Tate v. Tate

12 So. 2d 506, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 255
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1943
DocketNo. 2509.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 506 (Tate v. Tate) 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
Tate v. Tate, 12 So. 2d 506, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 255 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

The present proceeding, which is one by rule, had its origin in a suit for separation, which was filed by the present plaintiff in rule, Mrs. Allen W. Tate, against her husband, John H. Tate, on October 15, 1936.

In her petition, filed at that time, she sought to obtain a separation from bed and board as well as a separation of the community property which had been acquired during their marriage. She set out that the community property consisted of 16 shares of stock of the Illinois Central Railroad, valued at $42, 15 shares of Homestead Stock (the name of the Homestead not being mentioned), valued at $600, 11 shares of Pan American Life Insurance Company, valued at $175, 1 bond, referred to as Slattery Proceed No. ___, valued at $675, 5 shares of Standard Life valued at $30 and a home in Kentwood, Louisiana, valued at $3,500. She asked that an inventory and appraisement of the property be made according to law and that an injunction issue restraining her husband from disposing or encumbering any of the said property during the pendency of the said suit. She also asked that she be paid alimony in the sum of $40 per month and that the sum of $150 for services of her attorneys employed to prosecute her suit be paid by her husband and also that she be given the care and custody of her minor child born of their marriage.

The court granted the order for an inventory which was duly taken by a Notary Public of Tangipahoa Parish and filed in the proceedings on October 21, 1936. In the inventory there appears listed as community property only the real estate, which evidently was the home referred to in plaintiff's petition, valued at $3,500, 15 shares of Security Homestead Stock, valued at $50 each, or $750, and 1 share I.C.R.R. stock, valued at $42. The total amount of the inventory therefore was $3,795.

The husband did not resist the suit for separation and accordingly on November 20, 1936, judgment was rendered against him, by default, decreeing a separation from bed and board between them and dissolving the community of acquets and gains. He was ordered to pay alimony in the sum of $40 per month and also $50 attorney's fees.

On February 14, 1939, plaintiff again appeared in the same proceeding and, on alleging that the $40 alimony per month which had been awarded her was not sufficient to take care of herself and her child in view of her ill health and necessitous circumstances, she asked that a rule issue against her husband to have him show cause why the alimony should not be increased to $75 per month. Her husband answered, denying the allegations made.

No trial of that rule seems to have been had nor was any action taken on it in court. We judge, however, from some of the testimony in the record, that plaintiff did subsequently receive $22.50 per month in addition to the $40, out of the rent received by her father-in-law from the home which belonged to the community, which seemed to have been placed in his charge and care. This however is not a matter at issue in the present proceeding.

On June 28, 1940, plaintiff again appeared in the proceeding and filed the present rule against her husband, John H. Tate, his father, E.T. Tate and the Security Homestead Association through its liquidator, C.E. Walker. In her petition she sets out all that had transpired up to that time and she then avers that at the time the inventory referred to was taken and filed, the community between herself and her husband owned, in addition to the property listed, 11 shares of Pan American Life Insurance Company stock, 1 bond Slattery Proceed No. ___ and 5 shares of Standard Life Insurance Company stock, at a total valuation of $880 and that as no mention was made of this property in the inventory, it should be amended so as to include those items. She then avers that at the time the said inventory was taken, there were no claims listed against the said property and there were no debts due by the community, but since that time, 15 shares of Security Homestead stock which had been listed in the inventory have been illegally transferred to E.T. Tate, notwithstanding the injunction that was standing in the suit and that there has been paid to the said E.T. Tate, the sum of $335 as a stock dividend on the said stock, all without an order of court and without authority in law.

She then avers that the said homestead stock belonged to the community, that she had never transferred her interest to anyone, nor was there any pledge or mortgage *Page 508 bearing on it, for any loan standing against it, and that it was therefore illegally transferred to the said E.T. Tate, all of which cannot affect her one-half interest therein and that she therefore desires to have the same returned to the community or in the alternative that she recover judgment against the said E.T. Tate and the Security Homestead Association for the sum of $750, being the amount of its value as listed in the inventory, with interest at the rate of five per cent. She asks therefore that a rule issue against the said John H. Tate and E.T. Tate and the Security Homestead Association ordering them to show cause why the relief she asks for with regard to the said stock should not be granted and she further asks that the rule also order the said E.T. Tate and John H. Tate to show cause why the inventory heretofore taken of the community property should not be amended so as to include therein the property which was omitted therefrom, valued at $880.

In answer to the rule, the defendant E.T. Tate appeared through his counsel and admitted that the community was the owner of the property omitted in the inventory at the time the inventory was taken, but he avers that all of the said property had before then been pledged and delivered to him in order to secure an indebtedness due him by the community amounting to approximately $3,000. That said indebtedness was represented by monies loaned to John H. Tate during the marriage, for taxes paid on the property, for insurance premiums paid on insurance policies and other items, and that as security therefor the said John H. Tate, acting in his capacity as head of the community, had pledged and delivered to him all of the property mentioned as having been omitted from the inventory. He further sets out that he sold the Slattery bond and credited the amount against the indebtedness and that he had collected a liquidating dividend on the Security Homestead Stock of $25 per share for which he had also given credit, and that after allowing said credits, there was still due him the sum of $2,642 for the security of which he is holding the said property in pledge. He further avers that the said pledge having been effected before the filing of the suit for separation, is perfectly legal and valid and should be so recognized by the court. He further avers that he was never notified in any way about the taking of the inventory which is now complained of, that the same was taken by plaintiff in rule, without his assistance or knowledge, that she instructed the Notary as to what property was to be listed and that in no event therefore could he be held liable for the costs of this rule or for any amendment of the inventory in case the same is ordered by the court.

The defendant John H. Tate adopted the answer of the defendant E.H. Tate as his own. The Security Homestead Association filed an exception to the citation that was issued to it, which, it was agreed, should be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 506, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-tate-lactapp-1943.