Uchello v. Uchello

58 So. 2d 385, 220 La. 1062
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 24, 1952
DocketNos. 40063, 40260
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 So. 2d 385 (Uchello v. Uchello) 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
Uchello v. Uchello, 58 So. 2d 385, 220 La. 1062 (La. 1952).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

These consolidated appeals involve questions of alimony and distribution of the community assets.

Case No. 40,063 on the docket of this Court is an appeal from a judgment on a rule to suspend payment of any alimony, filed by the husband, Anthony Uchello, in the cases (consolidated below) of Mrs. Lucille Grandeury Uchello against her husband for separation on grounds of abandonment, filed January 20, 1948, and Anthony Uchello against his wife for separation on grounds of cruelty, filed February 3, 1948, resulting in a judgment, rendered March 30, 1949, in favor of the wife for separation from bed and board and an alimony award of $175 per month. It appears that in answer to the above rule to suspend payment ■of any alimony, the wife prayed that the award be increased to $300 per month. The district court dismissed the rule as to the huslband, and denied the increase sought-by the wife; and as she did not appeal nor answer the husband’s appeal, the sole question is whether the alimony of $175 per month was properly continued.

Case No. 40,260 on the docket of this Court concerns a suit instituted by the wife on May 17, 1949, for partition of the community and for an accounting by the hus[1066]*1066band, during the course of which the parties agreed on payment of many items in the Notary’s pro.cés verbal, the actual trial having thus been limited to certain items remaining in dispute. The appeals in this case are from the district court’s judgment on a rule decreeing distribution of the remaining amounts, and are prosecuted by the husband, by the wife, and by Mr. Warren Simon, attorney, no longer of counsel, who seeks to have increased the amount of attorney’s fees awarded him in the partition proceedings for services performed as attorney for the wife in the separation suits mentioned above. Counsel of record likewise maintain that the fees granted them are inadequate, and seek to have them increased. The matters to be determined are these: (1) whether the husband should be allowed credit for alleged repairs made to community property following the separation; (2) whether he should be allowed credit for the alimony paid his wife in his accounting of the rents collected by him; and (3) the fees to be allowed counsel for the husband and wife, respectively, on account of services performed from the inception of this litigation.

In disposing of the appeal incase No. 40,-063, the record discloses that alimony pendente lite was awarded the wife on February 9, 1948, at the rate of $166 per month, which amount was later (December 1, 1948) increased to $210 per month, based on an agreement between the parties. Some four months thereafter, at the time of judgment ■of separation from bed and -board (March 30, 1949), alimony was — again by consent— reduced to $175 per month until final divorce.

The husband, at the time he filed the rule to suspend alimony payments (January 23, 1950), in an effort to support his claimed inability to pay because of decreased income, offered a profit and loss statement covering the last three months of 1949 (prepared from figures submitted by him to a bookkeeper) which showed a net loss in his business for the period of $255.54, arrived at by deducting the (admitted) profit realized from gambling conducted on the premises, $1,003.50, from the (alleged) loss suffered in his retail saloon business, $1,259.04. He contends that this establishes positively that from the time the rent collections stopped, upon the sale of the community real estate (September, 1949) in the partition proceedings, he had no income upon which alimony could be assessed.

To rebut this evidence, and to prove the amount of purchases made by the husband for his business operations at the time of filing the rule to suspend payment of alimony were consistent with purchases made at earlier periods, the wife offered ledger sheets of companies doing business with the husband covering the 12 months of 1949 or a longer period. She also sought to elicit, through testimony of his colored employees, that business was as usual.

The husband’s contention that the stoppage of rent collections has deprived him of income on which alimony can be as[1068]*1068sessed is weakened by the fact that he has consistently urged his inability to pay, even while he was collecting the rents. The district judge obviously believed that the husband was able to continue alimony payments in amount of $175 per month, and after a full consideration we do not feel justified in disturbing his finding in this respect. Moreover, it is apt to observe here that when the alimony was reduced by judgment of March 30, 1949 (judgment in the separation suits), it was done by consent between the parties, Mr. Uchello’s attorney having made this statement at the commencement of the trial on March 22: “ * * ■we have agreed that until the. final divorce decree is rendered, Mr. Uchello will fay to his wife the sum of $175.00 monthly.” (Emphasis ours.)

The appeal in case No. 40,260 presents the question, first; of whether the husband should be allowed credit of $1,521.90, the cost of alleged repairs made to the community property after the separation — it being the claim of the wife that he has failed to sustain the burden of proving the repairs.

Mr. Uchello testified that during the latter part of 1948 he had work done on one. of the apartments in a building owned by the community and containing four units, located on Second Street in New Orleans, with the intention of occupying it himself, and in proof thereof submitted receipted bills for lumber, hardware, electrical equipment, paint and other materials, totaling $421.90, and for labor in amount of $1,100. He stated that a portion of the above cost was incurred in extending the garage, replacing a door thereon and putting a new roof on half of the structure. The contractor who did the work testified that he, with his helpers, repaired the roof of the house, completely redecorated the interior of the one apartment including plastering, painting, sanding of floors, removal of a partition and a dumb waiter, and replacement of screens; that on the four-garage building he put a new roof and lengthened one of the garages to the rear sufficiently to house Mr. Uchello’s car.

Although Mrs. Uchello states that she later inspected the property and “there was-no change in the garage,” it is possible that the work done was of the type which would not have been observed on casual inspection. She admits that she did not see the interior of the apartment. The district court was of the opinion that the husband had' sufficiently proved the above items, and we are in accord.

The second question presented is whether the husband is entitled to a credit, against net rentals collected before sale of the community property ($6,826.03), for alimony paid during the same period ($3,574), on. the basis of his claim that the rentals were the main source of the alimony payments. He points to the records in the separation suits to show that from the beginning, the court consistently included the rents in determining his ability to pay, and that his income from all other sources could not [1070]*1070possibly have supported the payments since it amounted to little more than half of the yearly alimony total.

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Related

Uchello v. Uchello
58 So. 2d 385 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 2d 385, 220 La. 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uchello-v-uchello-la-1952.