Vice v. Vice

190 So. 111, 192 La. 1002, 1939 La. LEXIS 1150
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1939
DocketNo. 35196.
StatusPublished

This text of 190 So. 111 (Vice v. Vice) 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
Vice v. Vice, 190 So. 111, 192 La. 1002, 1939 La. LEXIS 1150 (La. 1939).

Opinions

HIGGINS, Justice.

The husband instituted proceedings against his wife for the custody of their three year old minor son on the ground that his wife was morally unfit to continue in the custody of the child, because of her adulterous relations with the plaintiff’s brother, particularly on April 13, 1938, at 1450 Josephine Street, City of New Orleans, about 10 o’clock p. m. He also prayed that he be relieved of the assessment of alimony for the support of his wife and minor son.

The defendant denied the charges.

There was judgment dismissing the rule and the plaintiff appealed.

The record shows that .the couple was married in St. Bernard Parish on January 15, 1934, and that their son was born on February 6, 1936, in the City of New Orleans.

The husband filed suit for a divorce against his wife on February 18, 1938, alleging that she committed adultery with *1005 his brother, Joseph, on February 16, 1938, at 2044 Camp Street, New Orleans. He also asked for the custody of his minor son.

The defendant denied any wrongdoing and, in reconvention, asked for a separation from bed and board because of cruel treatment by her husband, who publicly and without any reason therefor charged her with having committed adultery with his brother in their home on October 10, 1937 and February 16, 1938.

On April 6, 1938, the trial court rendered judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s suit, and granting the defendant in reconvention a judgment of separation from' bed and board, the permanent care, custody and control of the child, and condemning the plaintiff to pay alimony at the rate of $9 per week for the support of his wife and $3.50 per week for the support of his son. The husband did not appeal from the judgment.

The wife instituted contempt proceedings on June 14, 1938, against the husband for nonpayment of a part of the alimony for six consecutive weeks and upon the payment of the amount in arrears, the rule was dismissed by the trial judge.

On July 1, 1938, the husband filed the rule upon which the controversy before this court is presented.

We shall now narrate the testimony of the witnesses in the order in which they testified.

Plaintiff stated that on • the night of April 13, 1938, after attending a picture show and while he was standing in front of De Rouen’s drugstore at Josephine and Magazine Streets, his wife in company with a young woman went into the drugstore and ordered a drink; that almost simultaneously his brother, Joseph, arrived at the drugstore and stood on the outside; that after obtaining the drink, his wife left the drugstore and walked down Magazine Street, and his brother, Joseph, followed her; that. he then walked up Magazine Street and when he reached Prytania Street and Jackson Avenue, he saw his wife and brother walking up St. Charles Avenue together; that he followed them, remaining a distance of about a block away, and that they went into Moffatt’s drugstore, located at the corner of St. Charles Avenue and Sixth Street; that he then followed them out Sixth Street, down Prytania Street until they entered the yard at 1450 Josephine Street, where his brother had a room in the rear of the premises on the first floor; that he waited awhile and then walked in the back entrance of the place on Prytania Street and quietly looked into the window of his brother’s room and saw the couple lie down on the bed together; that he then went to Jackson Avenue and Magazine Street, where he formerly spent some of his leisure time in the evening, to get a friend to go.back with him to his brother’s room to witness his wife’s misconduct; that two taxicab drivers, who were his acquaintances, agreed to accompany him and they got in one of the taxicabs and drove to his brother’s address; that they went through the back entrance on Prytania Street, on to the downstairs back porch; that he opened the screen door, *1007 turned the knob of the main door and pushed it open and the. three of them walked in and found his brother and his wife in bed together, lying close to each other, and her clothes were above her knees; that after telling them he knew he would find the “two snakes in the grass together,” he and the witnesses walked out; and that they returned to the taxicab stand at Jackson Avenue and Magazine Street and after telephoning his lawyer, the three of them rode in the cab to the attorney’s house, where they related what they had seen. (This attorney is not the present counsel of record for the plaintiff.)

The two taxicab drivers were Lewis Maurer and August Hagardorf, subpoenaed witnesses, both of whom work for the White Top Cab Company at their stand on Jackson Avenue and Magazine Street, a distance of about five blocks from 1450 Josephine .Street. Their testimony corroborates the plaintiff’s in all respects, except1 that part where the husband was alone when he first began to follow the couple.

C. M. Johnson, a friend of the plaintiff and a former co-worker at the Service Foundry, and who now operates a retail grocery at 1819 Sophie Wright Place, testified that he had seen the defendant and Joseph Vice sitting on a bench in the Coliseum Park as late as 9 o’clock at night on three or four occasions; that he appeared in court as a witness for the plaintiff in rule on the Friday previous to the date on which he was giving his testimony and that on the Tuesday night thereafter the defendant called at his grocery store and told him not to come to court and testify against her as there would be “plenty of hell down there,” and if he did not wish to get in trouble, it would be best for him to stay away; that on Wednesday night, a week before giving .his testimony, he and the plaintiff were standing at the corner of 1055 Camp Street, near the witness’ home, and Joseph Vice passed; that he followed him out Orange Street, up Magazine Street and out Race Street to Constance Street to the 1500 block, where the .defendant lived; and that he saw Joseph Vice go into her home and later about 8:30 p. m., he came out with her little boy and went to a saloon on the corner of Orange and Constance Streets, where he got a bottle of beer.

Joseph Vice, who was subpoenaed, testified that he is the brother of the plaintiff and admitted that he had been intimate with the defendant since November, 1937, and particularly on the night of April 13, 1938, at 1450 Josephine Street, about 10:30, when he and the defendant were surprised in his room by the plaintiff and the two witnesses; that he carnally knew her on July 13, 1938, or just two days before he testified; that the.defendant was in a delicate condition as the result of their illicit relations; that she asked him for money for the purpose of having an abortion performed; and that he practically lived with her since November 1, 1937, and they had misconducted themselves iñ the presence of the child.

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Related

Mouille v. Schutten
183 So. 191 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1938)
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90 So. 652 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 111, 192 La. 1002, 1939 La. LEXIS 1150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vice-v-vice-la-1939.