Sizeler v. Sizeler, 10202

Decision Date05 June 1979
Docket NumberNo. 10202,10202
Citation375 So.2d 122
PartiesJanet Lassen SIZELER, wife of Rickey M. Sizeler v. Rickey M. SIZELER.
CourtCourt of Appeal of Louisiana — District of US

Jerald N. Andry and Gilbert V. Andry, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Thomas M. Willmott, Metairie, for defendant-appellant.

Before REDMANN, GULOTTA and STOULIG, JJ.

GULOTTA, Judge.

The defendant-husband appeals from a September 22, 1978 judgment which, 1) denies his request to set aside a March 10, 1978 judgment awarding alimony pendente lite to the plaintiff-wife in the sum of $275.00 per month; 2) increases, retroactively, the alimony award in the March 10th judgment from $275.00 per month to $500.00 per month from December 22, 1977, the date of the filing of the petition for separation, to September 15, 1978, the date of the hearing of the rule in question; 3) increases alimony pendente lite in favor of the wife to the sum of $317.00 per month from October 1, 1978; and 4) finds the husband in contempt.

Before us, also, in this appeal is an October 16, 1978 judgment dismissing the husband's exception to the wife's use of summary proceedings, to set aside and annul the March 10, 1978 judgment. The husband also complains that the trial judge erred in maintaining the wife's exception to the husband's motion to hold the wife in contempt because of her failure to disclose that she had been employed at the time of the hearing for alimony pendente lite.

Because this appeal raises a serious procedural problem, we first address the issue whether or not summary proceedings may be used to annul or alter the substance of an earlier, March 10, 1978 judgment, from which no appeal has been taken. In this connection another procedural problem confronting us is whether an exception to the use of summary proceedings filed at 11:20 a. m. when the matter was set for trial for 10:00 a. m. (the trial actually commenced in the afternoon subsequent to the filing of the exception) was untimely filed.

LSA-C.C.P. art. 2592 provides that summary proceedings may be used, among other things, for the original granting of, subsequent change in, or termination of alimony. LSA-C.C.P. art. 2593 provides that the summary proceeding may be commenced by the filing of a rule to show cause, and exceptions to such a rule ". . . shall be filed prior to the time assigned for, and shall be disposed of on, the trial . . ." The trial judge in dismissing the husband's exception to the use of summary proceedings concluded that because the exception was filed subsequent to the time the matter was scheduled for trial, i. e., 10:00 a. m., the exception was not filed "prior to the time assigned" and was therefore untimely.

We do not agree, as a matter of law, with the trial judge. In those cases relied upon by the plaintiff-wife 1 the untimely exception was filed after the hearing had been commenced. In other cases, 2 where exceptions to the use of summary proceedings were filed on appeal, these exceptions were also held to be untimely. The obvious reasoning behind the adoption of LSA-C.C.P. 2593 is to afford an opportunity for the court to consider, in limine, the question of whether or not the matter before the court can properly be heard in a summary proceeding. Because an exception filed prior to the commencement of the actual hearing (as distinguished from the time the matter is set or scheduled for hearing) affords the in limine opportunity to the trial judge, we conclude that the exception filed in this case was timely.

Having so concluded we now turn to the issue of whether or not summary proceedings may be used to annul or alter the substance of an earlier (March 10, 1978) judgment from which no appeal has been taken. The Louisiana Supreme Court in Halcomb v. Halcomb, 352 So.2d 1013 (La., 1977) citing language from Pisciotto v. Crucia, 224 La. 862, 71 So.2d 226 (1954), stated that the jurisprudence is well settled that a judgment for alimony is in the nature of property and is protected against alteration or annulment ". . . except by the method and for the causes prescribed by law . . ."

LSA-C.C.P. article 2004 provides that a final judgment obtained by fraud or ill practices may be annulled. The article further provides that the action to annul must be brought within one year of discovery of the fraud or ill practices. In Columbia Radio & Supply Company v. Jordan, 215 So.2d 553, (La.App. 4th Cir., 1968) we stated that an action for nullity of judgment was neither a summary nor an executory proceeding, but an ordinary one and must comply with the rules governing ordinary proceedings. 3 Furthermore, it is well established that the grounds for nullity must be asserted in a direct action and cannot be raised collaterally. 4

Moreover, LSA-C.C.P. article 1951 provides that a final judgment 5 may be amended to alter the phraseology of the judgment, but not the substance, or to correct errors of calculation. See Hug v. Hug, 230 So.2d 333, (La.App. 4th Cir., 1970), writ denied, 255 La. 811, 233 So.2d 250 (La.1970); King v. King, 253 So.2d 660 (La.App. 1st Cir., 1971), writ denied, 260 La. 128, 255 So.2d 353 (La.1971).

In the instant case the September 22, 1978 judgment which retroactively increased the alimony to the sum of $500.00 per month clearly alters the substance of the March 10th $275.00 monthly alimony award. Such an alteration in substance cannot be granted except by ordinary proceedings in an action for nullity, if brought within the time prescribed in LSA-C.C.P. article 2004.

Accordingly, because revision of the March 10, 1978 judgment was erroneously sought in a summary proceeding, we are compelled to set aside that part of the judgment which retroactively increases the March 10, 1978 alimony award from $275.00 per month to $500.00 per month from December 22, 1977 to September 15, 1978. Because of our holding, the suspension of the contempt sentence must be conditioned upon the payment by the husband of the accumulated alimony arrearage based on the...

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