Parker v. Parker
This text of 304 So. 2d 681 (Parker v. Parker) 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
Sidney Mack PARKER, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Glenda Nixon PARKER, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*682 Nathan A. Cormie, Lake Charles, for defendant-appellant.
Gravel, Roy & Burnes, by James J. Brady, Alexandria, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before HOOD, CULPEPPER, and WATSON, JJ.
HOOD, Judge.
Sidney Mack Parker instituted this suit against his wife, Glenda Nixon Parker, seeking a divorce on grounds of adultery and demanding custody of their three minor children. Mrs. Parker reconvened, praying for a separation from bed and board and for custody of the children and child support. Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiff, granting a divorce and awarding him custody of the children. Mrs. Parker appealed from that part of the judgment which awarded her husband custody of the children and denied her claim for child support.
The issue presented is whether the trial judge erred in granting custody of the children to plaintiff.
The Parkers were married in 1962, and three children were born of that union, the oldest child being now 10 years of age. Mrs. Parker admits that she engaged in sexual intercourse on three occasions in 1973 and 1974 with a man named Jimmy Hill, who supposedly was a friend of the family. Hill and his wife frequently visited socially with the Parkers.
The first such act took place in the Parker home in Jena, Louisiana, in September, 1973, while the children were in school and Parker was at work. On that occasion Mrs. Parker picked Hill up in her car and brought him to her home. She stated that although they did not specifically plan to engage in sexual relations at that time, she "had a good idea" what would happen when she picked Hill up. The second incident occurred later that same month in an automobile a few miles from Jena. The third act of adultery was committed during the morning of February 28, 1974, at the Parker home, while the children again were in school and Mr. Parker was at his drug store.
Sometime in January, 1974, Parker confronted his wife with rumors he had heard that she was having illicit relations with Hill. Defendant vehemently denied those rumors. Following that confrontation, the parties separated, and Mrs. Parker and the three children moved to the home of defendant's parents in Reeves, Louisiana. Two days later the parties became reconciled and defendant and her children moved back to the family home in Jena, and she resumed living with her husband.
Plaintiff became increasingly suspicious of his wife after their reconciliation, however, and he began checking the speedometer of the automobile she was driving to determine the distance she drove it every day. He concluded that she was traveling more miles every day than she could reasonably account for, and that increased his suspicions. Parker made numerous telephone calls to his home throughout the day to determine if his wife was there, and he frequently demanded explanations from defendant as to why she did not answer the telephone or why the line was busy. Mrs. Parker testified that the constant *683 harassment by her husband "as to what I was doing and why and wherefore" made her "really not care."
In February, 1974, Parker arranged with the telephone company to have an extension line installed in his drug store so that he could listen in on and tape all telephone calls made to his wife at their home. These arrangements were made without his wife's knowledge. The installation of this telephone extension was completed about midday on February 28, and shortly thereafter, on the same day, Parker listened in on and taped a telephone conversation between defendant and Hill, in which they disclosed that they had engaged in an act of sexual intercourse in the Parker home that morning while the children and plaintiff were away. In that telephone conversation defendant indicated to Hill that she would leave her husband, and that she and the children would move to Texas with Hill and would live with him there.
Mrs. Parker testified that prior to that telephone conversation with Hill she had discovered that her husband had had an extension phone put in, that she suspected that plaintiff was listening in on the conversation, that she thought that plaintiff and Hill had conspired to trap her into admitting adultery, and that she made statements to Hill at that time which were not true, thinking that "it would have gotten next to him (Parker)." The trial judge found it difficult to assess that telephone conversation, and concluded that "it was either evidence of gross irresponsibility, insensibility or a calculated, deliberate act to terminate the marriage, regardless of possible ancillary consequences."
On the afternoon of February 28, after overhearing and taping that telephone conversation, Parker returned home from work and suggested to his wife that they take a ride in his automobile, leaving the children at home, representing to her that he wanted to show her some property he had just bought. He took a loaded gun with him, explaining to defendant that he expected to shoot armadillos. The gun was placed on the front seat of the car between them as they drove out of town. While on that trip Parker confronted his wife with the fact that he had over-heard her telephone conversation with Hill that day. He thereupon drove to a restaurant operated by Hill and told defendant to get out of the car there. Defendant refused. Plaintiff thereupon drove to the sheriff's office, where they discussed the matter with the sheriff, who advised Mrs. Parker to leave the home for a few days in order to avoid violence.
Later that afternoon Parker and the sheriff removed the children from the home, before Mrs. Parker had an opportunity to see them, and defendant reluctantly moved out of the family home. Since that time she has lived with her sister and her parents. Her husband has continued to live in the family home or with his parents in Jena, and he has retained custody of the children.
Mrs. Parker made several attempts to see her children between the date of the separation on February 28 and the date of the trial on March 15, 1974. On March 4, she telephoned her husband advising him that she was coming to see the children. When she arrived at the Parker home, her husband refused to permit her to enter, whereupon she hurled a rock through a window and attempted to gain entrance through that window. Plaintiff, however, prevented her from entering the house, and Mrs. Parker thereupon was arrested and placed in jail.
The record reveals that Mr. Parker had signed an affidavit in the sheriff's office before his wife arrived at the family home on that date, accusing her of disturbing the peace at that home. He obtained a warrant for her arrest before defendant arrived at the home, before she broke the window, and before any of the acts charged in the affidavit were committed.
*684 It is apparent that plaintiff deliberately planned to have his wife arrested before an offense was ever committed. Mrs. Parker was arrested pursuant to that warrant and was put in jail. She was bailed out of jail later that evening, apparently by Hill.
Several witnesses testified at the trial that they had seen Hill's automobile parked in front of the Parker home frequently.
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304 So. 2d 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-parker-lactapp-1975.