111 So. 481 | La. | 1927
The defendant has appealed from a judgment of divorce and relies upon a plea of res judicata. The divorce was granted for the cause given in the Act No.
This is an unusual plea of res judicata. It is founded not only upon a previous judgment dismissing a similar suit between the same parties but also upon a judgment thereafter declaring the right of action foreclosed by the first judgment, and upon a third judgment declaring the right of action foreclosed by the first and second judgment. With all of that, we agree with the judge of the civil district court that the plea is not well founded — not because the judgment dismissing the first suit was based upon a wrong interpretation of the statute, but because the plea of res judicata is never an appropriate defense in a suit for divorce on the ground that the parties have been living apart for 7 *24
years. It is not possible for a judgment, declaring that the plaintiff is not entitled to a divorce on the ground of 7 years' separation from his wife, to declare that he shall not be entitled to a divorce on that ground at some future time. Two such suits filed at different dates are not founded upon the same cause of action. If the judgment in any one or all of the three former suits had rejected the plaintiff's demand for a divorce after a trial of the case on its merits, the plaintiff's right of action in this suit would not be thereby foreclosed, as res judicata. It cannot be that the several judgments dismissing the plaintiff's three previous suits have had the effect of forever denying him the right to a divorce for a cause for which the law gives to any and every person in his marital situation the right to a divorce. We are constrained to overrule the decision in McCubbin v. Hutchings,
The defendant's alternative plea or exception of no cause or right of action was founded, as we understand from her brief, upon the fact that there was never a lapse of 7 years from the date of the judgment in any of the previous suits to the date of filing of the next suit. When a demand for divorce on the ground of 7 years' separation is rejected, or the suit dismissed, the plaintiff is not required to wait 7 years longer before bringing another suit on the ground of 7 years' separation. The judgment in such case does not interrupt the term of separation.
*25The judgment appealed from is affirmed.