Wilson v. Wilson

17 So. 2d 249, 205 La. 196, 1944 La. LEXIS 663
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 7, 1944
DocketNo. 37059.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 249 (Wilson v. Wilson) 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
Wilson v. Wilson, 17 So. 2d 249, 205 La. 196, 1944 La. LEXIS 663 (La. 1944).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Mrs. Lillian Lewis Wilson sued her husband Justin E. Wilson for a separation from bed and board on the ground of abandonment. In addition to her demand for separation, Mrs. Wilson asked for alimony and the custody of the two children of the marriage, a girl five years old, and a boy two years old. Mr. Wilson, answering plaintiff’s petition denied the alleged abandonment, averred the extra-judicial settlement of the matrimonial community, and asked for the custody of the children. Judgment was rendered granting the separation to Mrs. Wilson, approving the settlement of the community, giving the custody of the elder child to the parties jointly, giving the custody of the younger child to Mrs. Wilson, and ordering Mr. Wilson to pay alimony of $100 a month to Mrs. Wilson for her support and for the support of the children. As Mrs. Wilson was desirous of fitting herself to earn a livlihood, by agreement the spouses placed the elder child, a little girl, in the custody of the sister and brother-in-law of Mr. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp, with whom the child had previously spent a great portion *201 of her time. Mrs. Wilson placed the other child, a little boy, in the care of her mother.

More than a year after the judgment for separation and for alimony was rendered, Mr. Wilson, alleging that Mrs. Wilson was gainfully employed and that none of the alimony had been used for the support of the little girl, sought by rule to have the alimony reduced to the extent that it was awarded for her support and for the support of the little girl. On the day the rule was tried, Mrs. Wilson filed suit for final divorce, based on the separation from bed and board, re-urging her demand for the custody of the children and for alimony at the rate of $100 per month. The rule taken by Mr. Wilson for the reduction of alimony was dismissed. Answering the suit of Mrs. Wilson for divorce, Mr. Wilson admitted the rendition of the judgment of separation, and the lapse of one year without reconciliation, but asked that his sister, Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp, be awarded the custody of the little girl. Mr. Wilson again asked that no alimony be allowed for the support of Mrs. Wilson, or for the little girl, but only for the support of the little boy.

After hearing the parties, the trial judge rendered judgment in favor of Mrs. Wilson, granting her a final divorce and the permanent care and custody of the little boy and alimony at the rate of $100 per month, but he awarded the custody of the little girl to her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp, with whom she was living at the time. Mrs. Wilson applied for an appeal, suspensive and devolutive, from that part of the judgment awarding the custody of the little girl to Mr. and Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp. The trial judge granted Mrs. Wilson a devolutive appeal, but declined to grant her a suspensive appeal. Mrs. Wilson then applied to this Court for a writ of mandamus to compel the judge to grant her a suspensive appeal. Holding that the relief sought by Mrs. Wilson would avail her nothing since a suspensive appeal would only have the effect of delaying the matter and leaving the custody of the little girl where it was originally placed in the judgment of separation from bed and board, this Court denied the relief sought by Mrs. Wilson. Wilson v. Wilson, 202 La. 520, 12 So.2d 258. After the suspensive appeal was denied, the case was brought here on a devolutive appeal.

Mr. Wilson answered the appeal, contesting the award of alimony so far as it applied to Mrs. Wilson and the little girl and asked that the amount of alimony be reduced from $100 to $15 a month for the support of the little boy.

On the day the appeal was argued, Mrs. Wilson filed in this Court a petition setting forth that since the judgment appealed from was rendered in the district court, Mr. and Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp, to whom the custody of the little girl was awarded, had voluntarily surrendered the little girl to the petitioner. Annexed to the petition is a copy of a letter dated January 3, 1944, addressed by Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp to the Chief Justice. In this letter, after showing that while neither she nor her husband were parties to the suit, the trial court awarded the custody of the little girl to them, Mrs. Kemp stated:

*203 “Since that time conditions have changed and Mrs. Wilson has returned from California to Louisiana and wants the custody of the child, and while we have had Pamela a great part of her life and enjoyed her love and companionship, we do not feel that it is to her interest to seek her care longer unless agreeable to both her father and mother.
“I, therefore, request that you inform the other members of the Supreme Court of our attitude so that the judgment can be changed in this respect or remanded so that it can be corrected in the lower Court.”

Mrs. Kemp also advised the Court, through the Chief Justice, that she had sent a copy of the letter to the trial judge and to the attorneys representing the respective parties.

' In her petition, Mrs. Wilson alleges that, under the law and the evidence as contained in the transcript, the judgment of the district court is erroneous and should be reversed so far as it grants the custody of the petitioner’s child, Pamela Wilson, to Mr. and Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp; and, in the alternative, that the cause should be remanded to the district court in order that proof may be made of the facts stated in the petition. The prayer of the petition is in accordance with its allegations.

The rule is that this Court can not receive evidence originally nor consider as evidence documents that were net introduced in the court below. Code Prac. arts. 894, 895; Succession of Gravolet, 191 La. 599, 186 So. 41. But the rule has been relaxed where facts occurring subsequent to the appeal are not denied. In a number of cases this Court has considered evidence of such facts, since it' would serve no useful purpose to remand a case for the purpose of offering evidence in the court below of facts which are not denied. White v. Ramsey, 14 La.Ann. 329; City of New Orleans v. Metropolitan Bank, 44 La.Ann. 698, 11 So. 146; Dannenmann & Charlton v. Charlton, 113 La. 276, 36 So. 965.

As the letter of Mrs. Kemp to the Chief Justice does not involve any issue of fact between the parties, it might be considered if it were relevant to the issue before the Court. Although subsequent to the judgment of the district court, Mr. and Mrs. Kemp voluntarily surrendered custody of the little girl to Mrs. Wilson, that fact of itself does not make the judgment erroneous or dispense with the necessity of an adjudication by this Court as to its correctness.

There seems to be no legal obstacle to the final disposition of the case as it has been made up in the district court as shown by the transcript of the proceeding and we shall now proceed to consider it on the merits.

The only question presented for decision on the merits involves the correctness of that part of the judgment which awards the custody of the little girl to Mr. and Mrs. Kemp and alimony to Mrs. Wilson.

As shown by his reasons for judgment, the trial judge reached the conclusion that it was to the interest of the little girl to remain with Mr. and Mrs. Kemp, her uncle and aunt, with whom she was temporarily living at the time. He stated correctly that Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 249, 205 La. 196, 1944 La. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wilson-la-1944.