Morris v. Morris
This text of 336 So. 2d 254 (Morris v. Morris) 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
Susan Steers MORRIS
v.
Russell Lindsay MORRIS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*255 Charles S. McCowan, Jr., Baton Rouge, for appellant.
Gerard E. Kiefer, Michael A. Cavanaugh, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before LANDRY, COVINGTON and PONDER, JJ.
PONDER, Judge.
On March 11, 1975, Susan Steers Morris, plaintiff-appellee, filed suit (No. 32,331) for separation against Russell Lindsay Morris, defendant-appellant because of, among other things, alleged "adultery on many occasions, and particularly on February 22 and 23, 1975 and March 8, 1975 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana." After trial on June 11, 1975, the trial judge found mutual fault and denied the separation.
On June 20, 1975, Mrs. Morris filed suit (No. 33,267) for divorce and permanent alimony based on alleged adultery of defendant-appellant "on many occasions, and particularly on February 22 and 23, 1975 and March 8, 1975 and other dates to be adduced at trial." Defendant-appellant *256 filed exceptions of res judicata, lis pendens, prematurity and expressly pleaded the doctrine of judicial estoppel. Plaintiff-appellee, before knowledge of the filing of these exceptions, amended her petition to allege adultery on "February 22 and 23, 1975, February 25, 1975, March 4, 1975, March 8, 1975, March 11, 1975, March 25, 1975, April 8, 1975, April 15, 1975, April 22, 1975, May 6, 1975 and May 13, 1975 all of said acts of adultery occurring at the Oak Manor Motel, Baton Rouge, Louisiana...".
On July 1, 1975, plaintiff-appellee appealed the judgment in Suit Number 32,331 denying her a separation because of her purported mutual fault.
Defendant-appellant, on August 29, 1975, in answer to the divorce suit, denied any acts of adultery and specifically alleged that plaintiff-appellee locked defendant out of the matrimonial domicile on May 15, 1975; she humiliated defendant in public; she refused to communicate with defendant; she refused to prepare family meals; she was reckless with family funds; and, she "has failed and refused to live up to her obligations as a wife for a period of over eight years...".
The trial judge overruled all of defendant-appellant's exceptions and after trial on the merits signed judgment granting plaintiff-appellee a divorce "a vinculo matrimonii," custody of a minor child and $685.25 per month child support and alimony, subject to a $185.25 monthly credit for payments made by defendant-appellant on the mortgage on the family home. Mr. Morris has timely appealed and it is the latter case which is presently before us.[1] We affirm.
Defendant-appellant's specifications of error are as follows:
1. Not maintaining the exception of res judicata, or in the alternative, the plea of judicial estoppel, as the same matter was litigated in the separation suit with a "judgment of mutual fault" being rendered therein.
2. Not maintaining the exceptions of lis pendens, or, in the alternative, prematurity, as the same parties were involved in both suits.
3. Finding the evidence sufficient to prove adultery on the part of defendant-appellant and, in the alternative, not finding mutual fault.
4. Awarding plaintiff-appellee any alimony and child support, or, in the alternative, the sum of $685.25 per month.
5. The trial judge becoming an advocate for plaintiff-appellee and delving into matters not raised by the pleadings or the testimony theretofore presented.
SPECIFICATION NUMBER ONE
Specification number one is contrary to firmly established law. In order for a court to even consider the applicability of res judicata and judicial estoppel, the judgment raised must be final. Civil Code Article 2286; California v. Price, 234 La. 338, 99 So.2d 743 (1957). The judgment on the separation is not a final judgment; it is still subject to the appellate process.
SPECIFICATION NUMBER TWO
At the trial of the separation suit numerous registration cards from the Oak Manor Motel were introduced into evidence. The registration dates of these cards are identical to some of the dates alleged in the divorce petition. Defendant-appellant argues that the pleadings in the separation suit were expanded to cover the adultery allegations in the instant suit; that the proceedings in the separation suit were still pending at the time the divorce suit was filed; that the two suits were between parties in the same capacities; that the two suits, "had the same objectthe *257 dissolution of the marriage;" and that, therefore according to Article 925(3) of the Code of Civil Procedure, lis pendens was a proper exception. We disagree with defendant-appellant's conclusions. The causes of action and things demanded are not the same. The first suit is for a separation demanding as its object the negating of the obligation to live together and the dissolution of the community of acquets and gains. The second suit is for a divorce demanding as its object the dissolution of the bonds of matrimony. Adultery is merely a ground for either cause of action. Granted that the grounds are the same in the two suits, however, the objects and causes of action are different. Therefore, lis pendens was not proper.[2]
SPECIFICATION NUMBER THREE
Defendant-appellant asserts that although adultery can be proven by circumstantial evidence, such evidence must fairly and necessarily lead to the conclusion that adultery has been committed, Morris v. Morris, 152 So.2d 291 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1963); and Arbour v. Murray, 222 La. 684, 63 So.2d 425 (1953). Defendant-appellant further argues that the circumstantial evidence introduced herein was insufficient to prove adultery.
Motel registration cards were introduced into evidence showing that defendant-appellant stayed at the Oak Manor Motel thirty-one nights. Mr. Morris admitted that he loved the named corespondent and that she was with him at the motel approximately 75% of the time, often leaving at between 3-5 a. m. He also admitted some "mild petting" with the named corespondent whom he had known for the last two years. Love letters were also introduced containing sexual insinuations. And yet, even though it was established that defendant-appellant and plaintiff-appellee had engaged in no sexual relations whatsoever for the previous eight years, defendant-appellant denied any sexual intercourse with the named corespondent.
We do not agree with defendant-appellant's contention and find, as did the trial judge in written reasons that "the defendant continued a course of adulterous conduct after the filing of the separation proceeding, [and] that acts of adultery were committed upon the dates alleged... The circumstantial evidence is clear and convincing and allows for no other reasonable conclusion."
Alternatively, defendant-appellant contends that plaintiff-appellee was mutually at fault, and therefore not entitled to a divorce. Specifically, defendant-appellant argues that his wife never offered herself to him since 1969; she frequently criticized him in public with regard to his financial ability; she forced him to leave Oklahoma and move to Mississippi; and, on May 15, 1975, she locked him out of the house.
As to this contention we believe that the written reasons of the lower court are appropriate and adopt them as our own. "Since the court in Suit No. 32,331 found that there was mutual fault, and denied either party relief, the marital relationship continued to the same extent as if there had been a reconciliation.
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336 So. 2d 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-morris-lactapp-1976.