Starns v. Starns

146 So. 165, 176 La. 610, 1933 La. LEXIS 1577
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 30, 1933
DocketNo. 31721.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 146 So. 165 (Starns v. Starns) 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
Starns v. Starns, 146 So. 165, 176 La. 610, 1933 La. LEXIS 1577 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

Mrs. Gladys Iola Starns sued her husband, Isaac G. Starns, for separation from bed and board, alleging that defendant was guilty of habitual intemperance, cruelty, and excesses, and that he had publicly defamed plaintiff by causing to be published in the daily newspapers of the city of New Orleans and elsewhere statements made by him accusing plaintiff of improper conduct and infidelity. Plaintiff also alleged the existence of community property, prayed for an injunction against its disposal, asked for alimony and also for attorney fees.

The defense to the suit is a denial of the habitual intemperance, cruelty and excesses charged and that defendant’s statements concerning plaintiff constituted in law a defamation of her character; that the, statements defendant had made relative to the character of plaintiff were true; that defendant had made them without malice and for the purpose of correcting a newspaper error; and that a great portion of the newspaper accounts of the episodes mentioned therein emanated from plaintiff herself. Defendant also reconvened for a divorce, charging his wife with having committed adultery with one Dr. Sedgie L. Newsom. The reeonventional demand, however, was stricken out on plaintiff’s motion alleging that a defendant in a suit for a separation cannot reconvene for a divorce on the ground of adultery.

The court below rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor granting her a separation from bed and board; fixed her alimony at $100 a month; awarded her certain property as her separate property; designated certain property as community property; recognized defendant as a creditor of the community for certain amounts; and allowed $750 as attorney fees. From this judgment defendant appealed.

No written reasons were given by the trial judge for his decision in this case. However, the trial judge, on defendant’s objection that the allegations were too vague and indefinite to admit of proof thereunder, ruled out any evidence of cruelty and excesses, but admitted evidence relative to defendant’s alleged habitual intemperance. We assume, there *613 fore, that his judgment was based on his conclusion that plaintiff had sustained either, or both, of her allegations of habitual intemperance and public defamation.

While there was considerable testimony-adduced, both by plaintiff and defendant, on the issue of defendant’s habitual intemperance, our conclusion is, from a careful analysis of this testimony, that plaintiff has failed to sustain her charge by a preponderance of the evidence. It is plain, from the record, that defendant is not a teetotaler; but neither is he an habitual drunkard. Defendant has undoubtedly indulged in the ordinary use, not the habitual abuse, of intoxicating liquor practically all his mature life. His use of intoxicating liquor has not incapacitated him from successfully operating his large' mercantile business nor from driving his automobile; nor has it, in our opinion, rendered the living together of his wife and himself insupportable. The record reveals that plaintiff sometimes kept whisky in the home for her husband, which she served to him herself. She drank beer and, occasionally, some wine with defendant. A letter, which will be referred to hereafter, written by plaintiff to defendant shortly after their separation, shows that defendant’s so-called drinking was not seriously regarded by plaintiff, and that she was ready and willing to return to him. From all of which we are forced to the conclusion that, if trouble had not arisen between plaintiff and defendant over the alleged attentions of Dr. Newsom to plaintiff, this suit never would have been brought.

The act of defendant which is mainly relied upon in this court by plaintiff for the affirmance of the judgment of the court below is defendant’s, alleged public defamation of, plaintiff in the New Orleans newspapers.

The publication of which plaintiff complains arose out of the tarring and feathering of Dr. Newsom by defendant and his four brothers. For this act Dr. Newsom sued and recovered a judgment for large damages against the present defendant and two of his brothers. See Newsom v. Starns (La. App.) 142 So. 704.

The record discloses that the first publication relative to the tarring and feathering episode did not emanate from defendant. The story as it first appeared in the newspapers was what is termed in newspaper work as a “mystery story,” and, in the words of the representative of one of the newspapers engaged in investigating the affair, “The aim of every city editor in New Orleans was to find out who hq.d tarred and feathered Dr. Newsom. None of us knew. There was no indication in the story.”

Subsequently, defendant gave out the interview of which plaintiff complains. ■ Defendant testified that he did this in order to correct the newspaper stories which had left uncertain which of the wives of the Starns’ brothers was involved in the matter.

It appears that plaintiff, herself, also had talked to a newspaper reporter, but claimed that she had not been correctly quoted in the published story.

Dr. Newsom was tarred and feathered .by defendant and his brothers on May- 26, 1930. The facts leading up to that act and the newspaper publications resulting therefrom are substantially as follows, viz.; .....

*615 . On May 22, 1930, defendant, on the. insistence of his wife, who diligently assisted him in preparing for the trip, attended the convention of a fraternal order, of which he was member, held at Jackson, Miss. On the same riight there was a “Strawberry festival” dance given in Hammond under the auspices of the local American Legion. Plaintiff attended this dance with Miss Gladys Starns, her sister-in-law. One of defendant’s brothers, Newton Starns, and his wife also attended the dance. During the progress of the dance, Newton Starns left the hall for the purpose of attending to some business at Independence, La. While Newton Starns was absent and Miss Gladys Starns was on the dance floor, Dr. Newsom was seen to approach plaintiff, whisper something to plaintiff, and a short while thereafter plaintiff and Dr. Newsom left the dance hall together. This was between 11 and 11:30 o’clock. When Newton Starns returned to the dance hall from Independence shortly before 12 o’clock, he noticed that the defendant’s automobile, in which plaintiff had <?ome to the hall, was not in the place where it had been parked. On arriving at the hall, he inquired for plaintiff, and was told she was no,t there. Newton Starns, his wife, and Miss Gladys Starns then rode around the business section of Hammond in Newton Starns’ car looking for plaintiff, but without success. During the search they passed and repassed the dance hall several times. Shortly after 1 o’clock they gave up the search and went home; Miss Gladys Starns going to thei home of her mother. About 2 o’clock plaintiff.drove up in defendant’s car to the home of her mother-in-law. Miss Gladys Starns refused to accompany plaintiff to her home in Livingston.

Plaintiff admits that she was absent from the dance hall for two hours. She testified that she left the hall because she had a headache, and that she rode out to the home of a friend of hers in Bast Hammond, but the friend was not at home, and she rode around alone until she arrived at the home of her mother-in-law at 2 o’clock in the morning.

Defendant returned from Jackson, Miss., on.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 165, 176 La. 610, 1933 La. LEXIS 1577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starns-v-starns-la-1933.