Bordelon v. Brown

84 So. 2d 867
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1956
Docket8398
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 84 So. 2d 867 (Bordelon v. Brown) 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
Bordelon v. Brown, 84 So. 2d 867 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

84 So.2d 867 (1956)

Felix Edwin BORDELON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Edna BROWN, et al., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 8398.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 9, 1956.

*868 Earl Edwards, Marksville, for appellant.

Maxwell J. Bordelon, Marksville, for appellee.

GLADNEY, Judge.

This action was instituted by Felix Edwin Bordelon on January 26, 1955, to be decreed the lawful owner of and entitled to the possession of a joint savings account deposit created by plaintiff and Edna Brown in the Moreauville State Bank. Made defendant besides Edna Brown was the bank which answered by admitting the deposit and paying into the registry of the court the sum of $1,000 plus accrued interest of $12.50, or a total of $1,012.50, under authority of the concursus statute, LSA-R.S. 13:4811 et seq. With the payment of said amount, the defendant bank was relieved of further responsibility and is no longer an active litigant in the case.

Edna Brown filed an answer in which she set forth the circumstances which brought about the joint deposit and asserted that as a consequence of the death of Felix Edwin Bordelon she was entitled to be decreed the owner and receive possession of the money in the bank under the contract which existed between her and Felix Edwin Bordelon.

Shortly after filing the suit plaintiff died intestate and his children have been substituted as plaintiffs.

After trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of Edna Brown and plaintiffs have appealed.

The salient facts as related by Edna Brown are not seriously disputed. The transaction which gives rise to this litigation arose from a business relationship between Felix Edwin Bordelon and Edna Brown during November of 1952, at which time Edna Brown was engaged as a housekeeper and care-taker in the home of Bordelon, an elderly invalid. Her duties required her to also take care of two other invalid adults. As remuneration for these services Edna Brown received a salary of $60 per month until November 17, 1953, when the salary was reduced to $40 per month and at that time the aforementioned sum of $1,000 was deposited in the bank. The employment continued on the reduced monthly salary until December of 1954, at which time Edna Brown became ill and her sickness required hospitalization which temporarily prevented her from performing her customary duties at the Bordelon home. There is no evidence to indicate that prior to the institution of this suit that either Bordelon or Mrs. Brown intended to dissolve the business relationship. The existence of the deposit was evidenced by a bank book, the possession of which, according to the terms of the deposit, was necessary to accomplish withdrawal thereof. The deposit was made subject to the following endorsement which was written in the bank book by the hand of Louis B. Coco, assistant cashier of the bank, upon the joint direction of Felix Edwin Bordelon and Edna Brown:

"Must be signed by both parties. In case of death survival has complete amount."

In the assigned reasons for judgment the District Judge concluded that Edna Brown was entitled to the deposit on either of two grounds: (1) that the deposit constituted a remunerative donation and as such was not subject to formalities otherwise required of donations inter vivos; and (2) that Edna Brown had a proprietary interest in the deposit by reason of the agreement with Bordelon that the reduction of her salary would be supplemented by the deposit jointly executed by them on November 17, 1953, should Bordelon die first.

Appellant contends the District Court erred in not applying the principles pronounced in Vercher v. Roy, 1930, 171 La. 524, 131 So. 658, and Northcott v. Livingood, La.App.1942, 10 So.2d 401, in which *869 decisions it was held that an attempted donation inter vivos of a credit in a bank could only be legally recognized when evidenced by an act passed before the notary and two witnesses as prescribed by the LSA-Civil Code Article 1536. It is argued further that since such formality was not complied with the attempted gift of the deposit never became perfect and consequently Edna Brown has no right thereto. On the other hand, appellees earnestly assert the transaction creating the deposit was in the nature of a remunerative donation, and, therefore, not subject to the rules peculiar to donations inter vivos.

Any transaction which involves the gratuitous acquisition or disposition of property must be made in the forms established by the provisions of the LSA-Civil Code relating to donation inter vivos, and mortis causa. A donation inter vivos is therein defined as an act by which the donor divests himself presently and irrevocably of the thing given in favor of the donee who accepts it. The donation mortis causa is an act by which a donor disposes of property designed to take effect when he shall no longer exist and which is revocable. LSA-Civil Code arts. 1467, 1468 and 1469. It is clear from the tenor of the notation in the bank book upon which Edna Brown's rights depend, that the said agreement cannot be classified as a donation mortis causa for it complies with none of the formalities required for the validity of a testament.

We will, therefore, more particularly inquire as to whether Edna Brown's rights are dependent upon formalities required with respect to certain donations inter vivos. The following LSA-Civil Code articles are pertinent to the inquiry:

No. 1523:
"There are three kinds of donations inter vivos:
"The donation purely gratuitous, or that which is made without condition and merely from liberality;
"The onerous donation, or that which is burdened with charges imposed on the donee;
"The remunerative donation, or that the object of which is to recompense for services rendered."
No. 1525:
"The remunerative donation is not a real donation, if the value of the services to be recompensed thereby being appreciated in money, should be little inferior to that of the gift."
No. 1526:
"In consequence, the rules peculiar to donations inter vivos do not apply to onerous and remunerative donations, except when the value of the object given exceeds by one-half that of the charges or of the services."
No. 1536:
"An act shall be passed before a notary public and two witnesses of every donation inter vivos of immovable property or incorporeal things, such as rents, credits, rights or actions, under the penalty of nullity."
No. 1538:
"A donation inter vivos, even of movable effects, will not be valid, unless an act be passed of the same, as is before prescribed.
"Such an act ought to contain a detailed estimate of the effects given."
No. 1539:
"The manual gift, that is, the giving of corporeal movable effects, accompanied by a real delivery, is not subject to any formality."

The Code declares by way of definition that corporeal things are such as are made manifest to the senses, which we may touch or take, which have a body, whether animate or inanimate, and incorporeal things are such as are not manifest to the senses, and which are conceived only by the understanding. Things are also classified as being movable by the disposition of law such as obligations and actions. All things corporeal and incorporeal, other *870

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 So. 2d 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bordelon-v-brown-lactapp-1956.