Cameron v. Rowland

23 So. 2d 283, 208 La. 663
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 29, 1945
DocketNo. 37729
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 So. 2d 283 (Cameron v. Rowland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron v. Rowland, 23 So. 2d 283, 208 La. 663 (La. 1945).

Opinion

HIGGINS. Tustice.

The widow in community of the decedent appealed from the judgment of the district court, holding that the plaintiff was the legitimate daughter of the deceased by his first wife and is entitled, as his sole forced heir, to inherit his one-half interest in the community of acquets and gains which existed between him and his second wife. The case primarily involves issues of fact. We have carefully reviewed the record and it is our conclusion that the learned trial judge has clearly stated the issues, properly analyzed the evidence and correctly applied the law, and, therefore, we quote the pertinent part of his opinion with approval :

“James H. Rowland, an honored and respected citizen of the City of Shreveport, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, since 1907, died intestate on June 12, 1941. From 1900 to 1907 he resided in Memphis, Tennessee, where on January 22, 1902, he married the defendant, Mrs. Louise Tessier Rowland, who survives him. This marriage was without issue.
“Plaintiff, Mrs. Ferol Rowland Cameron, a resident of Pulaski County, Arkansas, brings this suit alleging that she is the only child of the deceased and sole heir to his estate, which is in the possession of defendant, who, without right, is claiming title thereto and ownership thereof and refuses to recognize petitioner as heir of her deceased father. Plaintiff prays for judgment recognizing her as only child and sole heir of the deceased and, as such, the owner, entitled to the possession of his estate and for an accounting from defendant.
“Plaintiff’s case is stated in Article II of her original petition reading:
“ ‘That the sai,d James Horace Rowland was twice 'married, his first wife being Laura Ellen Drummond, who died December 25, 1899, at Little Rock, Arkansas, and of which marriage your petitioner was the sole issue’,

and in Article III of her supplemental and amended petition, as follows:

“ ‘That in response to the order of this Court, petitioner now supplements and amends her petition so as to set forth such facts and information as is possessed by her at this time and avers:
‘(a) .That according to her understanding she was born on or about April 24, 1888, at St. Joseph, Missouri.
“ ‘(b) That petitioner does not know the date or place of the marriage of her mother, Laura Ellen Drummond, and her father, James Horace Rowland.
“‘(c) That her mother, Laura Ellen Drummond Rowland, died when petitioner was about eleven years of age, but that as far back as petitioner can recall, her mother and father were living together as husband and wife; that following her birth they lived together as man and wife for several years in the State of Missouri, moving therefrom to Little Rock, Arkansas, about the year 1892, where they lived together as husband and wife, until late in the month of December, 1899, when her mother died; that they always conducted themselves toward each other as husband and wife, and that your petitioner lived with them as their child, bore their name, and was treated and acknowledged, and maintained by them, and each of them, as their child, and was taught by them, and each of them, that Laura Ellen Rowland, born Drum-mond, was her mother, and James Horace Rowland, was her father.
“ ‘(d) That her father, the said James Horace Rowland, always referred to and spoke of the said Laura Ellen Drummond, as his wife, and the said Laura Ellen Drum-mond, always referred to and spoke of the said James Horace Rowland, as her husband, and they were received into society where they lived as husband and wife and were treated by friends and relatives as having that status, and the members of the immediate families of each of them visited them in the home they maintained as husband and wife, and they in turn as man and wife visited and were received in the homes of the members of the immediate families of each of them.
“ ‘(e) That upon the death of her mother, Laura Ellen Drummond in December of 1899, her father, James Horace Rowland, buried her mother as his wife, placed a tombstone above her grave upon which he had inscribed, among other facts, that she was the wife of James Horace Rowland, and, thereafter during his remaining lifetime, he looked after and cared for said grave and its upkeep.
“ ‘(f) That her father, James Horace Rowland, following the death of her mother, reared, maintained, and educated your petitioner as his child and the offspring of himself and Laura Ellen Drum-mond Rowland, and in speaking of Laura [285]*285Ellen Drummond Rowland, over the years between her death in December of 1899, and his death in 1941, referred to Laura Ellen Drummond in terms of affection as his wife, and your petitioner as the issue of his marriage to her; and your petitioner was always given to understand by her said father, James Horace Rowland, that she was his child, the issue of his marriage to Laura Ellen Drummond, petitioner’s mother; and at no time during his lifetime did the said James Horace Rowland by word, act or deed, give petitioner to understand otherwise.
‘(g) That the love and care showered upon your petitioner by each of her said parents during their lifetime; the high repute in which each was held by all who knew them; the good moral character each enjoyed; and the facts recited in Subdivisions (c) to (f), inclusive, hereof, except the number of years petitioner’s parents lived in Missouri, following petitioner’s birth, and the approximate date they moved to Little Rock, Arkansas, are circumstances of which petitioner has knowledge; however, petitioner avers that she has been informed by relatives that the said Laura Ellen Drummond, petitioner’s mother, left Jamesport, Missouri, where she resided, sometime between the Fall of 1885 and the Summer of 1887, to join and marry the said James Horace Rowland, petitioner’s father, who was then traveling from place to place in Missouri and in Iowa, and nearby states, soliciting orders, among other activities, for the enlargement of photos; that petitioner has no information as to the date and place they were married, but has been informed by relatives that they were living together as man and wife when petitioner was born and for more than a year prior thereto, and that this relationship continued under the circumstances, as set out in Subdivisions (c) to (e) inclusive, of this Article, until the death of the mother of petitioner.’
“The defense is set forth in paragraph (b) of Article 2 of defendant’s answer, reading:
“ ‘Defendant denies that James Horace Rowland was the father of plaintiff or was married to plaintiff’s mother, Laura Drum-mond.’
“On these issues the case went to trial. The record is voluminous. To undertake to discuss the evidence separately and in detail would extend this opinion to unwarranted length. We shall, therefore, endeavor to set forth, as briefly as we may, our findings of fact and our conclusions under the law we think applicable.
“Decision of this case, as we view it, depends upon determination of the following questions: (1) Were James H. Rowland and Laura Ellen Drummond ever lawfully married? (2) Was James H. Rowland plaintiff’s father? (3) Is plaintiff the heir of James H. Rowland?

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 2d 283, 208 La. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-rowland-la-1945.