Romero v. Romero
This text of 457 So. 2d 317 (Romero v. Romero) 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
Inez Hungerford ROMERO, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Ray Emile ROMERO, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*318 Porterfield & Simmons, John W. Porterfield, Jeanerette, for plaintiff-appellant.
Cecelia A. Bonin, of Landry, Watkins & Bonin, New Iberia, for defendant-appellee.
Before STOKER, YELVERTON and KNOLL, JJ.
YELVERTON, Judge.
In the proceedings for the settlement of the community and partition of community property between Inez Hungerford Romero and Ray Emile Romero, arising upon termination of the matrimonial regime, the trial judge made two rulings which the former wife, by this appeal, contests. She claims first, that the court erred in rejecting her claim for reimbursement for certain mortgage payments on the community home after the divorce, and second, that the court erred in ordering a sale by licitation of two pieces of immovable property. We find that the trial judge was correct in the first ruling, and substantially so in the second; we will correct the second ruling with instructions on remand; in most respects, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
During the marriage, the parties acquired a number of assets including a home in Iberia Parish, property in St. Martin Parish, and a business. In 1980 they separated, the husband sued for a divorce, and the wife petitioned asking for a settlement of the community property by partition by licitation. Before any further formal action was taken in either of these proceedings, the parties sold the business and the money from the sale was divided. The husband obtained a divorce in mid-1980.
The partition suit was heard in 1982. The trial court ruled that the real property, consisting of the family home and the lot in St. Martin Parish, could not be partitioned in kind, and he ordered that it be partitioned by private sale within 90 days of the judgment, which was signed in November 1982. The judgment additionally ordered the parties to file a detailed statement of their claims for reimbursement, together with supporting data, within 15 days of the filing of that judgment. Appellant did not comply with this order; she failed to file a detailed statement of her claims for reimbursement and offered no supporting data.
In February 1983 the trial court ordered both parties to file a statement replying in detail to the respective claims for reimbursement, and also a statement as to the status of the sale of the former home. In May 1983, replying to the wife's claim for reimbursement of the mortgage note payments, the husband filed a pleading urging that her claim should be denied because she failed to make proof of those payments. This was followed in June by the judgment denying the wife's claim for reimbursement of the mortgage payments. The same judgment ordered the partition by licitation of the family home and the lot in St. Martin Parish due to the "unexplained failure of the parties to sell the *319 immovable properties at private sale as ordered by this court in its order of November 15, 1982." The wife's appeal is from this judgment.
REIMBURSEMENT CLAIMS OF WIFE
Appellant's first contention is that she should be reimbursed for the mortgage payments on the community home which she allegedly made to Iberia Savings & Loan Association from the date of the divorce (June 1980) until the mortgage note was paid off (August 1982) by the husband.
A former spouse is entitled to be reimbursed for mortgage payments made on the community home after a legal separation or divorce. Michael v. Michael, 415 So.2d 229 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1982); Kennedy v. Kennedy, 391 So.2d 1193 (La.App. 4th Cir.1980), writ denied 396 So.2d 883 (La. 1981). However, in the present case we find that Mrs. Romero failed to prove that she made these payments. In her testimony she stated only that she was making mortgage payments in December 1980 in the amount of $284 a month, but that she no longer had that expense since her former husband paid off the mortgage note. She never testified that she paid the notes from the date of the divorce until her husband paid off the mortgage note. After the hearing the trial court ordered both parties to submit a detailed statement of their claims for reimbursement with supporting data. She failed to submit any statement or supporting data, such as cancelled checks.
Aside from her failure to submit the required evidence, either as supporting data to the statement demanded by the trial court, or by testimony at the hearing, that she made the monthly payments, there was evidence that for some portion of the disputed time she may not have made the payments, but that they were in fact made by others. The wife testified that she allowed her relatives to live in the house with her, and that she collected the sum of $350 a month for six months from her parents during their stay. From the record it additionally appears that her nephew had been living with her for quite some time. Although Mrs. Romero claimed she did not receive rent payments from him, there was evidence she claimed him as a dependent on her income tax return. The trial court may have considered these factors in denying the wife's claims. The trial court was probably influenced in this finding of fact by the refusal of Mrs. Romero to support her claim for reimbursement with what should have been readily available data.
Under these facts we cannot say that the trial court erred in its denial of reimbursement of the alleged mortgage payments made by the wife. See Scott v. City of Alexandria, 446 So.2d 986 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1984) for an analogous situation where a plaintiff failed to prove his claim by failing to submit readily available evidence.
PARTITION BY LICITATION
Although she initially prayed for a partition by licitation, Mrs. Romero now contends that the trial court was wrong in ordering such a partition of the two community immovables. In our opinion, the trial court was right in ordering a partition by licitation of the more valuable real estate, the family home; wrong in including in the order the smaller piece of land, the value of which renders it subject to allocation.
LSA-R.S. 9:2801 establishes the procedure for the partitioning of community property. This new procedure was in effect at the time of this hearing, Jackson v. Jackson, 425 So.2d 379 (La.App. 3rd Cir. 1982); Simon v. Simon, 421 So.2d 931 (La.App. 4th Cir.1982), writ denied 423 So.2d 1181 (La.1982).
It reads:
§ 2801. Partition of community property and settlement of claims arising from matrimonial regimes
When the spouses are unable to agree on a partition of community property or on the settlement of the claims between the spouses arising from the matrimonial regime, either spouse, upon termination of the matrimonial regime, may institute *320 a proceeding, which shall be conducted in accordance with the following rules:
(1) Each party shall file a sworn detailed descriptive list of all community property, the fair market value and location of each asset, and all community liabilities. Each party shall affirm under oath that the detailed descriptive list filed by that party contains all of the community assets and liabilities then known to that party. Amendments to the descriptive lists shall be permitted. No inventory shall be required. Upon motion of either party, the court shall set a time limit for the filing of each detailed descriptive list.
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