Opinion
No. 8396 (Consolidated with Nos. 8251 and 8252).
October 12, 1977. Rehearing Denied November 10, 1977.
APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF ORLEANS, STATE OF LOUISIANA, HONORABLE MELVIN J. DURAN, J.
Lanny R. Zatzkis, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
James C. Witcher, II, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee Janice Marie Coleman.
Emile W. Schneider, Tutor ad hoc, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.
Before STOULIG, BOUTALL and SCHOTT, JJ.
For the reasons assigned in the attached opinion, we affirm the judgment dismissing plaintiff's suit in the matter of Charles Coleman v. Janice Marie Coleman, separated wife of Charles Coleman, et al. Appellant is to bear all costs.
AFFIRMED.
Plaintiff, Charles Coleman, has appealed two judgments dismissing suits against his wife Janice Coleman — one in which he prayed for divorce on the ground of adultery, and a second in which he sought to disavow the paternity of a daughter born to Janice Coleman on October 7, 1975. Although these matters were tried separately, similar factual allegations made it expedient to consolidate these matters on appeal. We combine our reasons in this one opinion and render separate decrees in each case.
The minor was represented in this action by a tutor ad litem.
In the divorce trial, plaintiff testified he left the matrimonial domicile at his wife's request in April 1974 and became judicially separated on July 18, 1974 by a judgment of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans. He testified he and his wife had no sexual relations after that date. Plaintiff further stated that one Percy Saul lived with his wife after the separation and that the defendant bore a child some 15 months after the judicial separation.
Two of defendant's neighbors — Malvin Bell and Kathy Hill — testified Saul frequently stayed overnight at Mrs. Coleman's apartment; however, they said he began these visitations in the summer of 1975. The baby was born in the fall of 1975. Bell assumed Saul stayed in the apartment overnight because he saw him enter in the late afternoon and leave early in the morning. He also saw several cars driven by Saul parked in the vicinity of the defendant's apartment overnight. Bell did not keep a constant surveillance on the Coleman apartment.
Saul admitted that several cars that he had permission to use were left overnight because he had loaned them to Mrs. Coleman for her use. Saul is employed by a retail automobile outlet.
Janice Coleman said her daughter was fathered by plaintiff, having been conceived in December 1974 when she cohabited with him. She explained this was the only occasion they had sexual intercourse after the judgment of separation and she denies cohabiting with any other man. Saul testified that he and Mrs. Coleman were friends but not lovers.
Although the trial judge concluded in the adultery proceedings that the "* * * evidence leads one to be very suspicious * * *," he decided plaintiff failed to adduce sufficient proof to support a judgment of divorce. Proof of adultery may be established by indirect or circumstantial evidence; however the evidence must support a conclusion of an adulterous relationship to the exclusion of any other reasonable hypothesis. The mere fact that a man and woman spend time together alone does not necessarily mean they are engaged in illicit sex. Hermes v. Hermes, 287 So.2d 789 (La. 1973), and Kendrick v. Kendrick, 232 La. 1104, 96 So.2d 12 (1957).
In this case the decision of the trial court rests on an evaluation of the credibility of the witnesses. Our review of the record discloses no manifest error in the result reached by the district court. Accordingly we affirm the judgment dismissing plaintiff's petition for divorce. See Withers v. Withers, 296 So.2d 466 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1974).
In the action en desaveu, again credibility of the witnesses is a crucial factor. Appellant contends the trial court dismissed his suit because it placed the burden of proof on Charles Coleman to establish the girl was not his child. He relies on the presumption against paternity set forth in C.C. art. 188 (as it read prior to the 1976 amendment which, being substantive, was applicable when this suit was filed in 1975):
"The legitimacy of the child born three hundred days after the separation from bed and board has been decreed, may be contested, unless it be proved that there had been cohabitation between the husband and wife since such decree, because it is always presumed that the parties have obeyed the sentence of separation.
"But in case of voluntary separation, cohabitation is always presumed, unless the contrary be proved."
Singley v. Singley, 140 So.2d 546 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1962), for a discussion of presumption in actions en desaveu.
If the husband's statement is accepted that he and his wife did not cohabit after the judgment of separation, the presumption that he is not the father must stand until disproved. Of course, the wife may negate the presumption by proving that she and her husband did in fact cohabit after judgment was rendered.
In this case Janice Coleman testified to one instance of sexual intercourse with her husband in December 1974. Although she was vague about the time the post-separation cohabitation took place, she repeated on several occasions it was in December 1974. The trial judge made the credibility call in her favor, thus she carried the burden of proving the element that destroys the C.C. art. 188 presumption. On the record before us, while we are not overly impressed with Mrs. Coleman's testimony, we are equally confused by that of her husband.
Plaintiff suggests the child is the result of the adulterous relationship between his wife and Percy Saul. Yet his own witnesses testified they did not see Saul near Mrs. Coleman's apartment until the summer of 1975 when her pregnancy was well advanced. Plaintiff argues the trial judge's decision that Mrs. Coleman was the more credible of the two litigants is based on a misunderstanding of the testimony. In written reasons the trial judge discussed at length the improbability of Charles Coleman's having no information about his wife's pregnancy until several days after the baby was born. As appellant points out, plaintiff did not say in so many words he did not know of the pregnancy; he simply stated he learned of the birth several days after it occurred. When the testimony of all the plaintiff's witnesses is read together, there is an inference that they say plaintiff was unaware of the impending birth of the child before she was delivered. And yet, even if the trial judge erred in evaluating this aspect of the testimony, the evidence is still not sufficient to permit plaintiff to disavow paternity of this child.
To rebut the presumption of legitimacy dictated by the public policy of this State the evidence must be clear, certain and conclusive. In the instant case the trial judge found as a matter of fact that there was cohabitation after the judgment of separation was rendered. This finding of fact satisfies the proof required to overcome the exception to C.C. art. 184, the presumption of paternity, expressed in C.C. art. 187 as qualified by the first paragraph of C.C. art. 188. Heable v. Heable, 248 So.2d 847 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1971).
Accordingly we affirm the judgment dismissing the appellant's disavowal of paternity action.
I respectfully dissent from the judgment which affirms the dismissal of plaintiff's petition to disavow paternity of the minor child.
Plaintiff obtained a judgment of separation from his wife on July 18, 1974, and this child was born on October 7, 1975. Thus, he is entitled to invoke the presumption against paternity in the case of the child born more than 300 days after the judgment of separation from bed and board. C.C. Arts. 187 and 188 (as they read prior to Act 430 of 1976).
The trial court in his reasons for judgment made the statement that "the presumption of legitimacy is the strongest in our law. The plaintiff's proof is grossly insufficient and far short of that required to preponderate."
Similarly, my colleagues in discussing this case speak of the public policy of the state relative to the presumption of legitimacy.
Tannehill v. Tannehill, 261 La. 933, 261 So.2d 619 (1972) at p. 622 states that the presumption of paternity does not exist when the child is born more than 300 days after judgment of separation. Hence, I submit that the trial judge and my colleagues have erred in their approach to this case.
The only evidence offered to establish cohabitation and resulting paternity was the statement by the defendant mother to the effect that in December, 1974, while plaintiff was in her home on a visit to the children, and at a time when the children had gone outside, she had intercourse with him. He denied that this occurred. If this uncorroborated testimony is sufficient to rebut the presumption established by the Code in plaintiff's favor the presumption is meaningless.
I recognize that this case is consolidated in this court with the appeal of the husband from a separate suit against his wife for divorce based on adultery, and there may be some inconsistency in affirming the dismissal of his divorce action and at the same time reversing the dismissal of his action to disavow.
In the divorce action, plaintiff had the burden of proof, and I agree with my colleagues that the testimony and other evidence was insufficient for plaintiff to establish that his wife committed adultery so as to entitle him to a judgment as a matter of law. Surely the evidence was not sufficient for us to reverse the trial judge's dismissal of his suit.
The trial of the divorce case was held on March 18, 1976, and the trial of the disavow action was four days later in another division of the Civil District Court before another judge. Under the law and jurisprudence I cannot say that any error exists in the judgment dismissing the divorce suit, but I am compelled to dissent from affirming the judgment dismissing the disavowal action. The inconsistency here results from the statutory law and it is not for us to correct this problem but for the legislature.
I respectfully dissent.