106 So. 20 | La. | 1925
Lead Opinion
On June 5, 1913, the present defendant sued his wife, the present plaintiff, for divorce, causing her to be cited through a curator ad hoc. On February 12, 1914, judgment of divorce was rendered and signed. On November 24, 1922, the present suit was filed.
Plaintiff seeks, in this suit, to recover $15,000, as being the value of a one-half interest *654 in the property owned by the matrimonial community at the date of the rendition of the judgment of divorce. In the alternative, she prays to be recognized as the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property undisposed of, and to be decreed a sum equal to one-half the value of the property disposed of, by defendant.
Plaintiff's action is grounded upon defendant's alleged concealment of practically all the real estate belonging to the matrimonial community in the form of simulated sales to three individuals for the purpose of defrauding her of her rights in said community.
The suit was dismissed on exceptions filed by defendant, and plaintiff has appealed.
The basis of defendant's exceptions was the failure of plaintiff to accept the community of acquêts and gains within the time fixed by law, which is pleaded as a bar to her right of recovery.
The general rule is that, where a marriage has been dissolved by a judgment of divorce, the wife is presumed to have renounced the community, unless she has accepted it within the delay (30 days) allowed by law. Civ. Code. art. 2420; Herman v. Theurer, 11 La. Ann. 70; Succession of Ewing, 15 La. Ann. 416; Decuir v. Lejeune, 15 La. Ann. 569.
It would be against good conscience, however, to apply the rule literally to a case where a husband has concealed all or a portion of the community property with the object of defrauding his wife out of her just share of said property. Fraud vitiates all things, and, whatever guise it may assume, one upon whom it had been perpetrated is not remediless when it is exposed. We must give effect to this principle in construing the codal provisions. In doing so we are bound to hold, as we do, that wherever a marriage has been dissolved by a judgment of divorce, and the husband has practiced a fraud against his wife affecting her share of the community *655 property, the delay within which she must accept the community does not begin to run until said community has been restored in its integrity.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is set aside, and it is now ordered that this case be remanded to the district court to be proceeded with according to law; costs of this appeal to be paid by defendant; all other costs to await the final disposition of the suit.
Addendum
On the first hearing of this case we held that, as a general rule, where a marriage has been dissolved by a judgment of divorce, the wife is presumed to have renounced the community, unless it appears that she has accepted it within the delay of 30 days allowed by law, citing Civil Code, art. 2420, and also Herman v. Theurer, 11 La. Ann. 70; Succession of Ewing, 15 La. Ann. 416; and Decuir v. Lejeune, 15 La. Ann. 569. In so holding we ruled, however, that an exception exists to the general rule where the husband has concealed all or a part of the community property with the object in view of defrauding his wife out of her just share thereof, and held that in such instance the delay in which the wife must accept, if she accept at all, does not begin to run until the community has been restored in its integrity. The question to be determined upon this hearing of the case is, Is the ruling recognizing and enforcing the exception stated correct?
Article 2420 of the Civil Code provides that —
*656"The wife, separated from bed and board, who has not within the delays above fixed [to wit, 30 days], to begin from the separation finally pronounced, accepted the community, is supposed to have renounced the same; unless, being within the term, she has obtained a prolongation from the judge, after the husband was heard, or after he was duly summoned."
While this article makes no express exception in cases where the husband has fraudulently concealed all or a part of the community property with the end in view of bringing about an express or tacit renunciation of the community by the wife, still it was not necessary that the exception be expressed in the article. Fraud vitiates everything, even the wife's express or tacit renunciation of the community. The exception stated is fairly implied in the article.
In Wand v. Wand,
In Herman v. Theurer, 11 La. Ann. 70, in speaking of the right of the wife divorced from her husband to accept the community after the lapse of 30 days from the decree of divorce, it was said:
"Her action is barred, unless the conduct of the defendant [her husband] has been such as to prevent her from ascertaining her rights in regard to the community."
Article 2420 of the Civil Code, quoted supra, a correct interpretation of which is necessary in order to properly determine the present controversy, is substantially similar to article 1463 of the Civil Code of France, except that, instead of the delay for accepting being 30 days, in the French Code it is 3 months and 40 days.
Laurent, in discussing article 1463 of the *657 French Code, and after mentioning the strictness with which the article should be interpreted, says:
"Nous n'admettons q'une seule exception à l'article 1463, c'est le cas où la femme aurait été induite à ne pas accepter par les manoeuvres frauduleuses du mari; elle serait admise, dans ce cas, à accepter. C'est le droit commun; l'exception de fraude et de dol n'a pas besoin d'être écrite dans loi, elle est de droit. La femme peut attaquer, pour cause de dol, l'acceptation qu'elle a faite de la communauté (article 1455); elle peut aussi demander la nullité de la renonciation expresse qui lui a été surpise par dol. Pourquois ne pourrait-elle pas revenir sur la renonciation tacite de l'article 1463? Il y a un arrêt de la cour de Bruxelles en ce sens." Laurent, tome 22, pp. 432, 433, No. 411, Contrat de Mariage.
And Huc, in discussing the same article of the French Code, says:
"Il faut cependant reconnaître que la femme pourrait repousser la déchéance résultant de l'art. 1463, en établissant que son inaction a été le resultat de manoeuvres dolosive pratiquées par le mari pour la tromper sur la veritable situation de la communauté." Huc, tome 9, Liv. 111, Tit. V, No. 301.
Our conclusion is that our former opinion is correct, and should be reinstated. The facts shown by the petition, which must be accepted as true for the purpose of the exception, upon which the case was tried, justify the conclusion that defendant was misled into failing to accept the community within the prescribed delay of 30 days by the fraudulent acts of her husband. Under such circumstances her renunciation of the community, whether express or tacit, is not binding on her. The delay for accepting, in such an instance, does not begin to run until the effects of the fraud are removed by the restoration of the community in its integrity. Were it otherwise, the husband would be permitted to gain by his fraudulent acts.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment heretofore rendered herein is reinstated and made the decree of this court. *658