Rhodes v. Miller

179 So. 430, 189 La. 288, 1938 La. LEXIS 1179
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 7, 1938
DocketNo. 34237.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 179 So. 430 (Rhodes v. Miller) 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
Rhodes v. Miller, 179 So. 430, 189 La. 288, 1938 La. LEXIS 1179 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Duplain Rhodes, Jr., sued Louida Hunt Miller for the annulment of their marriage. Defendant filed an exception of no cause or right of action, which was overruled. She filed no answer, and plaintiff obtained a judgment' by default. Defendant appealed devolutively, the delay for appealing suspensively having elapsed.

Plaintiff alleged that he was married to Leah Robin in the city of New Orleans, where they resided. That while married to Leah Robin, he lived for several years in open adultery with Louida Hunt Miller. That Leah Robin sued for and obtained a judgment of divorce on the ground of his adultery with Louida Hunt Miller, who was specifically named in the suit. That shortly after the judgment of divorce was rendered, plaintiff and Louida Hunt Miller were married in Chicago, where they went for the purpose of evading the provisions of article 161 of the Civil Code prohibiting the guilty party in case of divorce on account of adultery from marrying his or her accomplice in adultery, under penalty or nullity of the new *293 marriage, and that after their marriage they returned to New Orleans.

Plaintiff alleged that his marriage to Louida Hunt Miller was not a legal marriage, for the reason that it was contracted in violation of a prohibitory law of this state. Hence, plaintiff prayed for a judgment decreeing his marriage with defendant to be null and void and of no effect whatever. Plaintiff also prayed for all general and equitable relief.

Defendant contends that ■ plaintiff has no standing in court to obtain the annulment of their marriage for the reason that his action is not sanctioned by any statutory authority. As a further bar to plaintiff’s suit, defendant invokes the rule of law that courts will not hear a litigant who alleges his own turpitude and the rule of equity that courts will not relieve a litigant who appeals for relief with unclean hands.

Defendant argues that a suit to annul a marriage is a special form of proceeding established by law, and that the only causes authorizing the proceeding and the persons entitled to avail themselves thereof are specified in articles 110 to 118, inclusive, of the Civil Code. And defendant cites Ryals v. Ryals, 130 La. 244, 57 So. 904, 905, as holding that the causes for annulling marriages specified in the codal articles are exclusive.

In Ryals v. Ryals, supra, the plaintiff’s wife sued for the annulment of her marriage on the ground that her husband had become insane and had been interdicted therefor and incarcerated in the state asylum. The judgment of the district court dismissing the suit on an exception of no cause of action was sustained by this court for the reason that: “The grounds upon which marriages may be annulled are specified in the Civil Code, and do not include that upon which plaintiff relies.”

That decision is clearly correct. Nowhere in the Code is it provided that a marriage shall be void or voidable by reason of the subsequent insanity of one of the spouses. But a different situation is presented in this case. Here the suit for annulment of the marriage is founded on a cause which is specified in the Code. Article 161 declares: “In case of divorce, on account of adultery, the guilty party can never contract matrimony with his or her accomplice in adultery, under the penalty of being considered and prosecuted as guilty of the crime of bigamy, and under the penalty of nullity of the new marriage.”

The Codal article being subject only to the qualification that the name or the identity of the accomplice in adultery appears in the record or in the evidence. Succession of Knupfer, 174 La. 1048, 142 So. 609. This is such a case.

A bigamous marriage is an absolute nullity and may be impeached by either of the contracting parties or by any other party in interest. Civ.Code, arts. 93 and 113. Monnier v. Contejean, 45 La.Ann. 419, 12 So. 623.

We see no reason why the same rule should not apply to the marriage of *295 a divorced party with his accomplice in the adultery, which is in the nature of a bigamous marriage, and is also an absolute nullity. Civ.Code, art. 161.

The article of the Code creates a substantive right which would be wholly useless without a judicial remedy for its enforcement or protection. To deny the remedy would destroy the right.

A person having a legal' right needing judicial enforcement or judicial protection is generally entitled to a legal remedy adequate to the situation, since right and remedy are reciprocal, and to deny the remedy is to destroy the right. Siegel v. Helis, 186 La. 506, 172 La. 768.

This brings us to the consideration of the other question raised by defendant, viz., has plaintiff by his own wrongful conduct debarred himself from any hearing in the courts ?

The courts recognize the doctrine that no one alleging his own turpitude is to be heard as the basis of an estoppel which bars a party from availing himself of his own wrong as the foundation for his demand.

But the courts also recognize the doctrine that estoppel cannot be invoked to impair the force and effect of a prohibitory law. Factors’ & Traders’ Insurance Company v. New Harbor Protection Company, 37 La.Ann. 233, 236; Succession of Jacobs, 104 La. 447, 29 So. 241; Ackerman v. Larner, 116 La. 101, 40 So. 581, 586; Louisiana Ry. & Navigation Co. v. Holly, 127 La. 615, 53 So. 882.

In the case of Ackerman v. Larner, supra, a donation omnium bonorum was sought to be made effective by estoppel. In holding that this could not be done, this court said:

“Estoppel, as predicated upon the maxim ‘nemo allegans suam turpitudinem audiendus est,’ it may be said, is a doctrine which forms part of the policy of the law by reason of its recognition by the courts, but, as the law itself is the paramount authority as to its policy, it follows that in those matters concerning which it speaks definitely, it cannot be controlled by an estoppel, which is but the creature of its creature. The law of the state and the policy of the law as to the question here at issue are declared, at one and the same time, as follows, to wit:
“ ‘The donation shall, in no case, divest the donor of all his property; he must reserve to himself enough for subsistence; if he does not do it, the donation is null for the whole.’ Civ.Code, art. 1497.
“Construing this article, our predecessors in this court have said: * * *
“ ‘That the nullity pronounced * * * is based upon motives of public order, and that the act done in contravention of its prohibition is against good morals, can hardly be doubted, and will be easily understood.’ Lagrange v. Barré et al., 11 Rob. 302.
“To hold, then, that in spite of the law as thus construed, a donation made in violation of its prohibitory and mandatory directions must be maintained, because made to accomplish an illegal purpose of *297 the donor, would be to subordinate the law and the public policy of the state, as definitely declared by the lawmaking power, to the will, or infirmity, of the citizen.”

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Bluebook (online)
179 So. 430, 189 La. 288, 1938 La. LEXIS 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-miller-la-1938.