Saacks v. Saacks
This text of 688 So. 2d 673 (Saacks v. Saacks) 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
Antoine M. SAACKS, Jr.
v.
Marilyn A. SAACKS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*674 Lanny R. Zatzkis, Karen D. McCarthy, Law Office of Lanny R. Zatzkis, New Orleans, for Plaintiff/Appellant, Antoine M. Saacks, Jr.
James A. McCann, New Orleans, for Defendant/Appellee, Marilyn A. Saacks.
Before BOWES, GRISBAUM and WICKER, JJ.
BOWES, Judge.
Appellant, Antoine Saacks Jr., appeals a judgment of the district court finding that appellee Marilyn Saacks was a good faith putative spouse. We affirm.
FACTS
Antoine Saacks Jr. filed for divorce from Marilyn A. Saacks in September of 1993. The petition stated that the couple had been married on August 2, 1969, and had physically separated. On June 13, 1994 a judgement of divorce was granted. On August 25, 1993, appellant filed a petition for partition of community property. On October 3, 1995, appellant filed a motion to dismiss the partition proceedings, averring that since the filing of the partition, evidence had come to light that Mrs. Saacks was married prior to her marriage to Saacks, but not divorced. Saacks alleged that Mrs. Saacks was not in good faith in marrying him, and that as a result, the civil effects of marriage, including a community of acquets and gains, did not flow to her. In effect, a community did not exist. A hearing was held on this motion, and following the taking of evidence and testimony, the court denied the motion to dismiss the petition to partition. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.
EVIDENCE AND TESTIMONY
At the outset, we note that appellant designated the record for appeal. As a result, only a portion of the transcript has been sent to this Court for review, that of the cross-examination of Mrs. Saacks. In the transcript, appellee stated that she had been married first to Donald Wynn, from whom she was divorced, and on the second occasion to Saacks. She admitted that she had also been married to Ronald DeFusco:
... but it was in Mexico, and not recognized in the United States, so it's not a legal marriage.
There was a marriage ceremony, but it was in Spanish and has since been "extracted from that record by Mr. DeFusco."
Q. What does that mean, extracted, taken out of the record, or
A. Torn out the page is what he had done.
Q. Does that make the marriage go away?
A. There was no marriage. We were married in Mexico. We never established a domicile in the State of Louisiana, or any other state. After the marriage he went back to New York, and I went to New Orleans. He came in once or twice after that, and that was it. I have friends who can testify to that.
When presented with a registry card registering a marriage between herself and Mr. DeFusco, and a marriage license, she was unable to read either document because they were in Spanish. In portions of a deposition read into the record, Mrs. Saacks again stated that she was married in Mexico "which was not legal in the United States and was not recognized." In his extensive and well written reasons for judgment, the learned trial judge found that it was unnecessary to determine whether Mrs. Saacks' marriage in *675 Mexico was actually valid or not due to his finding that she entered into her marriage with Antoine Saacks in good faith and with an honest and reasonable belief that there existed no legal impediment to marry. Among other things, the court stated:
Marilyn Saacks' demeanor and testimony during trial and at a deposition reflected her confusion regarding the entire marriage in Mexico, more specifically, that Marilyn Saacks was more likely than not convinced that either the marriage was invalid and not recognized in the United States, or that by "extraction" the marriage could be invalidated. This Court does not believe that the marriage in Mexico was a union which was ever acknowledged as being legitimate by Marilyn Saacks.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
On appeal, Antoine Saacks urges that it was error for the trial court
(1) to find that Mrs. Saacks was a putative spouse;
(2) to find that she was in good faith in contracting her marriage to him;
(3) to fail to address whether the Mexican marriage was valid;
(4) to exclude the Mexican marriage certificate and registration card; and
(5) to consider the actions of appellant in determining whether or not Mrs. Saacks was in good faith.
ANALYSIS
There is some confusion as to what exhibits were and were not admitted into evidence. In the portion of the transcript designated by appellant, we note that there was a stipulation by Mrs. Saacks to the marriage license and certificate, and that Mrs. Saacks was cross examined on those documents at the trial.
In the transcript available on appeal, the only exhibits which were objected to by plaintiff were two smallpox vaccination certificates and a letter purportedly written by appellee. Appellee objected as the documents were not listed in the pretrial order. The court allowed admission of the letter, but delayed its ruling on admissibility of the cards until the end of trial; however, the transcript ended there. We note that the minutes indicate that objections to plaintiff's exhibit number six, described in the minutes as a marriage certificate and three photos, were sustained at the close of trial. It is, therefore, not clear to this Court which exhibits were and were not admitted.
Appellant is in the position of having the burden to demonstrate error in the judgment of the trial court. For that reason the burden is on appellant to comply with La. C.C.P. art. 2131 and to have a complete record before the court of appeal. Traylor v. Traylor, 337 So.2d 922 (La.App. 3 Cir.1976); Hanley v. Hanley, 381 So.2d 963 (La.App. 4 Cir.1980). Absent such a complete record, we cannot say that the trial judge erred since we cannot say, with certainty, which exhibits were finally admitted and considered by him. Nevertheless, appellant had the opportunity to cross-examine the appellee on the documents; therefore, it appears that any error in admission of the documents was harmless.
PUTATIVE SPOUSE
The primary issue in this case is whether or not Mrs. Saacks is entitled to a share of the community formerly existing between herself and her husband. Saacks contends that his marriage to Mrs. Saacks was null because she failed to divorce Ronald DeFusco; therefore, the civil effects of the marriage, i.e., the right to share in community property established by a valid marriage, did not flow to her. According to La. C.C. art. 94:
A marriage is absolutely null when contracted without a marriage ceremony, by procuration, or in violation of an impediment. A judicial declaration of nullity is not required, but an action to recognize the nullity may be brought by any interested person.
La. C.C. art. 96 nevertheless allows civil effects to flow in an absolutely null marriage, under certain circumstances:
An absolutely null marriage nevertheless produces civil effects in favor of a party *676 who contracted it in good faith for as long as that party remains in good faith.
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