193 So. 702 | La. | 1940
The defendant is appealing from a judgment granting his wife a separation from bed and board on the ground of cruel treatment. The judgment allows the wife half of certain property and funds declared to belong to the matrimonial community, and allows her $250 for her attorneys' fee, to be paid out of the community funds. The *448 plaintiff, answering the appeal, asks for an increase of the allowance to $500.
The defendant, in his answer to the suit, denied that he had been cruel to his wife, and, in the alternative, pleaded that he and she had become reconciled after the quarrels which she complained of in this suit, and that she then condoned whatever offenses he had committed.
The evidence sustains the wife's charge that the husband treated her cruelly on several occasions; but it is not necessary now to decide whether this ill-treatment was of such a nature as to render their living together intolerable. The reason why that question is eliminated is that the testimony convinces us that there was a reconciliation between the parties after the suit was filed, and that the wife then condoned whatever offense or offenses the husband had committed in the way of ill-treatment of her. It is declared in articles 152 and 153 of the Civil Code that an action for separation from bed and board is barred by a reconciliation of the parties if the reconciliation is had before the suit is filed, and that the action is abated if a reconciliation is had after the suit is filed; and it is declared in article 154 that the same rule applies to an action for divorce.
The defendant in his testimony cites several instances in which he claims there was a reconciliation subsequent to all of the quarrels complained of in the plaintiff's petition. She denies that there was ever a reconciliation or condonation on her part, and the evidence seems to support her denial as to every instance cited by the defendant except as to one instance. *449 That was on Sunday, February 5, 1939 — after this suit was filed, and only three days before the trial commenced. The plaintiff and defendant had lunch together, that day, at a restaurant conducted in connection with a drug store in Lake Charles, where they resided. The wife came to the restaurant first and took a seat at a table, but did not order lunch until her husband arrived, a few minutes afterwards — possibly thirty minutes afterwards. He immediately took a seat at the same table, indicating that there was a previous understanding that he and his wife would lunch together that day. According to the testimony of the waitress, who knew both parties, they talked together as if on friendly terms during the meal; and at the end of the meal the waitress made only one check, according to her custom in serving a married couple. The wife then drove off in her car and he in his. That evening, at nightfall, the plaintiff in her car and the defendant in his car drove out to the suburbs of the city, to a somewhat secluded place on the roadside, where they parked their cars, and had an affaire d'amour, in his car. She admitted in her testimony that she and her husband had had the rendezvous. Her only explanation is that he threatened to kill her if she refused to meet him at the appointed time and place. Her testimony on the subject convinces us that she was mistaken in her recollection that she was alarmed by threats on the part of her husband when she went to keep her tryst with him in his automobile on the roadside. It would serve no good purpose to state in detail the testimony on the subject. It is sufficient to say that there is *450 no doubt that, on the occasion in question, after this suit was assigned for trial, and only three days before the trial commenced, there was a complete reconciliation of the quarrels and complaints which the parties had had. The wife's conduct towards her husband on that occasion was a condonation of all offenses on his part that she had knowledge of, and was not consistent with an intention on her part to prosecute her suit for separation from bed and board. It is not contended that the defendant was guilty of any offense against his wife after the reconciliation, or that any offense was concealed from her, or was not known by her, at the time of the reconciliation.
Counsel for the plaintiff cite the following decisions to support their argument that, even if the court should conclude that the plaintiff's meeting with her husband in his automobile on the Sunday evening referred to was voluntary on her part, and was not influenced by threats or fear, the incident did not constitute such a reconciliation as should put an end to the wife's suit for separation from bed and board, viz.: Terrell v. Boarman, 34 La.Ann. 301; Mack v. Handy, 39 La.Ann. 491, 2 So. 181; Martin v. Martin,
Although we have concluded that the plaintiff's suit should be dismissed for having become abated by the reconciliation of the parties, we have concluded also to put the costs of this litigation upon the matrimonial community, under authority of Section 2 of Act No. 229 of 1910, giving *453
to the appellate courts the authority to assess the costs of court in any case against any party to the suit, as in the court's judgment may be deemed equitable. It was the husband's fault that provoked the bringing of the suit, and it is as much to his credit as to the wife's that the suit is ended by the reconciliation of the parties. Hence, according to the doctrine of Snow v. Snow,
And, according to the ruling in Spiller v. Spiller,
The judgment appealed from is annulled and the suit is ordered dismissed for having become abated by the reconciliation of the *454 parties. The court costs are to be borne by the matrimonial community.
ODOM, J., takes no part.