Stallings v. Stallings

148 So. 687, 177 La. 488, 1933 La. LEXIS 1713
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1933
DocketNo. 32315.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 148 So. 687 (Stallings v. Stallings) 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
Stallings v. Stallings, 148 So. 687, 177 La. 488, 1933 La. LEXIS 1713 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Mrs. Olive Andrews Stallings obtained a judgment of separation from bed and board against her husband, Andrew Jackson Stallings. The judgment was rendered on December 8, 1931 and signed on December 14, 1931. No appeal was taken from the judgment and there has been no reconciliation between the parties.

On February 17, 1933, which was one year and sixty-four days after the judgment of separation was signed, Andrew Jackson Stab-lings brought suit for an absolute divorce against Mrs. Olive Andrews Stallings, grounding his action on the provisions of Act No. 56 of 1932. Mrs. Stallings unsuccessfully excepted to plaintiff’s demand, the basis of her exceptions being that Act No. 56 of 1932 was not retrospective in its operation, and that, if so construed, the statute would divest her of her vested rights and impair the obligations of the contract flowing from the judgment of separation which she had obtained. A writ of certiorari brings the case here.

Dnder the provisions of Act No. 25 of 1S98, the successful litigant in a suit for separation from bed and board is given the sole right to sue for and obtain a final divorce after one year and within two years from the date of the judgment, if no reconciliation has taken *491 place between tbe spouses. At the expiration of the two-year period the spouse against whom the judgment was rendered is given the right to apply for a final divorce.

Act No. 56 of 1932 amended and reenacted Act No. 25 of 1898. Under the provisions of the amending statute, the period at the expiration of which tbe unsuccessful litigant in the separation suit may apply for an absolute divorce is reduced from two years to one year and sixty days from the date the judgment of separation becomes final.

Relator contends that the statute is not intended to operate restrospectively and to destroy rights vested by prior judgments in the successful parties. S'he argues that under Act No. 25 of 1898 the judgment of separation vested in her the right to sue for a divorce at the expiration of the one-year period prescribed by law for a reconciliation and that such right exists exclusively in her favor for the entire succeeding year; at the end of which period only her husband may sue for a divorce. And relator’s brief contains a number of general statements taken from text-writers, judicial decisions and digests to the effect that a judgment is a contract, vesting rights in the successful party, which is beyond the legislative power to affect.

Article 86 of the Civil Code declares, “The law considers marriage in no other view than as a civil contract.” But the contract, itself, creates a social status or personal relation which affects not only the contracting parties, but also their posterity and the good order of society. The status or relation thus created is subject to the legislative will and not to the will of the parties, who cafinot dissolve it by mutual consent.

The parties cannot have any vested property rights in a purely domestic relation. And the constitutional prohibition against tbe legislative impairment of contracts does not apply to marriage. Maynard v. Hill, 125 U. S. 190, 8 S. Ct. 723, 31 L. Ed. 654. Approved in Arnett v. Reade, 220 U. S. 328, 31 S. Ct. 425, 55 L. Ed. 480, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1040.

A judgment of separation from bed and board is more in the nature of a provisional than a final proceeding. The matrimonial relation still exists. Even if the judgment should be appealed, it may fall by the reconciliation of the parties. It is only where no reconciliation takes place that the judgment may serve as the basis of an action for divorce by either of the spouses at the expiration of the periods fixed by law. Starns v. Starns, 174 La. 743, 141 So. 447.

If the personal relations arising between the parties to a marriage, as distinguished from their property rights which exist separate and apart from their status and do not depend thereon, confer upon them no vested rights, it would seem plain that a judgment dissolving those relations cannot invest the successful party with any vested rights therein; and, a fortiori, must this be true where the judgment is only provisional in character —operating as a mere temporary separation, leaving all the other marital rights and obligations in full force during the life of the spouses, and being subject to the complete restoration to the marital status by reconciliation.

Mr. Cooley, in his Constitutional Limitations, referring to the general subject of retrospective laws, says; “There is no doubt of the right of the Legislature to pass statutes *493 which reach back to and change or modify the effect of prior transactions, provided retrospective laws are not forbidden eo nomine, by the state constitution, and provided further that no objection exists to them other than their retrospective character.” Cooley, Const. Lim. (8th Ed. [1927]) vol. 2, p. 772.

Subject to the restriction set forth in section 15 of article 4 of the state Constitution, that no ex post facto law, nor law impairing the obligation of contracts shall be passed, nor vested rights be divested, unless for purposes of public utility, and for just and adequate compensation previously paid, there is no, constitutional inhibition against the legislative enactment of restrospective laws.

Act No. 56 of 1932 is not a criminal statute ; it is not an ex post facto law; and it does not impair the obligations of any contract. Cf. Hava v. Chavigny, 143 La. 365, 78 So. 594.

A contract of marriage is by its very nature incapable of the application of the principle that no retrospective law or law impairing the obligations of contracts shall be enacted.

Mr. Bishop, in volume I, Marriage and Divorce, § 1480, treating the subject of retrospective laws in respect to the causes for divorce, states: “Divorce statutes concern the good order of society. If, contemplating the interest involved as public, it is for the public order and profit that marriage be dissoluble after the transpiring of a particular delictum, it can make no difference what was the date of the delinquency, or whether before or after the statute was enacted. Hence, when the legislative intent does not directly appear in the statutory words, they should be applied equally to past and future transactions.”

Prior to the passage of Act No. 25 of 1898, only the spouse in whose favor a judgment of separation from bed and board was rendered was entitled, in the absence of a reconciliation, to sue for a divorce after the expiration of one year from the date the judgment became final. The law presupposes the possibility of a reconciliation and, under its policy to promote it, has ordained that a period of one year shall elapse between a judgment of separation and the action for a divorce predicated thereon, in order that the parties may avail themselves of the opportunity thus given them to become reconciled.

Act No.

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148 So. 687, 177 La. 488, 1933 La. LEXIS 1713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallings-v-stallings-la-1933.