Seymour v. Seymour

423 So. 2d 770
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1982
Docket13289, 13290
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 423 So. 2d 770 (Seymour v. Seymour) 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.

Bluebook
Seymour v. Seymour, 423 So. 2d 770 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

423 So.2d 770 (1982)

Jules Joseph SEYMOUR
v.
Deborah Walter, wife of Jules Joseph SEYMOUR.
Deborah Walter SEYMOUR
v.
Jules J. SEYMOUR.

Nos. 13289, 13290.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

December 1, 1982.

*772 Winifred M. Delery, New Orleans, for appellant.

Patricia R. Vincent, New Orleans, for appellee.

Before GULOTTA, CIACCIO and WARD, JJ.

CIACCIO, Judge.

Jules Joseph Seymour appeals from a judgment by the district court which awarded his wife, Deborah Walter Seymour, a separation a mensa et thoro, custody of the two minor children, use of the family home and child support of $400 per month. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

The issues on appeal are: (1) Was the trial court correct in granting the wife a judgment of separation, and, (2) in awarding the wife custody of the chidren and possession of the family home?

The facts are as follows: Jules Joseph Seymour and Deborah Walter were married on October 11, 1969. They had two children: Danille who was ten years old and Jules who was 11 years old. Mr. Seymour did not work. He received a medical retirement from the government for his 100% disability due to injuries sustained in the Viet Nam War. Part of his disability was mental and he underwent psychiatric treatment through the Veterans Administration and the Pontchartrain Mental Health Facility. The husband received a government pension, which consisted of $1,154 per month from the Veterans Administration and $597 per month from the Post Office. When his wife was working Mr. Seymour took care of the house and children. He had performed these duties five years. Mrs. Seymour was employed and she earned $1,010 per month. During the marriage the Seymour family resided at 7347 Hickman Avenue, New Orleans. The family home was spacious and comfortable, and each child enjoyed a separate bedroom. The children were in the fifth and sixth grade and they attended school in the vicinity of their family home.

The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour was affected by Mr. Seymour's violent outbursts, during which he would threaten and strike his wife, physically abuse his son and make sexual threats against his daughter.

Mr. Seymour had a drinking problem for which he underwent antibuse treatment at the request of the Veterans Administration.

On at least three occasions the police had been called upon to render assistance when Mr. Seymour reacted in a violent manner.

On April 21, 1981 Mrs. Seymour left the family home. Her husband had been drinking and he beat her. She called the police who took her husband to the Veterans Administration Hospital. She went to the YMCA's Battered Women's Clinic and spent the night at her father's house. She then spent a couple of weekends at the house with her husband but moved out again in June, 1981. She has not returned, even though her husband requested her to do so on several occasions.

She moved herself and her children into her mother's three bedroom apartment in the Desire Project. There, the children were cared for by their mother and grandmother.

The children continued to attend the school located near their home on Hickman Street. The children go to school an hour after their mother must be at work and they leave school an hour before she leaves work. Therefore, the children must be transported to their father's residence before school and picked up from there in the evening after school.

Following the couple's physical separation, Mr. Seymour continued to drink to excess, verbally abuse and threaten his wife, and engage in physical displays of violence.

On July 7, 1981 Jules Seymour filed suit for separation on grounds of his wife's *773 abandonment. (Doc. No. 81-10694) On the same day, Deborah Walter Seymour, filed suit for separation on the grounds of cruel treatment and habitual intemperance (Doc. No. 81-10797). The cases were consolidated. On July 29, 1981 the parties entered a consent judgment wherein Mrs. Seymour was granted child custody and child support of $400 per month. Mr. Seymour was given regular visitation rights. The injunction against harassment and alienation of community property was given mutual effect.

After a trial on the merits the district court, without written reasons, granted Deborah Walter Seymour a separation a mensa et thoro, custody of the two minor children, use of the family home and child support of $400 per month. The court dismissed Mr. Seymour's suit for separation and his rule which had requested a change of custody and termination of child support. Likewise, the court dismissed the wife's rule for alimony pendente lite and her request for an increase of child support.

Separation:

Mr. Seymour contends that he should have been granted a legal separation on the grounds of abandonment. He reasons that his wife left the matrimonial domicile without cause, in that she had reconciled with him after her grounds for leaving had been established.

Separation from bed and board may be claimed due to the "abandonment of the husband by the wife or the wife by her husband." C.C. Art. 138(5). Abandonment is to be proved, as any other fact in a civil suit. C.C. Art. 145. Meche v. Meche, 410 So.2d 1174 (La.App., 3rd Cir., 1982). In order to prove abandonment, one must show that the other party left the matrimonial domicile, without lawful cause, and that they have constantly refused to return to live with the other party. C.C. Art. 143. Meche v. Meche, supra.

The record clearly reveals that the wife left the matrimonial domicile in April and June, 1981 and that she refused to return to live with her husband. Therefore, the final consideration is whether Mrs. Seymour left with lawful cause.

Mrs. Seymour contends that she left the matrimonial domicile with legal cause because of her husband's cruel treatment and habitual intemperance. Her husband counters with the allegation that his wife has only shown one incident of cruel treatment, which occurred in April, 1981 when he became drunk and beat her. Further, he argues that the couple reconciled after this incident, and thus his wife is precluded from using this incident as a grounds for separation.

A party may claim a separation from bed and board "on account of habitual intemperance of one of the married persons or excesses, cruel treatment or outrages of one of them toward the other, if such habitual intemperance or such ill-treatment is of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable." C.C. Art. 138(3). Even a single instance of cruel treatment may be sufficient to justify a separation from bed and board. Gilberti v. Gilberti, 338 So.2d 971 (La.App., 4th Cir., 1976), citing DeJoie v. DeJoie, 224 La. 611, 70 So.2d 398 (La., 1954).

For a person to live in fear of bodily harm is such cruel treatment as to render living together insupportable. DeJoie v. DeJoie, supra.

In April, 1981 Mrs. Seymour had legal cause to leave the matrimonial domicile. The record is replete with testimony concerning Mr. Seymour's habitual intemperance and acts of cruel treatment, in striking his wife on numerous occasions, in abusing his children, of cursing and threatening his wife.

Therefore, the question becomes whether or not Mrs. Seymour had lawful grounds for leaving the matrimonial domicile in June of 1981. Stated another way, what, if any, effect did the cohabitation of the couple have on Mrs. Seymour's grounds for separation based on cruel treatment and habitual intemperance?

Cohabitation, after cruel treatment, is usually construed as reconciliation. See: Gilberti v.

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