Berthelote v. Berthelote

24 So. 2d 191, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 490
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1945
DocketNo. 2768.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 191 (Berthelote v. Berthelote) 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.

Bluebook
Berthelote v. Berthelote, 24 So. 2d 191, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 490 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

There are two issues presented in this case, one directly involving the honesty of the defendant, a brother of the plaintiffs, and the other indirectly impugning his integrity as he is asked to collate a certain sum of money by reason of the fact that he gained an advantage over his co-heirs in the estate of his father by the purchase of certain shares of bank stock which he bought from his father a few years before he died. In the first issue the plaintiffs seek to have the court cancel and declare null and void an act of mortgage executed in his favor by his father on the ground that it was a fraudulent simulation designed to give him an advantage over his co-heirs and deprive them of a part of their inheritance.

The father, Gustave Berthelote, an elderly gentleman, died on May 11, 1944. The mortgage which is attacked was executed *Page 192 September 12, 1942, over two years and a half before his death. It appears to be a mortgage given to represent an indebtedness incurred by the father on that day, in the sum of $800 and is secured by a first mortgage on the old gentleman's home property which constituted about fifty per cent of the estate he left. It is attacked on the ground that it was a simulation pure and simple and that no consideration whatever passed as the father, who was an aged gentleman who lived very frugally, had no reason to borrow any such sum of money as he had all that he needed and was not contemplating and in fact did not make any investments from that time until his death. The defense to the act of mortgage is that it was valid and represented a loan made by the defendant to his father to whom he gave the $800 in cash and that he believed that his father used the whole or part of the funds to satisfy the complaints that were being made by some of his children in settlements of the different communities in which he was involved, he having had children by three different marriages.

The testimony is rather voluminous, and after all there is not much variance or contradiction to be found except on the direct point that the old gentleman either received the $800 which the defendant says he loaned him on the mortgage note or that he did not. To resolve the question one way or the other it is necessary therefore to consider a lot more or less relevant facts and circumstances. The district judge did that and ruled in favor of the plaintiffs. In fact, he seemed to have entertained no doubt that nearly all the circumstances raised so much suspicion against the defendant there was hardly any question but that the taking of this mortgage was a scheme on his part to try to defraud his co-heirs and obtain an undue advantage over them.

[1] Our reaction to the record is that the district judge was correct in the conclusion he reached but we do not find it necessary to go as far as he did in accepting all of the circumstances he mentioned, as proof.

To us, the suspicious part about the transaction arises out of the question why would this old gentleman have borrowed $800 at the time, and mortgaged his property as security. The testimony is overwhelming that he owed nobody anything, that he had all of his needs and wants at home, that he had settled with all of his children, giving them all that was coming to them and, in some cases, favoring some beyond what was due them, so there was no reason shown why he should have wanted to borrow anything at all, much less the sum of $800. The question of the son's ability to have loaned him the $800 does not enter into the solution of the problem. His ability to loan the money is not disputed, but after all it has nothing to do with the case. It is doubtful whether he was called upon to say what the old gentleman did or wanted to do with the money. He undertook in his answer to say that he believed it was to make settlements with his children but unfortunately for him that is totally disproved. If, on the other hand, the burden was on the children to show that their father never did receive the money claimed to have been loaned it is our opinion that the various facts and circumstances found in the record show that he did not.

On the very day that he is supposed to have borrowed the $800 the father is shown to have had a balance of $1,600 in his checking account in the Bank of Terrebonne Trust Company, at Houma, for which he seemed to have no pressing needs at the time. The bank statement shows positively that he did not deposit anything on the day that the mortgage was executed and there is no proof to show that at that time he placed this money in safety either in the safe which he had at his home, or in any other place, or that he gave or disposed of any of it in any other manner. He was at the time well advanced in age, was sickly and required the services of a physician regularly. One of his daughters and her husband who lived with him seemed to have taken good care of him, shared the household expenses and proof was made that they lived on a cash basis. The doctor who attended him testified that he paid him in cash regularly and that he knew him to be a man who hated to have any debts pending.

It is rather significant that on the same day this act of mortgage was executed the old gentleman also executed a will before the same notary in which the defendant was appointed executor of his estate. The will makes no other disposition of his property than what the law would have made and apparently it was drawn for the single purpose of having this appointment in favor of the defendant. The will and *Page 193 a copy of the act of mortgage were placed for safekeeping in the old gentleman's bank box at the bank in Houma and it appears a bit singular that despite the fact that he had this daughter living with him and handling all of his business affairs, having general power to even sign his checks, and being the only one besides him who knew the combination of the safe he kept at his home, he never told her, or anyone else, a word about having executed that act of mortgage or of having made a will. It is rather significant also that the defendant himself would not have mentioned it to some of his brothers and sisters especially at the time of his father's death. He even let some of them open the succession before informing them that his father had made a will in which he had been appointed executor of the estate. That, to say the least, was rather strange conduct on his part, and with other circumstances already noted helped to cast a serious doubt on the validity of the whole transaction.

It is observed that neither the notary before whom the act of mortgage was executed nor either of the witnesses to the same testified in the case. It may be that they knew nothing more than the fact that the act had been executed. But when we come to consider the defendant's own testimony in one instance at least, that he gave his father the money at the time the act was passed, it is likely that one of these three persons would have seen that and been in a position to say that something like that had taken place even though in another instance the defendant claims that the money was inclosed in a large envelope when it was handed to his father.

The most striking thing about the whole case, however, is the fact that this old gentleman seemed to have had absolutely no reason in the world to borrow this money and, least of all, to place a mortgage on his property, a thing which he appeared to have been proud of never having had to do.

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Related

Succession of Boyd v. Adams
275 So. 2d 441 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
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91 So. 2d 8 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 191, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berthelote-v-berthelote-lactapp-1945.