Eskridge v. Farrar

34 La. 709
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 8216
StatusPublished

This text of 34 La. 709 (Eskridge v. Farrar) 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
Eskridge v. Farrar, 34 La. 709 (La. 1882).

Opinions

[714]*714The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Todd, J.

These consolidated suits were instituted in the District Court of the Parish of Tensas, against the defendants, as universal legatees of John Perkins, Sr., deceased, to recover certain special legacies, devised in tire last will and testament of said deceased, to the plaintiffs in the two cases, respectively.

The clauses in saidlast will, relating to these legacies, are as follows :

“XIII. I do hereby give and bequeath to my relatives, Elizabeth Scott Eskridge and Mrs. Anna Buck, wife of Capt. J. H. Buck, the sum of $5,000 each, and also to Miss Mary E. Ogden and to Mrs. Eliza Ogden, and to Miss Julia Ogden, daughters of Judge A. N. Ogden, of New Orleans, I give and bequeath to each of them the sum of $5,000 ; these $5,000 each, to be paid when practicable.”
“XIV. I do hereby order, and it is my will, that the indebtedness of Miss Elizabeth Scott Eskridge and Benj. B. Eskridge, to Mrs. Murdock’and Mrs. Ellen M. Perkins, say the amount of $10,000 principal, together with the interest accrued thereon, be bequeathed out of the proceeds of the rental of the Somerset Estate, and if it cannot be immediately liquidated, by reason of funds not having accrued, then it is my desire and will that the mortgage or lien be transferred from the property of the said Eskridges, and be a charge on my Somerset Estate, to be paid in preference to others, as soon as practicable.”
“ XVIII. I ■ give, devise and bequeath to my grandchildren, the children of my deceased son, William Perkins, and his wife, Ellen M. Perkins, all that body of land situated partly in the Parish of Madison and partly in the Parish of .Tensas, known as the ‘ Somerset Estate,’ (except, the ‘Hapaka Place,’ hereinbefore bequeathed and devised to Mrs. Evelyn Perkins and Miss Evelyn Bailey), being the same lands estimated with the Hapaka Place at 17,500 acres, more or less, and before the change of the parish lines situated partly in both of said parishes, and which property I made over by act of donation, on the 17th day of April, 1857j to my son, John Perkins, Jr., and which reverted to me, and I have sued for the recovery of, on the ground of the non-fulfilment by him of the conditions of the donation — there being a large amount of arrearages due and unpaid of the annuities which were stipulated to be paid to me, as one of the conditions of said donation. And my said son, John Perkins, Jr., having received from me, in money and other property, and revenues derived from the Somerset Estate, more than the portion which, by the laws of Louisiana, he would have a right to claim as forced heir, I institute my said grandchildren my universal heirs and legatees of all my property, real and'personal, unappropriated by this will, subject to the legacies herein made, I confirm to my said grandchildren the donation to them of [715]*715Eighty Thousand dollars each, contained in the aforesaid act of donation, made by me to said John Perkins, Jr., and which has been accepted for them by their mother as their tutrix. But, as the property devised to them by this, my last will, will be more than sufficient in value, to meet their claims under said act of donation, and the payment of the special legacies herein provided for, and [as] I desire that the property itself should be kept by them as a better investment of their means than any other that could be made, I express to them my strong wish and desire that they should accept the provisions of this will in their favor and not seek to have the property sold at my death, but let their claims be merged in the property given to them by this will. And I desire that the property should be kept together by my executors for their benefit and for the payment of said legacies, and that no division should be made between my grandchildren as long as the law will permit; that it should be kept together and undivided for tire purposes aforesaid. And all the monied legacies specified in my will are to be paid out of funds and revenues accruing from the rents and revenues of the Louisiana property, at such times and periods as it can be done without requiring property to be sold, and after taxes past due and debts are paid, and without depriving my grandchildren of the funds they may require from the revenues for their necessary expenses and means of education. And all of said legacies are to be a charge on the Somerset Estate, and nothing charged on my residence, the Oaks, save and except doctors’ bills and funeral expenses; and charges imposed in the special devise of the Oaks.”

This last will is dated the 11th June, 1866, and the testator died in the latter part of November of the same year.

On the 7th of April, 1857, John Perkins, Sr., made a donation inter vivos, to his son, John Perkins, Jr., which embraced all the property mentioned and devised in his last will. In the act, the donor imposed on the donee certain charges, among which were an annuity of $15,000 in favor of himself, (the donor) and $240,000 to be paid on the death of the donor to the children of his son Wliliam Perkins, (then deceased), the defendants in these suits. This sum was stated in the act to be in satisfaction and discharge of their rights as forced heirs of one-fourth of the donor’s estate, and also of any claim under the will of their father, to a share in the community which had existed between the donor and his deceased wife.

On the 2d of December, 1865, this provision in favor of the defendants was accepted by their mother and tutrix.

In the same month, (December, 1865) John Perkins, Sr., brought suit against his son, John Perkins, Jr., to revoke the donation, on [716]*716account of the non-payment of tlie annuities, the latter being absent from the State, and represented in the suit by a curator ad hoc.

A judgment was rendered by the District Court a few days before the death of the donor, revoking the donation.

An appeal was taken from this judgment by the curator of the absent defendant, and his creditors, who had intervened in the suit, to the Supreme Court, and by this Court the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. After the remanding of the cause, the executors of thelastwill of John Perkins, Sr., added by amendmentto the causes of revocation of the donation, the non-payment of the $240,000, to the children of William Perkins. Shortly after this action of the executors, on the 9th of August, 1869, John Perkins, Jr., by an act of dation cn paiement transferred to the defendants all of the Somerset Estate described in the last will mentioned, except the I-Iapaka Plantation,’ which had been devised by the will to the wife and stepdaughter of John Perkins, Jr.

Tho transfer was made in discharge of the sum of $240,000 imposed on the donee in the act of donation from John Perkins, Sr., to John Perkins, Jr., referred to. The transfer was accepted by pne of the defendants, then of age, and by the mother and tutrix of the other two.

Subsequently, after the claims of the creditors of John Perkins had been compromised and assumed by tho defendants in these suits, the children of William Perkins, a second and final judgment was rendered .by the District Court, revoking the donation from John Perkins, Sr., to John Perkins, Jr.

On the death of John Perkins, Sr., all the property mentioned, both in the act of donation inter vivos,

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Bluebook (online)
34 La. 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eskridge-v-farrar-la-1882.