Laiche v. Laiche
This text of 231 So. 2d 647 (Laiche v. Laiche) 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
Anicet LAICHE
v.
Estelle B. LAICHE.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*648 Patsy Jo McDowell, Baton Rouge, for appellant.
Carmack M. Blackmon and Walton J. Barnes, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before, LOTTINGER, REID and BLANCHE, JJ.
BLANCHE, Judge.
This appeal presents for our consideration the correctness of a judgment rendered by The Family Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge awarding appellee's wife monthly alimony in the sum of $40.00. A brief narration of the domestic litigation between these parties is necessary for a proper understanding of the issues on appeal.
The record reveals that the parties were married on September 27, 1941, and of this marriage six children were born. On February 12, 1955, Anicet Laiche filed a petition for divorce on the ground of the parties' having lived separate and apart for a period in excess of two years, in which petition the husband expressly stated he had consented and agreed to pay his wife for her support and for the care and support of the minor children of the marriage the sum of $150.00 per month, and in which petition the husband prayed for judgment, inter alia, granting defendant for her support and for the care and support of the *649 six minor children of the marriage monthly alimony in the sum of $150.00. The defendant wife was served personally and on March 15, 1955, judgment was rendered on confirmation of a preliminary default in favor of the husband granting him the divorce as prayed for and further granting to the wife for her support and the care and support of the minor children alimony in the sum of $150.00 per month. On July 15, 1957, judgment was rendered in favor of the husband pursuant to a rule filed by him reducing the alimony and child support to the sum of $100.00 per month. This judgment was subsequently reversed on appeal. Laiche v. Laiche, 237 La. 298, 111 So.2d 120 (1959). During the pendency of the appeal from the July 15, 1957, judgment reducing alimony and child support, the husband, pursuant to rule, obtained a judgment in his favor on July 14, 1958, suspending altogether alimony and child support payments until further order of the Court, he having alleged loss of his employment due to a labor strike. This judgment was subsequently affirmed on appeal. Laiche v. Laiche, 138 So.2d 257 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1962). The next significant development occurred on January 28, 1963, when judgment was rendered in favor of Mrs. Laiche ordering her former husband to pay child support in the sum of $80.00 per month. On February 5, 1968, Mr. Laiche filed a rule to reduce this child support from $80.00 per month to $25.00 per month, which rule was originally scheduled for hearing on February 12, 1968, but was continued and reassigned for February 19, 1968. At this hearing present counsel for Mrs. Laiche filed a rule directing Mr. Laiche to show cause why the child support should not be retained at $80.00 per month and also to show cause why he should not be condemned to pay his former wife the sum of $100.00 per month as alimony for her support. Judgment was rendered on February 19, 1968, and read and signed on February 20, 1968, reducing the child support from $80.00 per month to $50.00 per month and denying the claim of Mrs. Laiche for alimony for the stated reason that she failed to prove that the cause of the separation between the parties was not her fault. Counsel for Mrs. Laiche timely filed a motion for new trial on February 23, 1968, which was assigned for hearing on March 4, 1968. The record reflects that the matter was held open at the conclusion of the hearing on March 4, 1968, for the filing of briefs. On March 15, 1968, counsel for Mrs. Laiche filed a "plea of estoppel" and a peremptory exception of res judicata, both of which pleadings urged that the husband could not deny his former wife's right to alimony. Judgment was rendered on September 17, 1968, and read and signed on September 25, 1968, sustaining the peremptory exception and "plea of estoppel" and ordering a new trial for the limited purpose of determining the amount of alimony to which Mrs. Laiche was entitled. On written motion, the matter was assigned for hearing on October 21, 1968, and at the conclusion of this hearing judgment was rendered on said date and read and signed on October 28, 1968, granting Mrs. Laiche alimony in the sum of $40.00 per month. From this judgment Anicet Laiche perfected a devolutive appeal.
Shortly after oral argument before the Court, Anicet Laiche also took an appeal from the aforementioned judgment on September 17, 1968, and read and signed on September 25, 1968. To this latter appeal Mrs. Laiche filed a motion to dismiss, urging first, that the judgment complained of amounts to an interlocutory order granting a new trial from which no appeal lies; second, that if an appeal were proper it was taken after the delay for taking such an appeal had lapsed; and third, that the required security was not posted.
We are of the opinion that the issues sought to be presented by appellant are properly before this Court. If the judgment represents an interlocutory order from which no appeal would lie, then the matter has properly been presented to us by the first appeal taken by Mr. Laiche.
*650 If it represents a final, appealable judgment, then the appeal was timely taken inasmuch as the judgment appealed from was rendered after the case had been taken under advisement by the trial court, and the record fails to reflect that counsel for appellant was given notice by the Clerk of the signing of said judgment as required by Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure, Article 1913 as amended, which provision governs when the delay for taking an appeal commences. Finally, the argument of appellee that the required security for taking this appeal was not posted should have been presented to the trial court on a motion objecting to the form, substance and sufficiency of the appeal bond as provided by Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure, Article 2088 as amended. On such a motion appellant would have been given an opportunity to furnish new or supplemental security before the appeal could be dismissed. Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure, Article 5125. Furthermore, the security to be furnished for the taking of a devolutive appeal is to be fixed by the trial court in an amount sufficient to secure the payment of the costs. Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure, Article 2124. Nothing appears on the face of this record to indicate the trial court erred in permitting appellant to use the same devolutive appeal bond for this second appeal as was furnished by appellant in connection with the taking of the first appeal, especially since the second appeal required the preparation of no additional record or the transcribing of any additional testimony. Therefore, the motion to dismiss is accordingly denied.
Having disposed of the issues raised by the motion to dismiss, we now turn to the merits of this case.
In its Reasons for Judgment the trial court made the following statement:
"The Court, having addressed itself to the propositions advanced by counsel for defendant in rule, Estelle B. Laiche, is of the opinion that the position taken by counsel for Mrs. Laiche is correct and that the judgment rendered by this Court on the 19th day of February, 1968 and signed the following day, is in error.
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