Hammack v. Hammack

778 So. 2d 70, 2000 WL 1871722
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 2000
Docket99 CA 2809
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 778 So. 2d 70 (Hammack v. Hammack) 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
Hammack v. Hammack, 778 So. 2d 70, 2000 WL 1871722 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

778 So.2d 70 (2000)

Jimmie B. HAMMACK
v.
Sharyn Kathi Dunn HAMMACK.

No. 99 CA 2809.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

December 22, 2000.
Rehearing Denied March 1, 2001.

*71 Lee Herrington, Baton Rouge, Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant Jimmie B. Hammack.

Alan S. Fishbein, Baton Rouge, Counsel for Defendant/Appellee Sharyn Kathi Dunn Hammack.

Before CARTER, C.J., WEIMER and DURWOOD W. CONQUE[1], JJ.

CONQUE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment finding appellant's former wife free from fault in the breakup of the parties' marriage and awarding her final periodic spousal support in the amount of $800 a month.

Dr. Jimmie B. Hammack and Sharyn Kathi Hammack were married on July 24, 1998. On December 23, 1998, after ten years of marriage, Dr. Hammack, filed a petition for divorce pursuant to La. C.C. art. 102, based on living separate and apart for over six months. Kathi Hammack reconvened for periodic spousal support. The judgment of divorce was signed on August 2, 1999, and trial on the reconventional demand was held on August 13, 1999.

At the trial, the evidence presented centered on the relationship between Kathi Hammack and Dr. Jimmie Hammack's children from his prior marriages. Although Kathi Hammack contended that she was free from fault, Dr. Hammack argued that her animosity toward his children is what led to the breakup of the marriage.

DISCUSSION

The issues at trial were limited to those presented by the provisions of the Louisiana Civil Code pertaining to periodic spousal support, as amended and reenacted, effective January 1, 1998. The relevant provisions are:

Art. 111. Spousal support; authority of court

In a proceeding for divorce or thereafter, the court may award interim periodic support to a party or may award final periodic support to a party free from fault prior to the filing of a proceeding to terminate the marriage, based on the needs of that party and the ability of the other party to pay, in accordance with the following Articles.

Art. 112. Determination of final periodic support

A. The court must consider all relevant factors in determining the entitlement, amount, and duration of final support. Those factors may include:
(1) The needs of the parties.
(2) The income and means of the parties, including the liquidity of such means.
(3) The financial obligations of the parties.
(4) The earning capacity of the parties.
(5) The effect of custody of children upon a party's earning capacity.
(6) The time necessary for the claimant to acquire appropriate education, training, or employment.
(7) The health and age of the parties.
(8) The duration of the marriage.
(9) The tax consequences to either or both parties.
B. The sum awarded under this Article shall not exceed one-third of the obligor's net income.

*72 Fault, after the amendments to the code articles, continues to mean misconduct that rises to the level of one of the previously existing fault grounds for legal separation or divorce.[2] The burden of proving freedom from fault is upon the claimant. To constitute fault sufficient to deprive a spouse of permanent alimony, the spouse's misconduct must not only be of a serious nature, but it must also be an independent, contributory, or proximate cause of the separation.[3] The only significant change related to the issue of fault found in the 1997 amendments is that, unlike prior law, La. C.C. Art. 111 now explicitly requires that the fault of the claimant precluding an award of spousal support must have occurred prior to the filing of the "proceeding to terminate the marriage".

The facts show that the parties had no children during their marriage. Kathi Hammack had been married twice before, but had no children of her own. Dr. Hammack had also been married twice before. He had three children during his first marriage —a daughter, Laura, who is now married and has a son of her own, and two sons, Bryant, who died nine months after the parties were married, and Jason, who was twenty-five at the time of trial. During his second marriage, Jimmie Hammack had another son, Jeffery, who was sixteen at the time of the trial. Jeffery lived with his mother and visited at his father's home.

Kathi Hammack did not have a good relationship with her husband's children, and Dr. Hammack contends that the animosity between her and his children was her fault. He maintains that she wanted nothing to do with the children, and eventually drove them away from his home. He urges that her behavior toward his children ruined their marriage.

Even before the marriage, then sixteen year old Laura and Kathi Hammack got off on the wrong foot. Laura was a typical teenager and Kathi Hammack was the new wife. They did not like each other and settled into a pattern of generally ignoring each other. The antagonism between them grew worse over the years, and they eventually stopped speaking to each other. When Laura was married, Kathi Hammack was not invited to the wedding, and her presence caused quite a stir when she decided to go anyway. Laura and her mother were openly critical of Kathi Hammack's dress and behavior at the wedding, and there was even a physical altercation between Laura's mother and Kathi Hammack. Later, when Laura had a son, the first grandchild in the family, Dr. Hammack felt that Kathi wanted nothing to do with that child. This further widened the gap between them.

Jeffery was only about four years old when the parties were married. Dr. Hammack testified that everything seemed fine between Kathi and Jeffery until once, when he was eight or nine years old, he apparently put a stapler in his bag without permission as he was leaving the Hammack home after a regular weekend visit. Kathi interpreted his act as "stealing". On other occasions, Kathi Hammack accused Jeffery of taking other items without permission, including a hand-held calculator and a pair of exercise shorts. She came to believe that Jeffery was "a little thief", and sometimes referred to him as such. She did not want him in the house without supervision for fear that he would steal. Dr. Hammack contends that his wife's attitude toward Jeffery hurt him deeply and convinced him that the marriage was doomed.

Kathi Hammack does not deny that her relationship with her husband's children was strained. But the testimony at trial showed that her appraisal of the children's *73 behavior was not without some basis in truth, and that the acrimony between them was mutual. She denies that she either drove the children from their father's home or kept them from visiting there with him. She maintains that, during the course of the marriage, she made sincere efforts to become part of the family and to support her husband's participation in the lives of his children.

The trial court found that Kathi Hammack's behavior did not rise to the level of fault that might constitute an independent cause of the breakup of this marriage, and so preclude an award of final periodic support. The trial court wrote:

This court finds that these parties had the normal problems that married couples do where stepchildren are involved. This court finds it hard to believe, based on all of the relevant testimony and argument by the attorneys that Mrs. Hammack single-handedly kept Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
778 So. 2d 70, 2000 WL 1871722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammack-v-hammack-lactapp-2000.