Fazzio v. Krieger

76 So. 2d 713, 226 La. 511
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 12, 1954
Docket41328
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 713 (Fazzio v. Krieger) 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
Fazzio v. Krieger, 76 So. 2d 713, 226 La. 511 (La. 1954).

Opinions

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

On October 25, 1949, a judgment of divorce was rendered in favor of Mrs. Eleanore M. Fazzio and against her husband John J. Krieger on the ground that he had been condemned to an infamous punishment. This judgment awarded the wife the permanent care and custody of their three minor children, Eleanore, Elizabeth, and Mary J. Krieger, aged respectively eleven, six, and five. In a judgment rendered on April 10, 1953, the district court increased the amount awarded to the wife for the care and support of these minor children from $50 a month, which the husband had been paying under a previous order of court, to $75 a month. From this judgment the husband has appealed.

At the time the district court increased the alimony in this case to $75 a month it was disclosed that the wife’s entire income was her salary of approximately $240 a month, and that the three minor children were attending a boarding school at a cost of $180 a month. The husband was not employed, but there is some evidence in the record that he had attempted to secure employment. However, it was shown that defendant had remarried, and that his second wife, with whom he was living, was earning $280 a month as a stenographer. In increasing the alimony to $75 a month the trial judge took into consideration the earnings of the second wife.

The defendant in the instant case does not deny that he has a duty or obligation under the law to support his children, and the only question presented by this case is whether the trial judge was correct in tak[515]*515ing into consideration the earnings of the second wife in computing the amount of alimony awarded for the support of the children.

In this state it is too well settled to need comment that the salary of a wife who is living with her husband is community property. Articles 2402, 2334, Civil Code; Houghton v. Hall, 177 La. 237, 148 So. 37; Succession of Howell, 177 La. 276, 148 So. 48; De Maupassant v. Clayton, 214 La. 812, 38 So.2d 791.

The real problem presented by the instant case is whether the provisions of Article 2403 of the Louisiana Civil Code prevent the payment of alimony for the support of the children of a former marriage from the community funds of a second marriage. Article 2403 provides:

“ * * * 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.” (All italics ours.)

If the obligation or duty to support children of a former marriage is to be considered a debt contracted by the husband prior to his second marriage, it would appear that the community is not responsible for this obligation under the provisions of Article 2403. The issue then presented is whether the obligation or duty to pay alimony for the support of children of a former marriage can be considered a debt within the meaning of Article 2403.

In determining this basic issue the origin of Article 2403 of the Louisiana Civil Code is helpful. Article 2403 of the present Code is substantially the same as its predecessors, Article 2372 of the Code of 1825 and Article 65 of the Code of 1808. Formerly it was believed that Pothier’s Treatise on the Community, which appeared in 1769, was the principal source of Louisiana community property law. See Dart, The Louisiana Judicial System, 1 La.Dig. 13 (1917). However, it is'obvious that Article 2403 is based neither on Pothier’s treatise nor on the corresponding article of the Code Napoleon, Article 1409. This is so because both Pothier and Article 1409 of the Code Napoleon provide that the community is liable among other things for all the personal debts of the spouses which are owed on the date of marriage. See 6 Oeuvres de Pothier (1835), Traité de la communauté, p. 165, n° 233; Art. 1409, Code Napoleon. Contrary to the earlier belief expressed by Dart, above, it is now generally thought that Louisiana community property law is both French and Spanish in origin. See Oppenheim, Marital Community, 19 Tul.L.Rev. 200, 205 (1944), and authorities cited therein. Research into the Spanish law of community property reveals that since the year 1255 A.D. the Spanish law has contained the provision that an antenuptial debt of one spouse is the liabili[517]*517ty of his separate property alone. See 1 de Funiak, Principles of Community Property 435-437, sec. 156 (1943). The well-known Spanish commentator Gutierrez summed up the Spanish view on this subject in Quaestio CXXIX, No. 1, to Nov. Rec.Law 9, as follows s

“ * * * only those debts contracted during marriage were common and therefore payable from goods multiplied and acquired during the same marriage, which concern the actual marriage of man and wife and their partnership, and which accrue and were contracted on its account by both or one of them.” See 2 de Funiak, op. cit. supra 458.

It is thus obvious that Article 2403 of the Louisiana Civil Code is Spanish in origin. In this connection it is significant to note that, although under Spanish law the community was not responsible for the separate debts of the spouses, or debts contracted prior to marriage, one spouse’s share in such community was responsible for an obligation imposed on him, or her, by law, such as the obligation imposed on a parent to provide maintenance and support for his or her children by a former marriage. See 1 de Funiak, op. cit. supra 467-469, sec. 165. The views of the Spanish jurisconsults Matienzo and Gutierrez concerning the liability of the community for an obligation imposed on one of the spouses by law are discussed by de Funiak in these words:

“It will be seen, then, that when the law itself imposed an obligation on a spouse, as for support of a parent, or for taxes, or for a penal sum upon sentence for a criminal delict, or the like, the spouse’s half share of the community property might be reached, unlike the case of the ordinary separate creditor of the spouse. In the case of the ordinary separate creditor, his rights to reach his debtor’s properties were subordinated to the well-being and interests of the family which required that the community property be kept intact for its benefit during the marriage. But obligations imposed by the state itself took priority over everything else.” 1 de Funiak, op. cit. supra 468-469, sec. 165.

In view of the fact that Article 2403 of the Louisiana Civil Code is obviously Spanish in origin, the opinions of the Spanish commentators as discussed above are authority for the proposition that the payment of alimony for the support of children of a former marriage not only does not fall within the prohibition of Article 2403, but is clearly a valid liability of the second community.

Moreover, in Louisiana law, as in Spanish law, the duty of a parent to support his children is an obligation imposed by law. Civil Code, Articles 227, 229; Black v. Black, 205 La. 861, 862, 18 So.2d 321; State v. Seghers, 124 La. 115, 49 So. 998. It is therefore apparent that alimony for the support of children of a former marriage is not a debt as that word is used in Article 2403 of our Civil Code. This view finds strong support in decisions of the Supreme [519]*519Court of the United States, of other courts of this country, and of our own court. In Audubon v. Shufeldt, 181 U.S. 575, 577, 21 S.Ct.

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76 So. 2d 713, 226 La. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fazzio-v-krieger-la-1954.