Guillory v. Guillory

490 So. 2d 758
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 25, 1986
Docket85-745
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 490 So. 2d 758 (Guillory v. Guillory) 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
Guillory v. Guillory, 490 So. 2d 758 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

490 So.2d 758 (1986)

Albert GUILLORY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Blanche Edgar GUILLORY, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 85-745.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 25, 1986.

*759 Lynn A. Derouen, New Iberia, for defendant-appellant.

Darlene S. Simmons and Karen Longon, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before STOKER and YELVERTON, JJ., and BERTRAND, J. Pro Tem.[*]

YELVERTON, Judge.

In this divorce proceeding, the trial court found that Blanche Edgar Guillory was not free from fault, and therefore not entitled to permanent alimony. She appealed. We reverse and award her alimony of $200 a month.

In 1983 she sued her husband, Albert Guillory, for a legal separation on the grounds of cruel treatment and abandonment. Albert answered denying these allegations. A later stipulation between the parties resulted in a judgment being rendered for the wife granting the separation based on Albert's fault. In 1984 Albert filed for divorce based on living separate and apart for six months, after the judgment of separation, as authorized by La. *760 R.S. 9:302. The petition stated that Albert desired to pay his wife permanent alimony at $200 a month until she would become eligible for Social Security benefits. About three months later Albert filed asking for leave to file a supplemental and amending petition claiming he was unaware of the allegations and legal consequences of his original petition. Leave of court was granted, and the original petition was amended to allege that Blanche was not entitled to permanent alimony due to both pre-separation and post-separation fault on her part, and alternatively that Blanche did not need alimony and that in any event, Albert lacked the means to provide it. At the trial the trial court, over the objection of Blanche's counsel, allowed evidence relating to her pre-separation fault. On April 19, 1985, the judgment of divorce was granted. The trial court rendered judgment denying Blanche permanent alimony by finding that she did not sustain her burden of proof that she was free from fault.

The three issues before us are: 1) whether the trial court erred in allowing Albert to relitigate the pre-separation fault of the wife; 2) whether it was error to find Blanche at fault; and 3) if so, was she entitled to an award of permanent alimony?

RELITIGATION OF FAULT

Appellant argues that the separation judgment finding Albert at fault bars the relitigation of pre-separation fault in a subsequent divorce proceeding, and that the trial court therefore erred in allowing Albert to introduce evidence of Blanche's pre-separation fault. Albert responds with the argument that the parties merely stipulated to his fault at the separation proceeding, and that hers was never raised nor litigated in the earlier proceeding. We agree with Blanche. Her position is supported by the jurisprudence.

In Fulmer v. Fulmer, 301 So.2d 622 (La.1974), the wife obtained a judicial separation on the ground of the husband's abandonment. After a year and sixty days had elapsed, the husband filed suit for final divorce, based upon the expiration of one year following judicial separation without reconciliation, as authorized under former La.R.S. 9:302. At the trial post-divorce alimony was an issue. The question before the Supreme Court was whether the determination of marital "fault" in the separation proceeding barred relitigation of the "fault" issue for purposes of an award of permanent alimony.

In that case the Supreme Court held as follows:

"... [T]he judicial determination, in the separation proceeding, of the party at fault in the separation bars re-litigation, in the subsequent divorce proceeding, of the fault which caused the separation, when such need be determined for the purpose of awarding post-divorce alimony under the code article. We do so, as we will explain, on the basis of what we believe to be the legislative intent as deduced from the legislative history of the article.
"We assume that the legislative choice is based on the judicial economy and consistency represented by having the separation-causing fault determined once and in the separation proceedings itself, rather than litigating (or re-litigating) it in the much later divorce proceedings— where, with different testimony or less recent recollection, the separation-causing fault might even be determined contrary to that determined at an earlier well-tried and hotly-contested separation adjudiciation.
* * * * * *
"... A judgment of separation in favor of the wife is a judicial determination of the marital fault which caused the judicial separation. As to the pre-separation fault, it should constitute a conclusive determination which equally bars re-litigation of the issue of fault, when alimony is sought under Article 160, whether the divorce is based either on La.R.S. 9:301 or on 9:302. It should equally bar the husband or the wife from re-litigating such issue.
"Thus, where a judicial separation is decreed as caused by the fault of one *761 spouse or the other, such fault as judicially determined to be the cause of the separation is normally determinative of the issue of whether the husband or the wife is or is not at fault, for purposes of deciding whether the wife is entitled to alimony under Article 160. Such a conclusion is, of course, not applicable if the divorce is sought for post-separation fault, such as adultery; for the sole effect of the separation judgment is a conclusive adjudication as to which spouse's pre-separation fault primarily caused the separation."

In Moon v. Moon, 345 So.2d 168 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1977), writ denied 347 So.2d 250 (La.1977) the wife filed suit for separation on the grounds of the husband's cruelty. The husband reconvened urging mutual fault as a defense to the separation. Subsequently the husband chose not to oppose his wife's suit for a separation on the grounds of adultery. Rather than litigating the issue of the wife's fault, the attorneys for both parties entered into a stipulation that the judgment was not determinative of the issue of the wife's freedom from fault for alimony purposes since that issue was not litigated. The wife subsequently filed suit for a divorce based upon separation for over one year after the judgment of separation, and for alimony. The husband urged that the wife was not entitled to alimony because she was not free from fault, both pre-separation and post-separation. The wife filed a motion to strike the husband's allegations of her fault. The trial court granted the motion and refused to allow litigation of either pre-separation or post-separation fault. The husband appealed. This court held on appeal that the trial court correctly sustained the wife's motion to strike all allegations of pre-separation fault on her part, since the separation judgment barred relitigation of pre-separation fault, even though the parties attempted to stipulate that the judgment would not be determinative of the issue of the wife's pre-separation fault. This court found the stipulation to be invalid, since the purpose of entitling litigants to one hearing on the question of pre-separation fault is to achieve judicial economy, and the litigants could not by stipulation require the courts to relitigate a matter that had been previously adjudicated.

In the present case the parties stipulated that the separation was caused by the fault of the husband. Judgment was entered against Albert and in favor of Blanche.

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Bluebook (online)
490 So. 2d 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillory-v-guillory-lactapp-1986.