Dickey v. Kidd

467 So. 2d 25, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8299
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1985
DocketNos. 83 CA 1456, 83 CA 1457
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 467 So. 2d 25 (Dickey v. Kidd) 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
Dickey v. Kidd, 467 So. 2d 25, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8299 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

SHORTESS, Judge.

This is a suit to have declared null contracts made between individual heirs and the man they retained to pursue their interests in two successions. Although the trial court did find that the contracts had been rescinded by the heirs, they appealed, unsatisfied with several particulars of the declaratory judgment. For us to discuss the trial court’s decree and the plaintiffs’ assignments of error, we must first explain the familial relationship of the heirs 1 and the tortuous legal background of the parties.

FACTS

William Cotten died in 1955, leaving (among other heirs) his wife Ruby and daughter Penelope. Ruby was later remarried to Raymond Dickey who in 1965 adopted Penelope. In 1970, Penelope married William Scott Humes; the couple had no children and on April 16, 1973, Penelope Cotten Dickey Humes died intestate. She was survived by William, her husband, and ascendents Ruby, Raymond Dickey and two sisters (both by virtue of their relation to Penelope’s adoptive father, Raymond Dickey), Janis Carpenter and Susan Cormier. (Hereinafter, Ruby, Raymond, Janis and Susan may be referred to simply as the “heirs.”)

Roland Kidd (father of Kim M. Kidd, a defendant herein) testified that he was first made aware of the Dickey family’s situation through a Mr. Champagne, an associate of Ruby’s second husband, Robert J. Boudreaux, Jr. Champagne told Kidd that “there was a possibility that she [Ruby] needed help” in claiming any property she might stand to receive through Penelope’s death. Kidd decided to “look into it” because he thought he could help her since he was an abstractor.2

After Kidd visited Ruby twice at her home in Galena Park, Texas, they met in Lake Charles and signed a “Recovery Contract” on May 14,1974, enlisting the services of Kim M. Kidd to research and pursue (with the aid of legal counsel) any property the heirs could recover through Penelope’s death.3 This contract was later voided to allow signing of an “Employment Contract” on June 17, 1974, the terms of which are substantially identical to those of the contracts now before us, except that the June 17 contract named the law firm Triche & Sternfels as the attorneys to handle all “legal services and litigation” in the matter.

During this time, Kidd and Robert G. Haik, attorney at law, had been involved in another business dealing, and Haik was aware of the Penelope Humes matter. Kidd testified that Triche did not return his phone calls, and when he finally contacted Triche on the matter, Triche told him that Haik had “confronted [Triche] to be co-counsel” and that he (Triche) would rather get out of it altogether. Kidd testified that he assented, and on December 3, 1973, he, his son Kim, and Robert Haik, met at the Kidd home and signed a letter agreement [27]*27for Haik to “continue research and whatever legal requirements are necessary” in placing “Mrs. Dickey” in possession of “certain Louisiana properties.” The letter stated that “acceptance of this letter will institute your employment,” and it was signed in the place provided for acceptance by Robert Haik. On December 5, 1974, Kidd dismissed Triche as his attorney in the matter.

Since the June 17 contracts between Kidd and the heirs specified the Triche & Sternfels firm as attorneys, new contracts (the subject of this suit) were signed by Ruby, Raymond, Janis and Susan on December 7, 1974, in Galena Park. On December 8, Kim Kidd signed the contracts in Louisiana, and the contracts were recorded in the St. Mary Parish conveyance records on March 12, 1975.4

These “Employment Contraet(s)” stated that Kim Kidd would perform a “search of public records” of Louisiana and Texas and prepare abstracts of title to determine the possibility of the heirs’ ownership of property from the estates of Penelope Humes and William Cotten. Kidd was also to “perform all necessary investigative and curative work, under the advice and direction of counsel”, and to “employ and engage legal counsel to prosecute any claim, demand, and cause of action, for the purpose of establishing heirship and inheritance.” The heirs reserved the right to engage additional counsel “to assist in the [presentation] of any claims in the aforementioned successions and the handling of any litigation, subject to approval” of Kidd. The parties specified that Kidd did not gain any “interest in any of the succession or property involved” through the contracts, but would receive “a contingent fee of fifty percent (50%) of any and all property ... recovered by [Kidd].”

On February 19, 1975, the heirs signed an “Agreement” with Haik to perform substantially the same services for them as Kidd was bound to perform under his “Employment Contract.” This agreement was recorded in St. Mary Parish on March 12, 1975 5, and on June 10, 1975, the heirs through Haik intervened in the Succession of William Mansfield Cotten. On September 24, 1976, they filed a “Petition for Nullity or Rescission of Contracts,” naming Kim M. Kidd as defendant. Kidd answered this petition, and on December 21, 1978, filed his own intervention in the Succession of Penelope Humes. The hearings on these two matters (the heirs’ petition for declaratory judgment and Kidd’s intervention) were consolidated by joint motion of the parties on April 6, 1983, and a hearing was held August 2, 1983. The judgment rendered after this hearing forms the subject of this appeal.

ISSUES BEFORE THE TRIAL COURT

The heirs’ petition alleges that they retained Haik as their attorney to “do all things necessary to protect and further their interests with respect to certain properties that the deceased Penelope Dickey Humes may have inherited prior to her death .... ” They further allege three attempts by Haik (on March 10, 1975, in person, and by certified mail on March 10 and April 3, 1975) to “meet with Kim Kidd” and “set aside the [Kidd] contracts.” The heirs allege various vices of consent and capacity regarding the Kidd contracts, and that they “have been null and void since their inception.” They pray for a judgment “decreeing the contracts null and void.”

Kim M. Kidd’s intervention denies the incapacities and lack of consent, and alleges his contracts to be valid and enforceable. Kidd maintains that the heirs-Haik contract was in contravention of his employment contract, and prays for judgment, inter [28]*28alia, declaring his contract with the heirs valid and enforceable and Haik's contract null and void.

The trial court consolidated the two cases and ordered that:

only the merits of RAYMOND L. DICKEY, ET AL, versus KIM M. KIDD, bearing Docket No. 52,377 together with all claims by KIM M. KIDD as petitioner in intervention against ROBERT G. HAIK as defendant in intervention as included in said KIM M. KIDD’s Petition for Intervention filed in the SUCCESSION OF PENELOPE DICKEY HUMES, No. 9658, shall be tried on said August 2, 1983 and the trial on the merits of the remaining claims of the SUCCESSION OF PENELOPE DICKEY HUMES, Probate Docket No. 9658, shall be continued without date and pending further ordered (sic) of the Court.

The trial court rendered judgment on August 23, 1983, in favor of “plaintiffs in Suit No. 52,377”6 and against Kim Kidd “cancelling and rescinding those contracts entered into between said plaintiffs and KIM M. KIDD ... subject to recovery in favor of KIM M.

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Related

Succession of Humes
467 So. 2d 25 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
467 So. 2d 25, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickey-v-kidd-lactapp-1985.