Schoeffner v. Schoeffner

105 So. 18, 158 La. 933, 1925 La. LEXIS 2158
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 25, 1925
DocketNo. 26781.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 So. 18 (Schoeffner v. Schoeffner) 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
Schoeffner v. Schoeffner, 105 So. 18, 158 La. 933, 1925 La. LEXIS 2158 (La. 1925).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit against defendant for a separation from bed and board, and for her half of the community property. The grounds alleged by her for the separation consist of outrages, excesses, abuses, and public defamation. She alleges, among other things, that during December, 1916, defendant struck her in the face, badly bruising and blackening her eyes, and causing her face to swell; that at the same time and place, he started towards the wood box to get a billet of wood with.which to assault her, and was only deterred from striking her by the interference of her daughter, whom he also struck in the face; that he has cursed and abused her in the presence of her family so often and constantly that she cannot give the dates thereof, but the place was 7840 Poplar street, and the abuse alleged was charges against her chastity; that in 1917, when asked to give something toward the expense of running the house, defendant cursed her and brutally told her to go upon the streets to support herself; that on December 28, 1923, defendant brutally slandered her by declaring to his son, in reference to her, “You have another daddy now; your daddy is in the kitchen now,” meaning a young man friend *935 of the family, who was then in the house; that during the months of November and. December, ■ 1923, defendant subjected her ta spspieion, by ostentatiously playing detective around the house sneaking around the windows after nightfall, and creeping under the house, with the intent of disgracing and humiliating her and her daughters; that for two years past defendant has driven about the streets in an automobile with the woman with whom he lodges; and that, to specially worry and humiliate her, he has driven with this woman up and down the s.treet in front of her (plaintiff’s) residence.

During the year 1918, defendant left the matrimonial domicile, after all of the alleged acts and transgressions enumerated above had been committed, with the exception of the three last, that is to say, the one relating to the slander of plaintiff by declaring to her son that he had a second daddy in the kitchen, those relating to the playing of detective, and those with reference to driving the woman up and down the street in front of plaintiff’s home. After her husband left, plaintiff did not sue him for a separation • until August, 1922, when she brought suit against him for a separation from bed and board on the ground of abandonment. In obedience to one of the reiterated summonses, served upon him in that suit, to return to the matrimonial domicile, defendant returned to it, and his wife received him, the date of his return being October, 1923. As defendant obeyed the summons to return, a sufficient basis was thereby laid for the termination of the suit then pending, and in January, 1923, defendant filed an answer to the suit, in which he averred that he had returned in obedience to the summonses served upon him. The case was then tried and judgment was rendered for defendant dismissing plaintiff’s demand.

At about the time the foregoing judgment Was rendered, plaintiff filed the present suit for, a separation, and defendant has filed against a part of it a plea of res adjudicata, and of estoppel, and against the remaining part an exception of no cause or right of action.

The plea of res adjudicata is directed against all acts, which are set forth as causes of action herein, which occurred prior to the rendition of judgment in the former suit. The plea of estoppel amounts to nothing more, in part, than to repleading in the form of an estoppel, the res adjudicata urged, and, in part, to a plea that plaintiff has condoned the acts, alleged to have been committed pri- or to his return to the matrimonial domicile, by causing him to be summoned to return, and by receiving him after he did return. The exception of no cause or right of action is directed against that part of the petition which sets out, as causes of action, the acts alleged by plaintiff to have been committed after defendant’s return to the matrimonial domicile.

In our opinion the plea of res adjudicata is not well founded. For the plea to be well founded “the thing demanded must be the same; the demand'must be founded on the same cause of action; the demand must be between the same parties, and formed by them against each other in the same quality.” Civil Code, art. 2286; Lassus v. Clarke, 134 La. 865, 64 So. 801.

In the case at bar, that part of the cause of action excepted to, under the plea of res adjudicata, is not the same as was the cause of action in the former suit. In the former, the cause was abandonment, whereas in the present suit, limiting the cause to that part excepted to, it is excesses, outrages, and defamation. This difference, we think, is sufficient to defeat the plea of res adjudicata. Defendant, however, contends that it is not, for the reason that all grounds which might have been urged to sustain the demand for separation in the first suit should have been urged therein, and, as the grounds here excepted to were available to plaintiff when the *937 first suit was filed, she should have urged them in that suit, and that, not having done so, she is now precluded from urging them, and cites in support of his position Brooks v. Magee, 126 La. 388, 52 So. 551, and Harvin v. Blackman, 121 La. 431, 46 So. 525. However, the doctrine contended for by defendant can have no application in the present instance. This is so, because in a suit for separation on the ground of abandonment, the law requires that three reiterated summonses shall he served from month to month on the spouse who has abandoned the matrimonial domicile ; that these summonses must be followed by a judgment sentencing the spouse to return ; and that notification of this judgment must be given from month to month, to the spouse sentenced to return, for three months consecutively. Since, therefore, the plaintiff in a suit for separation on the ground of abandonment must cause the absent spouse to be summoned and ordered to return to the matrimonial domicile, and as these summonses and order imply that, if such spouse does return, he or she, as the case may be, will be received by the spouse suing, it would be inconsistent for the latter to sue at the same time for a separation on the grounds of excesses, outrages, and defamation. Because of this inconsistency, the doctrine urged by defendant can have no application here. Hence, from no standpoint, do we consider that {he plea of res adjudicata is good.

While we do not consider the plea of res adjudicata good, yet we are of the opinion that the plea that plaintiff has condoned the acts and transgressions alleged to have been committed prior to the return of defendant is well founded. We so think, because plaintiff caused defendant to be summoned to return to the matrimonial- domicile, and when he did return she. received him. The question therefore is: To what extent may those acts and transgressions be considered, if at all, in the present case? The Civil Code, in this connection, provides as follows:

“Art. 152. The action of separation shall he extinguished by the reconciliation of the parties, either after the facts which might have given ground to such action, or after the action had been commenced.
“Art. 153.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 18, 158 La. 933, 1925 La. LEXIS 2158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoeffner-v-schoeffner-la-1925.