Schlater v. Le Blanc

46 So. 921, 121 La. 919, 1908 La. LEXIS 773
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 13, 1908
DocketNo. 16,864
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 So. 921 (Schlater v. Le Blanc) 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
Schlater v. Le Blanc, 46 So. 921, 121 La. 919, 1908 La. LEXIS 773 (La. 1908).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. X

This is a suit for separation from bed and board.

It is the third suit growing out of disagreements between plaintiff and defendant.

There was talk of still another suit in 1905, which was never brought.

In the first and second suits defendant Rere was plaintiff.

The cause of action in the first and second suits was the alleged abandonment by the plaintiff, Mrs. Le Blanc, of the matrimonial domicile.

The cause of action here is in substance that her husband has been guilty for years ■of excesses, cruel treatment, and outrages as to render their living together insupportable, Injurious to health, and fatal to all happiness. Going into details, plaintiff’s petition •■sets forth different acts committed by her husband, all in support of the general averments of her petition. The petition alleges with particularity that defendant ill treated plaintiff, and details acts of asserted ill treatment committed a few days after their marriage, and complains of a number of other :acts committed since. She avers that she was neglected by^ him ; left suffering from illness when she was in need of sympathy; that he was severe and cruel to their children; that he was violent toward her — struck her; that •she had broken her arm in February, 1907; that she undertook to correct one of their children, when defendant rushed into the room, •seized her by the arm which had been recently broken, held a riding whip over her, at the same time calling her a brute.

The defense by the husband is that he has ■never committed any of the acts of which plaintiff complained; that, on the contrary, he has always sought her happiness and ■.that of his children.

1-Ie refers specially to the two suits instituted by him on the grounds of abandonment, and states that plaintiff became reconciled after these suits; that she sought this reconciliation ; that there was forgiveness on the part 'of each, and all had been smoothed over, and a condition of contentment existed. He annexed letters to his answer received from plaintiff.

The letters of plaintiff preceding the year 1906 were kindly and affectionate in tone, and expressed a desire to return, and the joy of the children when informed of their return at an early date to their home. These letters were written previous to and about the time of the reconciliation to which we will refer later; that is, after it had been wisely concluded to drop court proceedings (i. e., in the matter of the first two suits), and return home and live together.

In the year 1905, plaintiff and her husband went to Colorado Springs.

Not many days after they had been there, there was quarreling, angry disputes, and scoldings.

Supplemental Petition was Properly Allowed.

About eight days after the issue had been joined in the pending case, plaintiff filed a supplemental and amended petition alleging other grounds for a separation from bed and board.

The defendant interposed an objection to this supplemental petition, on the ground of want of citation, and on the ground that it was a new cause of action not timely urged.

We deem it in place to state that the answer, in which the defendant pleaded a reconciliation between plaintiff and defendant, covering a period of the married life to and including part of the year 1905, made it necessary, as plaintiff must have thought, for plaintiff to seek to meet defendant’s allegations by alleging other acts of a date which she averred was since the reconciliation.

[924]*924The original petition contained a long list of averments sufficient, if proved, to sustain the suit.

This supplemental and amended petition was in the nature of a replication to the answer, if it was anything.

It having been allowed, the petition presents no ground at this time to set aside the judgment. The courts of original jurisdiction have discretion in matter of amendments.

The want of citation, another ground urged by defendant, is a purely technical ground, affording no reason at this time to remand the case. The prayer of the petition remained the same and the ground of action as it was originally ; it only added to the allegations; averred grievances not before alleged. There were specific allegations to the end of enabling plaintiff to make out the general allegation of plaintiff that she could no longer remain at the matrimonial domicile.

In reference to the want of a cause of action, made part of .the defendant’s exception, we overrule it for the reason that the allegations of the petition, taken as true for the decision of the exception, amply shows a cause of action.

Next in order, we will consider,

The Pleas of Estoppel and Res Judicata.

The defendant urged in support of these pleas two suits which he brought in the year 1902 for separation on the ground of abandonment.

The first was instituted in January of that year, and the second in June following.

In the 'first suit, after three reiterated summonses, defendant (plaintiff here) in accordance therewith returned to the matrimonial domicile, and she again having left the matrimonial domicile again returned in the second suit after she had received summonses to return.

In the second suit, a judgment was rendered after three summonses had been served. It was after three notices of this judgment had been served on her that she returned.

The agreement to institute suit on the-ground of abandonment between plaintiff and. defendant is limited to the second suit; that is, we take it that as to the second suit it was pretty well understood that the purpose was as much as possible to avoid the-publicity of the family troubles.

These suits are pleaded as estoppel and res judicata. We are of opinion that they are neither. The grounds of action were different. Those alleged in the present suit never were alleged in the prior suits.

The testimony divests particularly the second of these suits of the seriousness that suits should have in order to give rise to-the plea of res judicata. Moreover, neither-of these suits can be considered in the light of res judicata, for they are not.

In reference .to estoppel, we are equally as positive that plaintiff is not absolutely concluded from proving antecedent facts (i.. e., facts anterior in date to the reconciliation hereafter referred to) going to corroborate her grounds of action in ■ the present suit. The antecedent facts are not ground for a divorce, but they may be considered as corroborative.

There was reconciliation in 1905, about June, and by reason of this reconciliation all acts prior (the letters in evidence preceding that date and the suits) will be considered' exclusively as corroborative evidence, and will not be taken as distinct grounds affording cause for a judgment of separation from; bed and board.

Testimony Not Before the Court.

The testimony excluded in our opinion was; properly excluded.

These are the facts on this point:

Counsel for defendant, while defendant’s-brother was testifying, expressed the desire,. [926]*926in answer to an inquiry of the court, of proving that plaintiff had been indiscreet. The acts of indiscretion were detailed.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 921, 121 La. 919, 1908 La. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlater-v-le-blanc-la-1908.