Phillips v. Phillips

107 So. 584, 160 La. 813, 1926 La. LEXIS 1966
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 1, 1926
DocketNo. 27761.
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 107 So. 584 (Phillips v. Phillips) 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
Phillips v. Phillips, 107 So. 584, 160 La. 813, 1926 La. LEXIS 1966 (La. 1926).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The plaintiff sued for a decree of separation from bed and board, for an injunction forbidding her husband to dispose of the community property, and for a partition of the property. She prayed for and obtained a preliminary injunction and an inventory of the community property. The court gave her a decree of separation from bed and board and perpetuated the injunction forbidding the husband to dispose of the community property, but did not, in the decree, order the partition, or refer to that part of the prayer of the plaintiff’s petition. The inventory of the community property was made and filed before the defendant answered the suit.

After the .decree of separation was rendered, the plaintiff did not, within 30 days, formally accept the community. Eight months after the decree was rendered, she brought suit for a partition and settlement of the community estate, alleging that the judgment of separation was final. The defendant pleaded that the plaintiff had no cause or right of action, because she had not accepted the community within the 30 days after the decree of separation from bed and board was rendered. We are informed that the exception of no cause or right of action was overruled; but the ruling is not in the record in this appeal.

The argument of the exception of no cause or right of action directed the attention of the plaintiff’s attorneys to the fact that the decree in the suit for separation from bed and board did not include an order for a partition of the community estate, and that the plaintiff had not formally accepted ,the community within the 30 days after the decree was rendered. Her attorneys, therefore, immediately asked for and were granted an appeal from the judgment rendered in the suit for separation from bed and board. The defendant, appellee, has moved to dismiss the appeal, on the grounds: First, that the citation of appeal was defective and did not allow appellee the time granted by article 583 of the Code of Practice, and, second, that the appellant acquiesced in the judgment appealed from, by suing for a partition of the community estate.

The defect in the citation of appeal was that it described the judgment appealed from *817 as being dated tbe 16th of December, 1925, tbe day on wbicb the appeal was taken, and the judgment was in fact dated tbe 16th of March, 1925. Besides, tbe citation of appeal was not served until five days before tbe return day.

Tbe defects in tbe citation of appeal and tbe delay in serving it are not sufficient causes for dismissing tbe appeal, because it does not appear that tbe errors were due to any fault of tbe appellant or her counsel. Sections 36 and 1907 of tbe Revised Statutes and article 898 of tbe Code of Practice forbid us to dismiss an appeal because of any defect, error or irregularity in tbe petition or order of appeal, or in tbe citation of appeal, or tbe service thereof, unless it appears that tbe error is imputable to tbe appellant. Tbe sections and article cited declare that in such cases tbe court shall grant a reasonable time' in wbicb to correct tbe errors or irregularities if they be not waived by tbe appellee. Tbe statute (originally enacted as an Act of 1839, p. 170) was enacted to give sanction to tbe ruling (in 1836) in Guerin v. Bagneries, 9 La. 472. See Hearing v. Mound City Life Insurance Co., 29 La. Ann. 832; Borde v. Erskine, 29 La. Ann. 823; Murphy v. Factors’ & Traders’ Insurance Co., 33 La. Ann. 455; Austin v. Scovill, 34 La. Ann. 486; Succession of Townsend, 36 La. Ann. 447; Philips v. Her Creditors, 37 La. Ann. 701; Cockerham v. Bosley, 26 So. 814, 52 La. Ann. 67.

Tbe provision in the statute that reasonable time shall be granted tbe appellant to correct tbe error is merely to protect the appellant against tbe consequence of errors on tbe part of tbe officers of the court below, but does not require tbe appellant to obtain time or opportunity to correct such an error when tbe correction is not at all necessary. Hiller v. Barrow, 80 So. 538, 144 La. 282, and Taylor v. Allen, 91 So. 635, 151 La. 82. In this ease it would be an idle ceremony to order that another citation of appeal should be served, after tbe appellee has taken cognizance of tbe appeal by moving to dismiss it on another ground than tbe defect in the citation, or service thereof. Tbe statute, in terms, suggests that the appellee may waive any such defect in tbe citation or service of citation of appeal. As it would be of no benefit or advantage whatever to tbe appellee to be served with another citation of appeal, and as it is not asked for, we shall not order it.

On tbe question whether tbe appellant acquiesced in tbe judgment appealed from, tbe case is similar to White v. White, 95 So. 791, 153 La. 313, and 106 So. 567, 159 La. 1065, except that, in tbe judgment of separation from bed and board, in White v. White, tbe district court did not, as it did in this case, perpetuate tbe writ of injunction forbidding tbe defendant, husband, to dispose of the community property, and except also that, in White v. White, tbe plaintiff did not, as she did in this case, bring a new suit for a partition of tbe community estate. We overruled tbe motion to dismiss tbe appeal in White v. White, and amended the judgment by perpetuating tbe injunction forbidding tbe husband to dispose of tbe community property, and, by ordering a partition of tbe property.

It is said that tbe idea of tbe attorneys for the appellant, in taking this appeal, was that tbe decree of separation from bed and board could not then be considered “finally pronounced” until the judgment should be affirmed in that respect by the supreme court; and that, under article 2420 of tbe Civil Code, appellant could then accept tbe community within 30 days after tbe judgment of this court would become final. Tbe article of tbe Code reads:

“The wife, separated from bed and board, who has not within the delays above fixed [meaning 30 days], to begin, from the separation finally pronounced, accepted the.community, is supposed to have renounced the same; unless, being still within the term, she has obtained a prolongation from the judge, after the husband was heard, or after he was duly summoned.” (The italics are ours).

*819 Our opinion is that that article of the Code has been abrogated by the Act 4 of 1882, allowing the wife, when the marital community is dissolved by a decree of separation from bed and board, or divorce, or by the death of the husband, the right to accept the community under the benefit of inventory “in the same manner and with the same benefits and advantages as heirs are allowed by existing laws to accept a succession under the benefit of inventory.” It is not possible to reconcile those advantages, given by the act of 1882, with the disadvantage that was theretofore imposed by article 2420 of the Civil Code, upon the wife when the marriage was dissolved by a judicial decree. The act of 1882 puts the divorced wife, or wife separated from her husband by a decree of separation from bed and board, on the same footing with a widow, and gives to both of them, with regard to the right to accept or renounce the community, the same rights and advantages that beneficiary heirs have to accept or renounce a succession. The statute declares:

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 584, 160 La. 813, 1926 La. LEXIS 1966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-phillips-la-1926.