Vaughn v. Vaughn

487 So. 2d 681
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 1986
Docket85-CA-690
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 487 So. 2d 681 (Vaughn v. Vaughn) 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
Vaughn v. Vaughn, 487 So. 2d 681 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

487 So.2d 681 (1986)

Connie Skaggs VAUGHN
v.
Keith Harold VAUGHN.

No. 85-CA-690.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

April 14, 1986.

*682 Bennett Wolff, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

A. Bruce Netterville, Gretna, for defendant-appellant.

Before KLIEBERT, BOWES and GAUDIN, JJ.

KLIEBERT, Judge.

This is a devolutive appeal by Keith Vaughn, the husband, from a judgment rendered in favor of Connie Skaggs Vaughn, the wife, decreeing, among other matters, a divorce, child support of $1,000.00 per month, and finding the wife free of fault in the marital dispute, but denying her permanent alimony. We affirm.

This marital litigation commenced in August 1983 when the wife filed a petition for separation from bed and board alleging abandonment and cruel treatment. Following a hearing, by judgment dated October 14, 1983, alimony pendente lite for the wife was set at $600.00 per month. The same judgment required the husband to pay child support of $550.00 per month for each of the two minor children of the marriage, a nine year old boy and a four year old girl. Subsequently, the husband, a police officer, was shot while on duty. On his motions for a reduction of child support and alimony pendente lite, by judgment dated May 14, 1984, the alimony pendente lite was reduced to $250.00 per month and the child support for both minor children was reduced to $750.00 per month.[1] Although an appeal of the May 14, 1984 judgment was granted to the husband, this appeal was subsequently dismissed by the district court for non-payment of the appeal cost.

On July 15, 1984 the husband filed a reconventional demand alleging the wife's fault, cruel treatment, and constructive abandonment in April 1983 and praying for a full divorce. Thereafter, the wife, on September 5, 1985, filed a petition alleging she was free of fault, her abandonment by the husband in April 1983 and the spouses continued separation without a reconciliation for over a year following the abandonment. The petition prayed for a full divorce, custody, permanent alimony, child support and use of the family home. The record contains various rules for contempt, alimony arrearages and enforcement of child support filed against the husband prior to and subsequent to the reduction in alimony pendente lite and child support payments fixed by the May 14, 1984 judgment.

*683 When the case was called on December 12, 1984, apparently on a rule to increase child support, after some discussion between the trial judge and the attorneys for the parties, it was agreed several of the outstanding rules would be tried along with the fault issue and the parties' entitlement to a divorce based on their having lived separate and apart for one year without a reconciliation. Following this hearing the trial judge rendered the judgment of May 2, 1985, which is the subject of this appeal. Although the judgment decreed other matters, on appeal the husband assigned error only to the trial court's decree absolving the wife of fault and setting the child support at $1,000.00 per month.

FAULT

The husband's version and the wife's version as to the marital dispute are diametrically opposite. According to the husband, the wife was highly disagreeable before their separation. He testified there were many episodes where she would start arguing, cursing and then start hitting, spitting and throwing things. In most instances the fight was over his desire to take the children to his parents' home. Although the wife admits to having what she categorizes as the usual family arguments, she contends their marital relationship was very close and loving until April of 1983.

As to the events leading to the separation on April 13, 1983, the wife said she saw her husband and another police officer laughing, talking and otherwise "carrying on" in a parking lot with two females. She blew her horn to attract his attention and called him over and according to her had a normal conversation. Also, according to her, when he got home from work about 3:30 P.M. he was not very talkative and left for his detail (a sideline job) shortly after his arrival from his regular work. When he returned home at about 9:30 that night he wasn't very talkative but said things did not appear to be working out so he told her he was leaving home to "get his head together". He then packed his suitcase and left.

In contrast, the husband says that during the day which led up to his being pushed out of the house, he received a message from central lock-up to call his wife at home. When he called, his wife said she was fed up with him, his children and his job and unless he complied with her request to come home she would go to his headquarters to cause trouble in an effort to get him fired. He contends they spoke on the phone for forty-five minutes to an hour, with her continuously yelling and screaming. When he got home from work he talked to her for a long time trying to calm her down before he left to go on a detail. While on the detail she again called him on the phone, threatened to have him fired and again insisted she was fed up with him, his children and his job. When he told her that if she continued to carry on, one day he would leave. In response, she said "Get the hell out—nobody wants you anyway." To this he claims to have responded "If you pack my bags I'll leave." When he got home about 9:00 o'clock she opened the door, set a packed bag outside the door and said "Kids, kiss your dad good-by—he's leaving." When she again informed him she wanted him to leave, he left.

The husband testified to several other instances which occurred subsequent to his leaving the home. All of these are basically denied by the wife except for an incident at the husband's apartment at the Harper's Ferry Apartment Complex. According to the husband the wife came to his apartment at the Harper's Ferry Apartment Complex on May 14, 1985, uninvited. According to the wife, her purpose was to visit and discuss their mutal problems. Upon arriving at the apartment she put her hand over the "peephole" and knocked. While waiting for the door to open she could hear her husband talking to someone inside the apartment. When the husband opened the door she saw a female lying on the couch. The woman got up and started walking towards the door. The wife admits to then pushing her out while justifying *684 her action with the contention she was aggrieved and became distraught on seeing her husband of some twelve years with another woman. Thereafter, depending upon whose version is accepted, an argument and name calling session or a discussion ensued for some 5 to 7 hours in which the husband's parents were called to come over and in which bottles were broken, debris scattered on the floor and the apartment put in total disarray. Although the wife denies it, the two hundred pound husband contends he took a "tail whipping" at the hands of his wife for 5 to 6 hours, which left his "lip busted", his "groin black and blue", and his being unable to work the next day due to the injuries sustained.

The husband, the female in the apartment and her female friend all said she was in the apartment waiting for her friend who lived in the same apartment complex to come and pick her up to go shopping. Although the husband reluctantly agreed the female was his girl friend and had stayed in the apartment overnight on several occasions, he denied having had sexual relations with her at any time.

Although the trial judge did not give written reasons for his judgment, he rejected the husband's argument of mutual fault.

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Related

Billingsley v. Billingsley
618 So. 2d 562 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Helms v. Helms
534 So. 2d 502 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)
Roberts v. Roberts
519 So. 2d 229 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
487 So. 2d 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughn-v-vaughn-lactapp-1986.