Corbello v. Corbello

132 So. 127, 171 La. 735, 1930 La. LEXIS 1989
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketNo. 30757.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 So. 127 (Corbello v. Corbello) 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
Corbello v. Corbello, 132 So. 127, 171 La. 735, 1930 La. LEXIS 1989 (La. 1930).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

Mrs. Erisse Corbello, who resided in the parish of Calcasieu, and was very old, senile, and poverty stricken, suddenly came into possession of valuable oil property in Orange county, Tex., in 1924. She was interdicted because of her senile dementia, in March, 1925, and the Calcasieu National Bank of Southwest Louisiana was appointed curator of the interdict. The bank rendered a provisional account of the curatorship every year, and 'these annual accounts were regularly verified and approved by the district judge, until the old lady died, on the 3d of February, 1930, when the bank rendered its final account. Thereupon this suit arose by way of opposition, on the part of the heirs of the deceased, to the approval of the bank’s accounts. The district court gave judgment approving the final account, except that the court ordered the bank to amend the account by giving the estate of the deceased credit for interest at 5 per cent, per annum on uninvested sums in excess of $500, which interest amounted to $72.-50. The heirs of the deceased have appealed from the decision; and the bank, answering the appeal, prays that the judgment be amended so as to relieve the bank of the charge of $72.50 interest, and that the account be approved as rendered.

The complaints of the appellants are, for the most part, merely general and very drastic accusations of extravagance and maladministration on the part of the trust officer of the bank, who attended personally to the affairs of the interdict. The evidence, on the contrary, shows that the services were rendered faithfully and with due regard for conserving the estate of the interdict.

The first specific complaint of the appellants is their allegation that the' provisional accounts rendered annually by the curator, as well as the final account, were not proven according to law, or contradictorily against the undercurator, and should be proven anew. In every instance a notice of the filing of the account was published according to law; the undercurator acknowledged that he had received due notice of the filing of every proviional account, and had examined the accounts and found them to be correct. He and the attorney appointed to represent the absent heirs, and the attorney then representing the present appellants, accepted Service of a copy of the final account, both before and after an amendment thereto was made at the request of the bank. Every judgment of approval of the accounts contained a recital that due notice of the filing of the account had been given, and that all of the requirements of the law had been observed. We do not find any omission or defect in the proceedings in that respedt.

The next complaint is the allegation that the expenditures made by the curator, without the advice of a family meeting, exceeded the revenues of the interdict, to the extent of $600 on the second provisional account, $2,595.-.61 on the third provisional account, and $1,-136.89 on the final account. The record, however, does not show that the expenditures for account of the interdict exceeded her revenues. When the bank was appointed curator it re *739 ceived $3,500 from the guardian in Texas, as the entire amount of capital belonging to the interdict. All'sums received thereafter were for royalties, which were paid monthly to the bank, and bonuses, which were paid at longer intervals, on the oil leases in' Orange county, Tex. The royalties and bonuses were treated as revenues, and there seems to be no complaint of their having been so regarded. Soon after the bank received the $3,500, the bank was authorized by the court to buy, and did buy, a home for the interdict, costing $2,-<500. That left only $1,000 of the original capital to be accounted for by the curator. At the termination of the curatorship, by the death of the interdict, she had a cash balance of $5,243.04 in hank, subject to charges; amounting to only $S28.70, or $4,414.34 net, besides the residence in Calcasieu parish, La., and the oil properties in Orange county, Tex. During 'the term of the curatorship, the bank was' authorized by the court to pay, and did pay, from time to time, small sums of money to some of the appellants, who were in indigent circumstances. Those disbursements amounted to $820, and are not complained of. The total sum of the royalties and bonuses received by the bank for account of the interdict was $24,388, and the total expenditures, including the cost of the home and the sums advanced to some of the appellants, amounted to $22,645.95, — or $1,742.05 less than the revenues.

The next complaint has reference to the home which was bought for the interdict and afterwards repaired at her -expense. It is charged that the property cost originally $1,-100 more than it was worth, and that the repairs cost $683.71 more than the curator was authorized to spend for repairing the property. The appellants ask that the curator be charged $4,800, as the cost of buying and repairing the property, or, in the alternative, that the curator be ordered to pay the $1,100 excess cost of the property and $683.71 excess cost of the repairs. The evidence does not sustain the allegation that the property was not worth what it cost originally — $2,500. It is true that there was no family meeting called to advise upon buying the home for the interdict, but that formality was dispensed with under the conditions prescribed by Act No. 110 of 1920, p. 159; and the law in that respect was complied with literally. It is true also that the curator asked for and obtained the authority of the judge to spend only $1,600 for repairing the property, and that the repairs, when completed, cost $2,283.71, or $683.-71 more than the amount authorized. In the total sum of $2,283.71 appearing on the account as the cost of repairing the property, However, are several items, amounting to $226.54, being $29 for surveying, $36.90 for digging a well, $49 for plowing and grading, and $111.64 for insurance premiums; which items do not belong in the list of repairs. The cost of the repairs, therefore, exceeded the amount authorized by only $437.17; and the reason for this excess is well 'explained by the testimony to the effect that, as the repairing progressed, it was found that the property was more in need of repairs than the curator estimated when he asked for authority to make the repairs. An itemized account of the actual cost of the repairs was submitted in the next annual or provisional account of the curator, was proven to be correct, and was approved by the decree of the court. We do not find any cause for complaint in that respect.

The next complaint in the lower court was that the curator had computed his commission of 10 per cent, upon the original capital, $3,-500, as well as upon the revenues received for account of the interdict. The curator conceded in the lower court that the complaint *741 was well founded, and promptly amended the account by giving the estate credit for $350 of the commission, before the opposition came to trial.

The next complaint is that the following items of expenditure were, as the appellants contend, unnecessary, unauthorized, and unlawful, viz.: $160 for .a secondhand Ford car; $150 for a cow; $60 paid in exchanging the cow for another cow; $78 for a sewing machine; and $54.20 for chickens. We do not find that there was extravagance in any of these expenditures.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 127, 171 La. 735, 1930 La. LEXIS 1989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbello-v-corbello-la-1930.