johnston
This text of 966 So. 2d 1248 (Etter v. Johnston) 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
MARIA DENISE ETTER
v.
BRIAN KEITH JOHNSTON.
Court of Appeals of Louisiana, First Circuit.
JAMES J. ZITO, Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee, MARIA DENISE ETTER.
HARRY L. SHOEMAKER, III, Attorney for Defendant-Appellant, BRIAN KEITH JOHNSTON.
Before PARRO, KUHN, and DOWNING, JJ.
PARRO, J.
A former spouse appeals a judgment that partitions community property, challenging the trial court's classification of certain assets and liabilities, which impacted his ex-spouse's claim for reimbursement. For the following reasons, we amend and, as amended, affirm.
Factual Background and Procedural History
Maria Denise Etter (Etter) and Bryan Keith Johnston (Johnston) were married on February 16, 1991, and divorced on October 18, 1999. Following their separation, Johnston lived in the marital domicile and allegedly continued to pay the monthly mortgage payment of $550. In April 2001, Etter filed a petition for partition of the parties' community property, seeking to have the court set a time limit for Johnston to file a detailed descriptive list or a traversal of her list. Subsequently, Johnston filed a detailed descriptive list. Etter filed a detailed descriptive list and traversal on May 5, 2003, noting her claim for reimbursement in the amount of $2,800. On August 12, 2003, the parties were ordered to update their detailed descriptive lists and claims for reimbursement by November 1, 2003. After the December 8, 2003 trial date was continued at Etter's request, the court ordered the parties to file any amendments to their pleadings, descriptive lists, and lists of exhibits and witnesses no later than April 15, 2005, indicating that the failure to list any witness or exhibit would preclude their use at trial unless extreme good cause was shown. In compliance with this order, Etter filed a list of witnesses and exhibits and amended her detailed descriptive list to set forth a claim for reimbursement for the use of her separate funds to pay 11 different debts.
Following a trial at which Johnston was unrepresented, the trial court ordered reimbursement to Etter for the use of her separate funds to pay community debts or Johnston's separate debts in the amounts of $15,911.50 for Johnston's legal expenses and costs, $6,400 for the down payment on a mobile home, and $1,325 for a Studebaker truck.
After engaging counsel, Johnston filed a motion for a new trial. Etter opposed the motion on the ground that Johnston had failed to comply with previous court orders. Her opposition was further based on his failure to offer compelling evidence to establish the mortgage indebtedness on the property, the amount of the reduction on the mortgage indebtedness that may have occurred, payments made on the mortgage indebtedness, and any documentation to substantiate payments of the mortgage indebtedness. The motion was granted in part to allow only reargument of the issues of rental reimbursement and mortgage reimbursement. Following the hearing on this motion, the trial court maintained its original judgment.
Johnston appealed, contending the trial court erred in (1) disallowing reimbursement to him for the mortgage payments, (2) allowing rental reimbursement to Etter in the absence of a court order or a prayer for same,[1] (3) failing to limit Etter's reimbursement to one-half of $15,000 for use of her separate funds for payment of legal expenses for his defense in second-degree murder proceedings, which he submits was a community debt, (4) allowing full reimbursement for a $6,400 down payment on the mobile home and a $1,325 payment for a Studebaker truck, which he submits were paid with community funds from a joint checking account, and (5) allowing full reimbursement for $911.50 paid to the East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriffs Office in connection with his criminal charges, which he submits was paid with community funds from a joint checking account.
Reimbursement for Mortgage Payments
Johnston challenges the trial court's denial of his right to reimbursement for amounts paid by him since 1998 towards the mortgage note on the marital domicile. After recognizing that a former spouse who occupied the marital domicile is not liable to the other spouse for the rental value unless there is an agreement between the parties or a court order, the trial court reviewed the procedural history of the case. In his sworn detailed descriptive list filed while represented by counsel, Johnston simply listed the house note in the amount of $550 as a community debt/liability. Subsequently, the trial court afforded both parties ample opportunity to file a complete detailed descriptive list, amended pleadings, an exhibit list, and a witness list. Johnston did not comply. Thus, Johnston never made a formal request for reimbursement of mortgage payments. In light of these facts, Etter objected to the introduction of evidence by Johnston on this issue at the outset of trial and again when Johnston attempted to introduce written documents purportedly from the mortgage lender. Because Johnston was unrepresented, the trial court allowed introduction of the evidence. In its reasons for judgment on the motion for a new trial, the trial court remarked that it erred in allowing Johnston to introduce such evidence because he had ignored prior court orders. In the interest of completeness, the trial court found that the written documentation offered by Johnston was insufficient to satisfy his burden of proving a claim for reimbursement in that the documentation was incomplete and had neither been authenticated nor identified with any mortgage lender.
After a thorough review of the record, we are unable to find that the trial court manifestly or legally erred in finding that Johnston failed to satisfy his burden of proof on this issue.
Characterization of Settlement Proceeds
In his brief, Johnston urged that the money that had been used to pay certain debts came directly from proceeds from Etter's workers' compensation settlement, which represented medical expenses and lost wages and would have been a community asset. Initially, we note that the receipt and release reveals that the accident in question occurred on November 5, 1988, which was before the parties were married. Furthermore, nothing in the record supports Johnston's assertion that the settlement involved a claim for workers' compensation against Etter's employer for a work-related accident. The documentation supports a finding that the settlement involved a claim for personal injury filed by Etter in district court against Casey Construction Management Corporation, Welch Door Service, and Atlas Door Corporation, concerning injuries she sustained when the rolling grill door at the entrance to the LensCrafters store in Cortana Mall suddenly recoiled. Accordingly, the trial court did not manifestly or legally err in finding that the settlement proceeds were Etter's separate property. See LSA-C.C. art. 2344.
A check in the amount of $48,753.97 was deposited in a savings account opened by Etter at First National Bank of Denham Springs on August 11, 1995. Because Etter placed portions of her separate funds from her personal savings and/or checking accounts into the parties' joint checking account, Johnston urges that the money lost its characterization as separate property via commingling.
The mere mixing of separate funds and community funds in a joint bank account does not in and of itself convert the entire account into community property; only when separate funds are commingled with community funds indiscriminately so that the separate funds cannot be identified or differentiated from the community funds are all of the funds characterized as community funds. Curtis v.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
966 So. 2d 1248, 2007 WL 3355813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etter-v-johnston-lactapp-2007.