Schneider v. Schneider

25 So. 2d 900, 209 La. 925, 1946 La. LEXIS 744
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 18, 1946
DocketNo. 38089.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 So. 2d 900 (Schneider v. Schneider) 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
Schneider v. Schneider, 25 So. 2d 900, 209 La. 925, 1946 La. LEXIS 744 (La. 1946).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

Mrs. Louise Manion Schneider is appealing from a judgment of the district court dismissing her suit against her husband, Claude W. Schneider, for separation from bed and board based on cruel treatment, outrages, and excesses toward her.

The specific allegations upon which the plaintiff based her action are that (1) “about six months after their marriage, her * * * husband cursed and abused her without any cause or provocation * * * to such an extent that she was compelled to leave him and return to the home of her parents, where she remained for about a week”; (2) “That, when their oldest child was about 13 months old, her * * * husband again cursed and abused her without cause or provocation, and she was again compelled to leave him, remaining away for about five days.” On both of these occasions she alleges she only returned to her husband upon the entreaty of her family. She further alleged (3) that she lived with her husband from that time “with infrequent bursts of temper and violent abuses on his part, until the summer of 1937, when her * * * husband, without any provocation, called her a liar and assaulted and beat her; * * * threw her against the family automobile,” *927 injuring the hack of her head and bruising her face; (4) that in February of 1944 he came into the room of one of their daughters at the family residence, where she was then staying, and insisted upon her returning to his room with him, saying “You’ll have to do as I want you to do, or I’ll choke you,” and that upon her refusal he placed his hands on her throat in an attempt to choke her, since which time she has kept her door locked, and that at this time she was pregnant although unaware that she was; (5) that her husband continued to abuse and subject her to rough and violent treatment on many occasions, more particularly during August of 1944, when he violently grabbed a chair, saying, “I’ll pick up this chair and kill you with it”; (6) that he abused her while she was pregnant by nagging, speaking to her in' loud and harsh tones and in a cruel manner and at times cursing her, casting aspersions and insinuations upon her conduct in front of her children, particularly with reference to war work done by her at LaGarde hospital, with the result that she was continually taking bromides and calling her doctor in because of her nervous condition; (7) that he publicly defamed her by openly stating in the presence of their daughters that she is mentally unbalanced; and (8) finally, that because of these many abuses she has become very nervous and unhappy , and is therefore entitled to a separation from bed and board. In a supplemental and amended petition she alleged that in the early part of the summer of 1944 her husband pushed her against a door, causing her to sustain a bruise, as a result of which she had a black eye.

In his answer the defendant admitted he and his wife quarreled on several occasions but denied that these quarrels were precipitated by any action on his part, attributing them to her extravagance and utter disregard for money or financial obligations and to her reference to his conduct with imaginary women. He also gave his version of the several incidents upon which his wife based her action.

The trial judge, in dismissing the plaintiff’s suit, did not, as reflected by his written reasons for judgment, pass upon the several alleged acts of the husband upon which the plaintiff based her cause of action, being of the opinion that there was co-habitation as late as June 9, 1944, as contended by the husband, and that this amounted to a condonation of all of his faults that he had committed up until that time and that she had failed to establish the only charge against her husband that had taken place thereafter, that is, the incident of his threat to her life in August of 1944. He also expressed the opinion that most of the difficulties that had arisen between these parties had been financial in nature, stating: “The defendant is a business'man in the town of Slidell and owns one-third of the stock of the Schneider Brick and Tile Company. He is a man of some means and the record shows that he was generous with his family. His wife, on the other hand, appears to have been a good wife and a good mother, but her extravagances led to embarrassment to him *929 on many occasions. * * * I am satisfied that there is disappointment in this marriage * * * and I am further satisfied that there is an incompatibility of temper, but these are not causes for separation from bed and board under our laws.”

The plaintiff and defendant, members of prominent families, were, according to the record, married in New Orleans on October 22, 1924, and thereafter made their home in Slidell, Louisiana, where the defendant’s business is located. Of this union three children were born, Ellen, Margaret, and Charles John, who were 18 years, IS years, and 9 months respectively at the time this suit was instituted. Subsequently, in 1938, they moved to New Orleans, where the defendant had purchased a large home in a fashionable section of the city so that their daughters might enjoy the broader cultural, educational, and social advantages afforded in the city, they being placed in fashionable schools. (The elder was in a college in the East at the time this suit was instituted.) It appears that the defendant is a man of some means; that he provided well for his family and that, in so far as the record in this case shows, until the plaintiff first began her action for a separation, which came as a shock to their friends who had always regarded them as a congenial and happily married couple, the friends and acquaintances in their social circle were unaware of any difficulties between them.

From our appreciation of the evidence, which we have studied very carefully, we conclude, as did the trial judge, that most of the difficulties that arose be-tween these parties apparently came about as the result of arguments over money matters and we think these difficulties have culminated in the present incompatibility of these parties. But we disagree with the trial judge’s conclusion that the defendant has borne the burden of proof that was upon him to support his special plea of condonation, based on his alleged cohabitation with his wife on June 9, 1944. To support this he relied on his uncorroborated testimony, which is flatly denied by his wife, and, in our opinion, there is nothing in the record that would justify our giving more weight to his testimony in .this respect than to hers. He has thus failed to establish this plea by the preponderance of the evidence required by law.

On the other hand, we think the plaintiff has also failed to establish the allegations upon which she based her action by a preponderance of the evidence. With the exception of her mother’s testimony and that of Miss Jennie Peters, the plaintiff relied entirely upon her own testimony and this shows that most of the incidents of which she complains in her petition were precipitated by her, as contended by her husband, and in the other material but controverted aspects she was not corroborated.

The testimony of the plaintiff’s mother adds very little to hers, since it does no more than corroborate the plaintiff’s testimony that she did return to her family home on the two times she alleges she did. The gist of the remainder of Mrs. Manion’s testimony is that the plaintiff and defendant were constantly wrangling. She ad *931

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Related

Walker v. Walker
159 So. 2d 344 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Niemann v. Seeling
133 So. 2d 161 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Schneider v. Schneider
38 So. 2d 732 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
25 So. 2d 900, 209 La. 925, 1946 La. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-schneider-la-1946.