Freudenstein v. Freudenstein

34 So. 589 | La. | 1903

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, C. J.

The defendant appeals from a judgment decreeing a separation of bed and board between himself and his wife.

The chief contention is as to whether the plaintiff should have been permitted, as she was, to file a supplemental and amended petition, in which she set up in aid of her original prayer various acts of the defendant which she alleged had taken place subsequently to the service of the petition made upon him. It is maintained that these alleged acts could not be urged as substantive grounds for a separation; that, if they really occurred, they could have been declared upon only in a new and independent suit. Defendant contends that the judgment against him was based exclusively upon the amended petition. The acts complained of in plaintiff’s original petition are charged to have taken place on July 26 and on July 29, 1901, while those added in the supplemental petition are averred to have taken place on August 9, 1901. If the judgment be maintained, it must rest either upon the acts charged to have taken place on the 9th of August, standing alone, or those acts taken in connection with those set out in the original petition as having occurred on the 29th of July, 1901, for those of July 26th which were declared upon were not sustained. The acts of the 29th of July, 1901, charged against him by the plaintiff, are that he (she being absent at the time set forth in the petition) publicly defamed her in the presence of the wife’s mother and sister, of her stepdaughter, and of one of the latter’s lady friends.

Opinion.

We have examined the record to ascertain what the situation would be if the testimony as to what took place on the 9th of August had not been introduced at all; next, what the situation would have been, if, without the filing of the amended petition, it had been permitted to have been introduced over defendant’s objections; and, lastly, from the actual situation of its having been introduced over objection, when an amended petition in the meantime had been allowed to be filed over opposition. Had the case gone to trial without any testimony as to what occurred on the 9th of August, we are of the opinion that plaintiff would not have made out her case. Had testimony been taken on the trial without any additional pleading as to what occurred on the latter day, this testimony could not be used as substantive evidence in support of substantive grounds on which to base a judgment, but, at best, as evidence corroborating or supporting the grounds set out in the original petition.

Considering the testimony from that standpoint, as being authorized to be so considered under the decision in Mack v. Handy, 39 La. Ann. 496, 497, 2 South. 181, we think plaintiff’s demand would be still unsustained. Assuming that defendant’s cpnduct on the 9th of August was such as piaintiff alleges it to have been, the acts of that day were acts separate and distinct from those of the 29th of July, and not bearing such a relation to each other as would authorize their being so linked together for the purpose of giving the plaintiff a judgment, on the original petition. This being the situation, the correctness of the district court’s action turns upon the question whether the plaintiff was justified in' introducing a new cause of action into the case, based upon facts occurring after the institution of the suit, through the instrumentality of an amended petition. We do not think she was. To affirm the judgment would be really to give plaintiff a judgment upon the supplemental petition as, the main demand. The judgment should be reversed, without prejudice.

We take occasion to say that there is evidence in the record which leads us to believe that a reconciliation between these parties may be affected by following that course. For the reasons assigned, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment of the district court be annulled, avoided, and reversed, and it is now ordered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiff’s demand be rejected, and her suit dismissed, without prejudice, as of nonsuit.

BLANCHARD, J., dissents.