Harrison v. Harrison
This text of 503 So. 2d 116 (Harrison v. Harrison) 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
Francis D. HARRISON
v.
Catherine H. HARRISON.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*117 Floyd J. Reed, New Orleans, for defendant/appellant.
Janelle A. Naccari, Metairie, for plaintiff/appellee.
Before KLIEBERT, GRISBAUM and WICKER, JJ.
WICKER, Judge.
This appeal arises from a judgment of separation between Catherine H. Harrison (the wife), appellant and Francis D. Harrison (the husband), appellee based upon mutual fault and awarding the wife $750.00 as alimony pendente lite. From that judgment the wife has appealed. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
On May 23, 1985 a petition for separation was filed by the husband alleging cruel treatment. Thereafter, on June 19, 1985 the wife filed a rule for alimony pendente lite. By judgment dated August 26, 1985 she was awarded $2,000.00 per month in alimony.
On July 15,1985 the wife filed an answer and a reconventional demand alleging physical and mental cruelty as well as abandonment.
On June 6, 1986 the trial judge rendered a judgment after an April 10, 1986 hearing decreeing that a reconciliation took place between the parties between the 24th and 28th day of August, 1985 and vacating all previous orders. No appeal has been taken from the decree of reconciliation.
On November 4, 1985, the husband filed again for separation alleging cruel treatment. The wife also filed a second petition for separation following the reconciliation on April 23, 1986 in which she alleges inter alia public humiliation and mental cruelty.
On May 12, 1986 among the matters heard were the separation and rule for alimony pendente lite. On May 21, 1986 the trial judge rendered his judgment finding mutual fault and awarding the wife $750.00 alimony pendente lite.
Appellant now specifies the following errors:
1. That the trial court was clearly wrong and committed manifest error when it awarded alimony pendente lite of only $750.00 per month to the wife in view of the husband's consistent refusal to obey and comply with the writs of subpoena duces tecum, and
2. That the trial court erred when it found the husband at fault in leaving the purported matrimonial domicile and at the same time found the wife at fault in the cause of the separation of the parties.
At the close of the May 12, 1986 hearing, the wife's counsel requested the trial judge to impose the sanction provided for in L.S. A.-C.C.P. Art. 1354. The article provides that:
[w]hen a person subpoenaed is an adverse party, the party requesting the subpoena duces tecum may accompany his request with a written statement under oath as to what facts he believes the *118 books, papers, documents, or tangible things will prove, and a copy of such statement must be attached to the subpoena. If the party subpoenaed fails to comply with the subpoena, the facts set forth in the written statement shall be taken as confessed, and in addition the party subpoenaed shall be subject to the penalties set forth in Article 1357.
Appellant contends that since she attached an affidavit to her subpoena duces tecum stating "that the records, that is, books, papers, documents or tangible things so subpoenaed will prove that the respondent in subpoena, Francis Daniel Harrison, has an income ranging from $75,000.00 to $85,000.00 per annum out of which to pay alimony pendente lite" that these facts should be considered to be confessed by her husband in view of the fact that he did not produce these at the hearing.
The trial judge stated at the close of the hearing that he wished to review the procedural aspects of Article 1354 and took the matter under advisement. In his judgment rendered on May 21, 1986, however, he made no mention of the sanction.
Since evidence was offered at the hearing[1] regarding the return and the husband's explanation as to why he could not produce the records, the trial judge's silence is to be taken as a rejection of the wife's demand for a sanction pursuant to L.S.A.-C.C.P. Art. 1354. See, Reed v. Verwoerdt, 490 So.2d 421 (La.App. 5th Cir. 1986) and the cases cited therein.
At the May 12, 1986 hearing the wife's counsel referred to a subpoena duces tecum which requested that the husband produce his 1984 and 1985 tax returns. In reply to this request, the husband testified that he had filed for an extension on his 1985 tax return and it was not yet prepared. With regard to the 1984 tax return he testified that it had been in a box with his receipts and that it had been moved while he was living away from the domicile. He was also under the impression that counsel for the wife had the 1984 return.
Counsel for the wife also asked for the 1984 and 1985 income tax returns of Harrison Turbine Services, Inc., the only corporation in which the husband had an interest. The husband testified that he did not produce these forms because his accountant had them and that when he tried to contact his accountant, his accountant was out of town. He also stated that he was under the impression that his wife had given her counsel all of the records from the corporation by the date of the first hearing on July 12, 1985. Counsel for the wife did not indicate to the trial judge at the time that he was questioning the husband on the return that he was dissatisfied with the return. He noted the husband's failure to comply, however, when he questioned the wife and again at closing.
In Kinnebrew v. Louisiana Ice Co., 216 La. 472, 43 So.2d 798 (1949) the Louisiana Supreme Court dealt with the issue of whether a failure to produce records constituted a confession of the facts stated in the plaintiffs' motion for the subpoena. In Kinnebrew, however, the plaintiffs claimed that the records produced were insufficient and subsequently filed a rule to show cause why the facts should not be considered as confessed. The matter was set and evidence taken on the rule. Afterwards, the trial judge rendered his decision and found that the defendant had produced all records which existed or which it had in its possession.
In the instant case, the trial judge evidently accepted the husband's explanation that he had in fact produced all of the records which existed or were in his possession. Kinnebrew, supra. We find no manifest error since there is evidence before the trial judge which "upon [his] reasonable *119 evaluation credibility, furnishes a reasonable factual basis for [his] finding." Canter v. Koehring, 283 So.2d 716, 724 (La.1973).
Since the trial judge did not consider as confessed the allegation that the husband was earning $75,000.00 to $85,000.00 for 1986, then he must have examined the evidence to consider of whether the husband had a substantial change in his earning capacity as contended. He must also have considered the wife's needs.
Although the wife testified that she required $4,940.08 per month, she also admitted that she did not know what her monthly expenses were at present and that her list of expenses constituted a list of what her expenses "will be" once she "gets on her feet."
Furthermore, she admitted that her husband pays the housenote of $914.00; however, she included the housenote as one of her expenses.
Alimony pendente lite relates to the facts as these existed during the time the parties lived together and as they actually exist as the litigation commences and not to future possibilities. Hollowell v. Hollowell,
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