Allen v. Anderson
This text of 55 So. 2d 596 (Allen v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ALLEN
v.
ANDERSON et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*597 Andrew H. Thalheim and Richard A. Thalheim, Gretna, for plaintiff and appellant.
Parnell J. Hyland, New Orleans, for defendants and appellees.
McBRIDE, Judge.
This appeal, taken by Riley Allen from an adverse judgment, involves his suit against Cyril Joseph Anderson, Raymond Anderson, and Beatrice Chandler Hills, seeking to have himself judicially declared the owner of and entitled to the undisturbed possession of Lots 7, 8, and 9 of Block 28, Stafford Subdivision, Jefferson Parish, which is occupied by the defendants. By his suit, Allen also seeks to have set aside a certain judgment which was rendered on March 16, 1950, by the Twenty-fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, which recognized the defendants as the children and sole heirs of Belle Fraser Raney, and sent them into possession of said decedent's undivided one-half community interest in the property, for the reason that the defendants were born out of wedlock to Belle Fraser Raney, and were never "legitimated."
To set forth the interrelation of the parties and the subject of the suit, the preliminary facts may be stated thus:
Richard Raney purchased the property on December 12, 1924, during his marriage with Belle Fraser Raney. He was married to her one April 23, 1921, and she died on February 21, 1942. On March 24, 1948, there was judgment rendered in the succession of Belle Fraser, under docket No. 20781 of the Twenty-fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, recognizing Richard Raney as the surviving *598 husband of the decedent and placing him into possession of the decedent's undivided one-half community interest in the property. Raney represented to the court in the succession proceedings that the decedent had died intestate and left no ascendants, descendants, or adopted children.
On April 6, 1948, the present plaintiff, Riley Allen, bought the property from Richard Raney by authentic act.
On March 16, 1950, on the initiation of the three defendants herein, another proceeding, styled "Succession of Bella Frazier Rainey," docket No. 23567 of the Twenty-fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, was commenced. Cyril Joseph Anderson, Raymond Anderson, and Beatrice Chandler Hills, in their petition in said proceedings, alleged that they are the only children and sole heirs at law of the decedent, and prayed that they be placed into possession of the decedent's community interest in the property. They set forth that the decedent had been married three times; that Beatrice Chandler Hills is the legitimate issue of the union between decedent and Willie Chandler, her first husband, and that Cyril Joseph Anderson and Raymond Anderson are her legitimate children, issue of her marriage with William Anderson, her second husband. They also prayed that Richard Raney, decedent's surviving husband in community, be recognized and sent into possession of his community interest in the property. On the same day, judgment was rendered in accordance with the prayer of the petition.
On May 5, 1950, Riley Allen, who had bought the property from Richard Raney as aforesaid, filed suit to evict "Joseph Anderson & Occupants" therefrom, on the ground that Joseph Anderson was the tenant of Riley Allen and had failed to meet the payment of rent. Anderson resisted this suit by filing answer in which he denied that the relationship of landlord and tenant existed between Allen and himself. He further set up as a defense that he "and others" are joint owners of the property by virtue of the judgment in proceedings No. 23567, which entitles them to possess as owners. Nothing further transpired in the possession suit. The proceedings have no connection with the issues involved in the present suit, and we mention them merely to set forth the situations of the various parties.
There then followed the instant suit, which was commenced on October 13, 1950. Riley Allen rests his case on his acquisition from Richard Raney and the judgment recognizing the latter as the owner of Belle Fraser's community interest in the property, rendered in proceedings No. 20781. He assails the judgment in proceedings No. 23567, which decreed the defendants to be the owners of the community one-half of Belle Fraser in the property. The defendants contend for the validity of this judgment, and affirmatively assert that they are the lawful owners of one-half of the property in dispute.
The trial judge held that the defendants were the legitimate offspring of Belle Fraser. He found as a fact that she had been married first to Willie Chandler, and that Beatrice Chandler Hills was born of that marriage. He also found as a fact that Belle Fraser subsequently married William Anderson, and that Cyril Joseph Anderson and Raymond Anderson were legitimate children of that union.
The burden of proving the marriages and their legitimacy, in view of the denial of plaintiff, rested with defendants, who are asserting rights arising from those relations. Doiron v. Vacuum Oil Co., 164 La. 15, 113 So. 748.
Belle Fraser was born in Raceland, Lafourche Parish, and left there when about thirteen years old, the time not being established by the record, to reside in a place which the witnesses refer to as "Pattersonville." From their geographical description of the town, we entertain no doubt that it was Patterson, in St. Mary Parish, to which Belle Fraser moved.
No marriage certificate was ever produced, and the defendants rely on parolevidence to show the existence of a marriage between Belle Fraser and Willie Chandler. In the absence of higher evidence, a marriage may be so established. *599 Succession of Anderson, 176 La. 66, 145 So. 270. To that end, two relatives of Beatrice Chandler Hills were produced as witnesses. There is no need to dwell at any length on their testimony, except to say that it falls far short of proving that a presumptive marriage resulted from the general reputation of the parties. The testimony given by one of the witnesses is so unsatisfactory as to warrant the thought that the events narrated by him were entirely fictive.
Not alone have defendants failed to prove the existence of the marriage, but we have before us a certificate from the office of the clerk of court of St. Mary Parish, which is in evidence, setting forth that the marriage records between 1820 and 1951 show no marriage between Belle Fraser and Willie Chandler. Of course, it is possible that the marriage ceremony, if such actually took place, could have been performed elsewhere, but as Belle Fraser moved to Patterson during childhood, and continued to live there, we feel sure that her marriage would not have taken place in any other parish.
No proof was introduced attesting to the legitimacy of Cyril Joseph Anderson and Raymond Anderson. They were born to Belle Fraser in New Orleans during the period when she was living with William Anderson, who reported their births to the Recorder of Births, Deaths, and Marriages in the City of New Orleans. The birth certificates contain the information that Belle Fraser's two children are illegitimate issue of William Anderson and Belle Fraser.
The theory of plaintiff's case is that none of the defendants are capable of inheriting Belle Fraser's community interest in the property, because they had never been legitimated.
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55 So. 2d 596, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-anderson-lactapp-1951.