Hockaday v. Hockaday

161 So. 164, 182 La. 88, 1935 La. LEXIS 1581
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 1, 1935
DocketNo. 33255.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 So. 164 (Hockaday v. Hockaday) 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
Hockaday v. Hockaday, 161 So. 164, 182 La. 88, 1935 La. LEXIS 1581 (La. 1935).

Opinions

LAND, Justice.

This is a suit for separation from bed and board, with an incidental demand for alimony pendente lite in the sum of $150 per month.

Defendant excepted to the jurisdiction of the district court for the parish of Acadia, in which the suit was brought, ratione person» and ratione materi», both as to the main de-, mand and as to the incidental demand. These exceptions were overruled.

The rule for alimony was then tried, and judgment was rendered against defendant for alimony pendente lite at the rate of $75 *91 per month from date of judicial demand; the accrued alimony for three months to he paid forthwith, and the remaining alimony to be paid on the 17th day of each month.

From this judgment defendant has suspensively appealed to this court.

On page 18 of plaintiff’s brief we find the following statement: “The court found, and since we concur in his findings, we desire to follow his findings and opinion, in this regard, to-wit: (1) That the proceedings herein were not founded upon the provisions of Oiv. Code, art. 142, as amended; (2) That the plaintiff wife was at the time of bringing her suit, and theretofore, a non-resident; (3) That the husband was at the time of bringing said suit a resident of the Parish of Acadia; and (4) That the wife’s cause of complaint, viz., her abandonment by her husband, while originating in a State other than Louisiana, had continued uninterrupted until defendant husband became a resident of Acadia Parish, Louisiana, and while he was a resident of Acadia, thus constituting an abandonment here.” (Italics ours.)

It is alleged by plaintiff that she is a resident of Atlanta, Ga.; that she was married to defendant in the city of New Orleans, La., January 21, 1911; that immediately thereafter, she and her husband established their matrimonial domicile in the city of New Orleans, parish of Orleans; and that, after remaining there for some time, they moved to Jacksonville, Fla.; from there to Atlanta, Ga.; and thence to Vicksburg, Miss.

Plaintiff alleges that while she and her husband were residing in Vicksburg, Miss., during the month of April or May, 1916, he abandoned her, without cause or provocation, and has never since returned to her, and that it became necessary for her to return to her native home in Atlanta, Ga., to establish her residence and' domicile with her people.

The parties to this suit were married in Louisiana, and established a matrimonial domicile in the city of New. Orleans, parish of Orleans, where the marriage was contracted. They removed to and established domiciles in other states. During that time, the alleged abandonment occurred.

The plaintiff established a residence and domicile in the state of Georgia in 1916, and her residence and domicile there has continued until this day.

Conceding that plaintiff may have brought this suit under article 142 of the Civil Code, as amended, had she returned to the matrimonial domicile in the city of New Orleans, within any reasonable intendment of the law, yet she has never returned at all to the matrimonial domicile in the city of New Orleans. Nor have the parties to this suit, after the marriage in the city of New Orleans, ever resided together in the parish of Acadia, where the suit was instituted. In fact, plaintiff was never in the parish of Acadia, other than for a few days to testify at the trial of the rule for alimony.

The right of a wife to return to the state of Louisiana, where the marriage was contracted, after a matrimonial domicile has been established elsewhere, for the purpose of filing a suit for separation from bed and board, on account of the misconduct of her husband in another state, is fully discussed in the case of Hyman, Lichtenstein & Co. v. *93 Sehlenker & Hirsch, 44 La. Ann. 108, 120, 121, 122, 10 So. 623, 627. It is said in that ease: “The wife here has not returned ‘to the domicile where her marriage was contracted,’ tcithin any reasonable intendment of the law. * * *

“It would hardly he supposed that a married woman domiciled in Mississippi could run over into the state of Louisiana for a day, voithout any intention of remaining here, or resuming her residence, institute an action for a separation from bed and board leading to divorce, return instantly to her Mississippi domicile, and claim a decree in such a case that any court in Christendom would grant or respect. We had occasion recently to consider the rights of a married woman in such a case, and the limitations upon her right to invoke the jurisdiction of her original matrimonial domicile. Smith v. Smith, 43 La. Ann. 1140, 10 So. 248.

“No such case was contemplated by the law, which only intended to extend its protection to women married here, whose husbands, domiciled in another country, had so mistreated them as to justify them in leaving the matrimonial domicile and in returning to their former homes, to live under and to receive the protection of its laws.” (Italics ours.)

Plaintiff’s husband abandoned her in the state of Mississippi in the -year, 1916 Instead of returning to the matrimonial domicile in the city of New Orleans thereafter, and suing her husband for a divorce, under article 142 of the Civil Code, which gave her that right, although the abandonment occurred in another state, plaintiff returned to her native home in Atlanta, Ga., in the year 1916, and resided there continuously until the filing of the present suit August 14, 1934, a period of 18 years.

The defendant husband has recently inherited some property and money in the parish of Acadia in this state.

In a supplemental petition, plaintiff alleges that “although her said husband continues to a certain extent to be a wanderer, he is now, and has been ever since December 19, 1933, if not for a longer period, a resident of the Parish of Acadia, wherein he is now and has been domiciliated during the period above stated.”

Plaintiff does not pray that her husband . be summoned to return to any matrimonial domicile whatever. Nor does she allege that she has ever presented herself at the residence of her husband in Acadia parish and demanded that he receive her there, and that he has refused to do so.

In our opinion, the district court of Acadia parish is without jurisdiction ratione mátense to try this suit, under any aspect of this case.

In the first place, the suit was not brought by the plaintiff in a district court at the matrimonial domicile established by the parties in the city of New Orleans, immediately after their marriage in that city on January 21, 1911.

Nor has plaintiff ever “returned” to the matrimonial domicile in the city of New Orleans, “within any reasonable intendment of the law,” so as to bring her suit within the requirements of article 142 of the Civil Code of this state.

*95 Plaintiff has cited the case of Clark v. Clark, 145 La. 740, 82 So. 875, as authority sustaining the jurisdiction of the district court of the parish of Acadia in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 164, 182 La. 88, 1935 La. LEXIS 1581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockaday-v-hockaday-la-1935.