Gautreaux v. Gautreaux

57 So. 2d 188, 220 La. 564, 1952 La. LEXIS 1106
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 14, 1952
DocketNo. 40626
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 57 So. 2d 188 (Gautreaux v. Gautreaux) 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
Gautreaux v. Gautreaux, 57 So. 2d 188, 220 La. 564, 1952 La. LEXIS 1106 (La. 1952).

Opinions

McCALEB, Justice.

Certiorari issued herein at the instance of relator, a practicing attorney representing the plaintiff, to ascertain the validity of proceedings had in this cause on December 6th, 1951, which culminated in two judgments holding relator in contempt of court and sentencing him to pay a fine of $100 and serve 24 hours in the parish jail for each offense.

The judgments of contempt have their origin in certain purportedly salacious and offensive allegations made by relator on behalf of plaintiff in. this action, in which plaintiff is demanding an absolute divorce founded on the alleged adultery of her husband. The suit is a continuation of a previous action bearing the same title, which was heretofore expunged and dismissed by the respondent judge because the petition contained lewd and libidinous matter employed in connection with a charge therein that the defendant, in addition to the commission of the act of adultery, had also perpetrated a crime against nature with the corespondent. In that case, as here, our supervisory jurisdiction was invoked but the writs were denied, as we felt that the order expunging the petition was proper, in view of the disgusting and unnecessary descriptions portrayed therein.

Thereafter, the instant suit was filed containing substantially the same allegations but omitting the lewd details and descriptions (other than to state the manner in which the act was performed) respecting the commission of the crime against nature by defendant and the corespondent. On December 6th 1951, more than ten days after defendant had been personally served with citation and a copy of the petition, relator appeared in open court and moved for the entry of a preliminary default judgment, which was denied on the ground that the time allowed by law for the defendant to make an appearance had not elapsed. Simultaneously, the judge issued the following order:

“On October 30, 1951, I ordered expunged from the records of this Court the petition filed by plaintiff herein against defendant herein bearing No. 6799 of the docket of this Court, because of the scurrilous and indecent language contained in said petition.

“On November 21, 1951, less than thirty days after said petition was ordered expunged, which order was affirmed by the Supreme Court, and in brazen defiance of said order, the attorney for plaintiff filed the petition in the present suit, which is almost an ■ exact duplicate of the petition which had been expunged from the records of this Court on October 30, 1951, omitting only a few words from article six of said petition.

“As stated in my order issued October 30, 1951, the language in this petition is so unnecessary and so far beyond the require[570]*570ments of the law in alleging a cause of action that it is difficult for the Court to conceive of a member of the bar resorting to such practice.

“And as I further stated in my order of October 30, 1951, it is the Court’s opinion that your sole motive in inserting such indecent language in this petition was intentionally calculated to insult and embarrass the young woman member of this Bar who is representing the defendant herein.

“Also the official stenographer of this Court is a young woman, and you would delight in interrogating witnesses concerning the allegations of article four of this petition for the sole purpose of gratifying an insatiable desire to insult and embarrass both of these young women, but Sir, as long as I am on this bench, no such licentious and sadistic pleadings are going to be filed and permitted to remain part of the records of this Court.

“The law requires attorneys to plead their causes with propriety and decency, and I shall insist and demand that you respect the dignity and authority of this Court and also respect the officers of this Court and the members of this Bar.

“Mr. C. A. Blanchard, I have been very lenient, tolerant, and patient with you, but you seem to have a natural propensity to manifest a contemptuous attitude toward the Court and the members of the Bar.

“It is my opinion that any member of the bar who would descend to such a low level of practice should forfeit his privilege of practicing the honorable profession of the law.

“You were told very plainly on October 30, 1951 that article six of the petition filed in suit number 6799, which was expunged from the records of this Court, contained language which had no placeñn any Court and was wholly unnecessary to allege a cause of action, but, notwithstanding the Court’s order, you have inserted article four in the petition filed in the present suit, which contains some of the same scurrilous, repulsive, and indecent language.

“In view of the foregoing, the Court construes your conduct a brazen insult to and contempt of this Court.

“For the foregoing reasons, it is ordered that the petition filed herein be expunged from the records of this Court, with the hope that you will file a petition stating a cause of action as alleged in article three of this petition, which is all that is necessary ■ and which will be within the bounds of law and decency.”

While the foregoing was being read, relator arose and began arguing with the judge and, notwithstanding remonstrance by the judge, relator did not desist.1 [572]*572Whereupon, the judge found him guilty of contempt and sentenced him to pay a fine of $100 and to serve 24 hours in jail. Immediately thereafter, upon the resumption, of the reading of the order, relator again arose, threw open his coat in a belligerent attitude, slammed his folder on the desk, cursed the judge and shouted “Come on and take me to jail”. Whereupon, the judge ordered the sheriff to prevent relator from leaving the courtroom and again adjudged him guilty of contempt, sentencing him to another fine of $100 and 24 hours more in the parish jail.

In his brief in support of the writ, relator attacks the validity of the proceedings below on divers grounds. However, we find that some of the points raised are repetitious and, further, because of the conclusion we have reached, it has become unnecessary to consider all of his contentions. Hence, we shall discuss only those pertinent to the views we entertain.

Relator initially complains that the judge was wrong in dismissing plaintiff’s petition, contending that he had the right to allege such facts as he deemed were necessary for the maintenance of plaintiff’s demand, even though those facts involved lascivious or abnormal conduct by defendant. The judge, on the other hand, takes the position that his action in expunging the entire petition is not before us as plaintiff has a remedy by appeal from that judgment and that our inquiry is limited to ascertainment of the validity of the orders of contempt.

While it is true that the order expunging plaintiffs petition is an appealable judgment, the record in the case is before us on the writ of certiorari which is broad enough in its scope to include our inquiry into the legality of all proceedings had below and particularly those upon which the judgments of contempt rest. Article 855 of the Code of Practice; State ex rel. Harz v. City of New Orleans, 216 La. 849, 44 So.2d 889. Under the circumstances, it would not be consonant with justice to require plaintiff to take an appeal when the proceedings under which her suit was dismissed are now before us for scrutiny and decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 So. 2d 188, 220 La. 564, 1952 La. LEXIS 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gautreaux-v-gautreaux-la-1952.