De Ville v. Robertson

108 So. 2d 681, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 751
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1959
DocketNo. 4735
StatusPublished

This text of 108 So. 2d 681 (De Ville v. Robertson) 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
De Ville v. Robertson, 108 So. 2d 681, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 751 (La. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

ELLIS, Justice.

Plaintiff filed this petitory action in which she prays to be decreed the owner of an undivided %th interest in and to the following property:

“The North Fifty (SO) feet of Lot Six (6) of Block Seven (7) of the Amelia Cormier Subdivision in the City of Lake Charles, Louisiana, with improvements located thereon; One (1) Lot of household goods and furniture valued at approximately $1000.00,” as forced heir of her mother, Clementine Broussard Thibodeaux, born Healy (Hardin) (Hardy).

In order to present a cause of action plaintiff alleged that she was born on Jan. 6, 1893 of the marriage between Henri Broussard and Clementine Broussard, which was her mother’s first marriage; that her mother’s second marriage was with Joseph Thibodeaux and of this union two children were born, viz., Rita Robertson, born Thibodeaux and Lillie Petetan, born Thibodeaux, made defendants herein; that her mother departed this life intestate at her domicile in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, on or about April 14, 1942, and her mother never adopted any person; that her mother left real and personal property which is within the jurisdiction of the [683]*683■court, all of which belongs to the community of acquets and gains which existed between her mother and her mother’s second husband, Joe Thibodeaux; that by virtue of the foregoing facts plaintiff was the forced heir of her mother, Clementine Broussard Thibodeaux and as such is the owner of an undivided %th interest in and to the above described property.

The defendants denied the alleged marriage between Henri Broussard and Clementine Broussard upon the lack of sufficient information; denied that the plaintiff’s mother’s second marriage was with Joe Thibodeaux, but admitted that the defendants were the children of Joe Thibodeaux, denied that the plaintiff’s mother left any real or personal property in the jurisdiction of the court, and that the property belonged to any community of acquets and gains between the mother and her second husband, Joe Thibodeaux, but alleged or admitted that Joe Thibodeaux was the owner of the property in dispute. In fact, careful consideration of the defendants’ answer shows a denial of every material fact necessary to plaintiff’s cause of action.

The case was duly tried and the lower court with written reasons held that the burden of proof was on plaintiff to prove a valid marriage between her mother and Henri Broussard, her alleged father, and that she had failed to make this proof and, therefore, her cause of action must fail. Accordingly her rendered judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff rejecting her demands and dismissing her suit.

Counsel for plaintiff filed a motion for new trial on the ground that they had discovered since the trial of the case “A document in the records of the Parish of Lafayette, which is the authority to celebrate a marriage ceremony between Henri Brous-sard and Miss Clementine Hardin, which authority contains a certificate signed by E. J. Healy, a Catholic Priest, stating that he joined in the Holy bonds of matrimony Henri Broussard and Clementine Hardin.” Counsel further alleges that he used every effort and due diligence to procure the above evidence by the trial of this case. Upon the motion the lower court granted a new trial.

The defendants through their counsel, filed a written objection to the granting of a new trial and asked that it be revoked. They alleged in this objection that the suit was filed in August 1956 and more than 17 months elapsed from the date of the filing to the date of trial, and that the “newly discovered evidence” which was the basis of the motion for the new trial was a matter of public record in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana, and that plaintiff did not exercise due diligence in obtaining or attempting to obtain this newly discovered evidence which was available to plaintiff and which should have been obtained, particularly in view of the fact that it was a companion document to a document which was obtained and filed in the suit. The case was called for trial and counsel for the defendants renewed his objection for granting a new trial on the grounds set forth in the written objection, mainly that due diligence had not been exercised in obtaining the evidence for which the new trial had been granted. The court in effect overruled the objection and allowed the trial to proceed, whereupon, counsel for plaintiff produced as a witness an 88 year old man who had signed the priest’s return as a witness to the wedding of plaintiff’s mother and Henri Broussard, and in connection with his testimony offered the marriage certificate and the priest’s return as to his having married the parties.

The witness testified that he knew Clementine and Henri Broussard, was present at their marriage and that they had been separated for a long time but he gave no dates as to the separation nor as to the date of Henri Broussard’s death, in fact, testified that he did not know when he died. He also testified that he did not believe that plaintiff’s mother and Joe Thibodeaux, her alleged second husband, were ever married, “because Clementine never did divorce from Broussard.”

[684]*684After this second trial stated in its written reasons that “The court is now convinced that plaintiff is the legal daughter of Henri Broussard and Clementine Hardin (Hardy), and, accordingly, the written decree of March 3, 1958 is set aside and reversed and judgment is hereby rendered in favor of plaintiff, * * * ”, decreeing the plaintiff to be the legal child born of the marriage between Henri Broussard and Clementine Hardin and as such she was decreed to be the owner of an undivided %th interest in the property described in her petition.

Timely written motion for a Rehearing was filed by counsel for the defendants. In this motion counsel sets forth that the judgment was erroneous and should be revised for the following reasons:

“The opinion of March 27 is based on only part of the testimony of Wilson Woods, the witness for the Plaintiff. The record shows that Wilson Woods testified that there was never any marriage between Clementine Hardy and Joe Thibo-deaux, the parents of your defendants. Further, it was stipulated in the record that there is no evidence of any divorce between Clementine Hardy and Henri Brous-sard in the records of Lafayette Parish and testified to by a Deputy Clerk of Calcasieu Parish that no divorce had ever been rendered in Calcasieu Parish between these persons. Therefore, the second marriage as alleged by the Plaintiff, i. e., between Clementine Hardy and Joe Thibodeaux, was never shown to have been consummated and therefore no community was ever established between these parties. There being no community, then the mother of the Plaintiff never acquired any interest in the property, title to which is here litigated.

“There is no evidence in the record showing how or when Joe Thibodeaux acquired the property in which Plaintiff claims an interest. The only evidence which was introduced relative to the interest -of the Plaintiff’s mother in the property in the succession of Plaintiff’s mother, and Joe Thibodeaux, No. 5260 of the Probate Records of Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. Examination of this record shows that there is no evidence as to how the decedents or either of them acquired any interest in this property. Without such proof, the Plaintiff’s chain of title is incomplete.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 So. 2d 681, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-ville-v-robertson-lactapp-1959.