Howard v. La Coste

270 S.W. 181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 27, 1924
DocketNo. 1157. [fn*] .
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 181 (Howard v. La Coste) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. La Coste, 270 S.W. 181 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

* Writ of error dismissed for want of jurisdiction May 13, 1925. Appellants sued appellee in the county court at law of Jefferson county, Tex., to recover the sum of $380, the alleged value of services rendered by them and expenses incurred as attorneys at law in representing appellee's wife as defendant in a suit brought by appellee against her in the district court of Jefferson county, Tex., for divorce, wherein judgment was rendered against appellee denying him the divorce. In their petition appellants alleged:

"I. For cause of action the plaintiffs represent to the court that heretofore, to wit, on or about the 22d day of January, 1923, the said defendant, John La Coste, filed his substituted petition for divorce against Marie La Coste, his wife, the same being cause No. 18600 in the Fifty-Eighth district court of Jefferson county, Tex.; that thereafter on or about the 22d day of January, A.D. 1923, this cause came on for trial in due order, and trial being had, the court gave judgment for the defendant Marie La Coste, denying the plaintiff's petition for divorce; that said judgment was made final; that said John La Coste has not perfected his appeal from same; that defendant John La Coste and Marie La Coste were man and wife prior to the filing of the divorce suit above described and are yet lawfully man and wife.

"II. The plaintiffs herein, B. B. Howard, H. C. Keen, and W. T. McNeill, acting at the request and at the special instance of Marie La Coste, represented her as defendant in the above-mentioned cause, and performed the usual services incident to the trial of a cause of that character, securing the judgment as above mentioned. The said legal services were necessary for said Marie La Coste, and that said defense to said suit was necessary to protect said Marie La Coste's good name and character.

"III. That the reasonable value of the legal services performed in the cause above mentioned for the said Marie La Coste is the amount of $300; that it was necessary for plaintiff B. B. Howard to make two trips from New Orleans, La., to this city in the interest of said Marie La Coste, and the expense incidental thereto totalled the amount of $80.

"IV. That said amount is now due and unpaid, and defendant, though often requested, has hitherto failed and refused and still refuses to pay the same or any part thereof, to plaintiffs' damage in the sum of $380."

Appellee answered by general demurrer and general denial.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered that appellants take nothing by their suit, from which judgment they have appealed.

The case is before us upon an agreed statement of the pleadings and the facts. The pleadings are as set out above. The facts are that on November 19, 1921, appellee, John La Coste, filed suit against his wife, Marie La Coste, in the district court of Jefferson county, Tex., for divorce, and for grounds of divorce alleged:

"(3) That about ten years ago plaintiff left defendant, coming to Texas, and afterwards repeatedly requested her to come to Texas where his business was, and where he had established his home, but that for more than three years next preceding the filing of this petition she has failed and refused to come and live with plaintiff or have anything to do with him. That during all of said time they have not lived together as husband and wife, and plaintiff believes and alleges the facts to be that during all of said time it was the intention of defendant to abandon him."

Marie La Coste resided in New Orleans, La., and when she was served with citation in the divorce suit she employed B. B. Howard, one of the appellants, to resist said suit and to defend same. By and through her attorneys, appellants, she filed answer containing the following:

"To the third article of said petition she makes a denial in toto: And further answering shows that she declined to follow or live with the plaintiff for the reason that he fled this city, his former home, and matrimonial domicile, with the niece of this defendant, Lena Anna Sifker, aged about 26 years, and lived in open adultery with her in Mississippi and Texas, in parts unknown to respondent until recent years; he having left her with her children in 1912. That she now has in her possession and control a female child born of that illicit intercourse, whom she is supporting and rearing because the mother, her niece as aforesaid, died in the insane asylum at San Antonio, Tex., in 1920.

"That for the above reasons she has refused to live with her said husband, and that on account of her religious views and her age she is not desirous of seeking a divorce, but only desires that her husband provide for his legitimate and illegitimate children, who are now in her care and custody, and she reserves her right to apply to this honorable court for alimony, both for herself and children and the illegitimate child herein mentioned at a later date, and for such amount as the court may deem proper."

Said answer was duly verified by Marie La Coste. The divorce suit was tried before the court and judgment entered denying the divorce and dismissing the suit. From this judgment there was no appeal. Later, May 21, 1923, appellants, Marie La Coste's attorneys, filed this suit against John La Coste to recover their fees for representing Mrs. La Coste in the divorce suit.

John and Marie La Coste were separated in 1912, at New Orleans, La. Marie La Coste sued appellee for divorce in the district court of Orleans parish, La., and on April 9, 1913, she obtained a decree of *Page 183 separation from bed and board from John La Coste, and in said decree of separation the property rights of the parties were settled and the permanent care, custody, and control of their minor children were given to Marie La Coste. Since said decree of separation, John La Coste and Marie La Coste have lived separately and apart; the said Marie La Coste residing in New Orleans, La., and John La Coste at Port Arthur, Tex. During practically all the time since the said separation John La Coste has contributed monthly in money to the support of said minor children approximately the sum of $50. He did not employ or agree to pay appellants any fee for their services in representing Marie La Coste. Under the laws of the state of Louisiana, when one party sues the other for divorce and a decree of separation from bed and board is entered, the party in whose favor same is entered may have said decree made permanent and the divorce absolute after one year from the date of the decree, by appearing before the court and showing that there has been no reconciliation, and after two years from the date of such decree, the offending party may, in same manner, have same made permanent. Neither party had made application for the decree to be made permanent at the date of the judgment in appellee's suit for divorce, January 22, 1923. The petition and answer of the parties in the divorce suit of appellee against his wife appear as evidence in the agreed statement of facts in this case. Appellants are and were practicing attorneys and were employed by Marie La Coste to represent her in resisting the granting of the divorce sued for by her husband, and performed such services and defended said suit, and it was shown that their services were reasonably worth the sum of $150, and that B. B. Howard, one of the appellants, incurred actual and necessary expenses in attending the trial and prosecuting the defense in the sum of $35.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-la-coste-texapp-1924.