Roberts v. Roberts
This text of 304 So. 2d 839 (Roberts v. Roberts) 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
Audrey Louise Dickerson ROBERTS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
James Ardis ROBERTS et al., Defendants-Appellees-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
James E. Franklin, Jr., Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellant.
James B. Wells, Bossier City, for James Ardis Roberts, defendant-appellant.
Goode, Goode & Overdyke by J. Philip Goode, Shreveport, for Curtis L. Parker, defendant-appellee.
Before AYRES, HALL and DENNIS, JJ.
*840 AYRES, Judge.
Plaintiff and the named defendant were formerly husband and wife. Through a petition filed on April 13, 1967, a judgment of final divorce was rendered and signed on November 8, 1967. Thus the community of acquets and gains formerly existing between them was dissolved as of the date of the filing of the action for divorce.
By the present proceeding, the former wife seeks a settlement or liquidation of the affairs and property of the aforesaid community. From a judgment of settlement and liquidation of the community and otherwise decreeing the rights of the parties in the estate, orders of appeal were granted both plaintiff and defendant.
It may be first pointed out that we are charged with the responsibility of determining whether appeals have been properly taken and perfected so as to confer jurisdiction upon this court. In this respect the appellant James Ardis Roberts has not appeared, either personally or through counsel, or by the filing of a brief as required by the Uniform RulesCourts of Appeal, Rule VII, Section 5(b). Hence, the appeal taken by him should be, and it is hereby, dismissed as abandoned.
The issues presented by plaintiff's appeal for resolution concern: (1) the validity of a sheriff's sale of a tract of land upon which a residence, a store building, and a service station were located; (2) the ownership of funds in an account with The First National Bank of Shreveport; (3) the ownership of a camp on Lake Bistineau; and (4) miscellaneous items of alleged community property and the manner of their partitioning, whether in kind or by licitation.
Plaintiff-appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court: (1) in failing to recognize her as the owner of an undivided interest in the real estate hereinabove referred to or (2) in failing to declare her the owner of the funds on deposit with The First National Bank of Shreveport or, in the alternative, that such funds were the property of her mother, Mrs. Vivian Dickerson Culpepper; (3) in ordering plaintiff to reimburse defendant the sum of $375.00 for alleged community funds purportedly used by her to purchase separate property; and (4) in awarding defendant the total sum of $7,780.00 as allegedly owed him individually by the community of acquets and gains formerly existing between plaintiff and defendant.
The first assignment of error relates to the sheriff's sale of the property, hereinabove noted, to the defendant Curtis L. Parker. The property was sold on December 13, 1967, under a mortgage held by Parker. Thereafter, Parker reconveyed the property to defendant James Ardis Roberts on credit and for Roberts' note and mortgage covering the property in the sum of $12,000.00. Mrs. Roberts contended that the sale was invalid as depriving her of her interest therein through fraud and a conspiracy conducted by defendants, Roberts and Parker. Both Roberts and Parker testified that there was no conspiracy or prior deal or understanding between them whereby Parker agreed to transfer the property to Roberts after the sale. Parker, as the foreclosing mortgage creditor, bid the property in for an amount in excess of the indebtedness. Mrs. Roberts was awarded her half of this excess, viz., $1,794.42, and received the benefit of having the mortgage extinguished. The resale of the property by Parker to defendant Roberts was for a valuable consideration, Roberts' promise and obligation to pay the sum of $12,000.00 therefor.
The proof is insufficient to establish either fraud or a conspiracy on the part of defendant Roberts or of defendant Parker, or that plaintiff was in any way taken advantage of. We find no basis upon which it could be determined that the trial court erred with respect to this item.
We conclude, however, that the trial court erred in holding that one-half of the funds on deposit with The First National *841 Bank of Shreveport was community property and in recognizing defendant Roberts as the owner of one-half of that one-half, or one-fourth of the total deposit. The trial court erroneously found that a federal credit-union account, from which the funds on deposit in the bank were derived, was the joint account of Mrs. Roberts and her mother, Mrs. Vivian Dickerson Culpepper, and, relying on a presumption that property in the name of a spouse at the termination of a community is presumed to be community property, found that Mrs. Roberts had failed to bear her burden of proving otherwise.
This deposit in the bank was made on January 3, 1968, or almost eight months after the divorce suit was filed, terminating the community, and almost two months after the judgment of divorce was granted. Two days before the previously discussed sheriff's sale, the credit-union account was closed. Two checks were issued by the union to Mrs. Roberts' mother, who turned the checks over to Mrs. Roberts, who planned to use the money to pay off the mortgage note or to buy the property at the sheriff's sale. When these purposes were not accomplished, the money was deposited in The First National Bank in the name of Mrs. Roberts' son. Mrs. Roberts continued to hope that she would be able to salvage the property.
In carefully considering the nature of the credit-union account, the conclusion is inescapable that it was the mother's account. Although the account was in the name of both the mother and the daughter, the testimony of the treasurer of the federal credit union was that the funds were always deposited by Mrs. Vivian Dickerson Culpepper and that the purpose of showing Mrs. Robert's name was to constitute Mrs. Roberts as the beneficiary in case of the mother's death.
Although the mother's testimony is somewhat vague as to the source of the money going into the account, the evidence establishes that she worked, although on a small salary, for 25 years, and that she had received money from her son over a period of years.
Defendant Roberts' theory is that Mrs. Roberts abstracted money from time to time from the store business and gave it to her mother to put into this account. There is no proof of this alleged fact, which can only be predicated upon speculation and conjecture.
Moreover, if it could be said that the mother and the daughter were joint owners of the account, the interest of Mrs. Roberts would, in that event, constitute her separate property as a gift from her mother. Donations made to a certain spouse are separate property. LSA-C.C. Art. 2334. Defendant Roberts' demands for a share or interest in the property have not been established.
From the above-stated conclusion, a reversal of the judgment and a rejection of defendant Roberts' claims on the account are in order as is a dissolution of the injunction granted with respect thereto.
In regard to the Lake Bistineau property, the trial court rejected defendant Roberts' claim of ownership of the property but awarded him the sum of $375.00 as his half of the community funds used to purchase the property. The record supports the judge's conclusion that this property was not community property. It was purchased by the wife after the dissolution of her marriage to the defendant.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
304 So. 2d 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-roberts-lactapp-1974.