ESTATE OF LEVITZ v. Broadway
This text of 960 So. 2d 1235 (ESTATE OF LEVITZ v. Broadway) 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.
Opinion
The ESTATE OF Mary Jacqueline LEVITZ, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Joe E. BROADWAY and Don R. Broadway, Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1236 Mulhearn and Smith by Leroy Smith, Jr., Tallulah, for Appellant.
Hamilton & Hamilton by Orlando N. Hamilton, Jr., Oak Grove, for Appellees.
Before STEWART, GASKINS and LOLLEY, JJ.
STEWART, J.
At issue in this appeal is whether the evidence supports the trial court's finding of a remission of a debt by the obligee, Mary Jacqueline Levitz, prior to her death. Having reviewed the record, we find no manifest error in the trial court's judgment, and affirm.
FACTS
Background
On April 17, 1995, Joe E. Broadway and Don R. Broadway executed a promissory note in favor of their sister, Mary Jacqueline Levitz ("Jackie"), for the amount of $70,000 payable in one-hundred twenty equal monthly installments of $849.80, inclusive of principal and interest. The first payment was due May 1, 1997, and the last was due on April 1, 2007. The note also provided for semi-annual payments of accrued interest during the first two years until the regular monthly payments were to begin. The Broadway brothers used the money to purchase land in Arkansas and to build a cabin. The note provided *1237 that title to the property would be transferred to Jackie in the event the loan was not paid. No payments have ever been made on the note.
On November 18, 1995, Jackie disappeared from her home in Vicksburg, Mississippi, under circumstances indicative of foul play. She was eventually pronounced dead, and her estate was opened in Florida with the note listed as one of the assets. An ancillary succession was opened in West Carroll Parish where the Levitz estate represented by Tiki Levon Shivers, the co-ancillary administrator of the estate and sister of Jackie, Joe, and Don, filed suit against Joe and Don to collect the amount due on the note or obtain title to the Arkansas property.
In answer, Joe and Don pled as an affirmative defense the remission of the note by their sister, Jackie. They filed a motion for summary judgment supported by ten affidavits, their own and those of various family members, stating that Jackie had orally expressed the intention to forgive the debt and not require payment by her brothers. Jackie indicated to them that the property would be for the whole family to enjoy.
The estate opposed the motion for summary judgment with affidavits from Tiki and Mitchell Broadway, another Broadway sibling. Tiki's affidavit referred to a conversation she had with Jackie shortly before her disappearance. She recalled Jackie saying that she told Joe and Don not to worry now about paying the loan so that they could use the money to improve the cabin. Mitchell's affidavit related a conversation he had with Jackie in March or early April of 1995, during which she asked him to become a partner in buying the Arkansas land. Not wanting to be involved in financial dealings with his brother Don, he declined. According to Mitchell's affidavit, Jackie told him that hunting leases were to be sold to generate income to repay the loan. In another conversation in October 1995, she again told Mitchell that he should have gotten in on the deal, because the hunting club fees would bring in a lot of money.
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the Broadway brothers after determining that the affidavits offered by both sides were not contradictory and did not create an issue of material fact for trial. The trial court's summary judgment was reversed in Estate of Levitz v. Broadway, 37,246 (La.App.2d Cir.5/14/03), 847 So.2d 170, and the matter was remanded for further proceedings.
Trial Proceedings and Testimony
Upon remand, a bench trial was held. The trial court heard testimony from Joe, Don, and Tiki, as well as from Geraldine "Gerri" Brown, another Broadway sibling. The parties stipulated that the wives of Joe and Don, if called to the stand, would testify in the same manner as their husbands. The estate introduced the deposition of Mitchell, and Joe and Don introduced the depositions of three elderly aunts.
Joe testified that he drew up the note for the loan and brought it to Jackie's bank for safekeeping. He claimed she did not want them to sign a note. Joe related a visit by his sisters Jackie and Geraldine to his house during which he mentioned selling hunting leases on the property. Jackie indicated that she did not want to go forward with that plan. Instead, she told him that she was proud of what he and Don were doing with the property and that she had decided to forgive the debt.
Don testified that he signed the note presented to him by Joe and later learned from Joe that Jackie had forgiven the debt. When he and other family members were invited out to dinner in Vicksburg by Jackie, he took the opportunity to thank her for forgiving the debt. He testified *1238 that she told him they did not owe a penny.
Gerri recalled visiting family in Oak Grove with Jackie. She testified that while visiting Joe, he discussed selling the hunting leases to get money to repay Jackie. Jackie told him not to sell leases on the property and explained that she was forgiving the debt and that they did not have to worry about paying the money back. She told Joe to use the money to make the property a place the whole family could enjoy. Gerri then recalled visiting their three elderly aunts who had gotten together to see Jackie. During their conversation, Jackie told the aunts that she had forgiven the note. Gerri also testified that she was present at the family dinner gathering at Jackie's house in Vicksburg and overheard Jackie tell her brothers that they would not have to repay the money, that she wanted them to improve the property, and that she was looking forward to going there. Gerri stated that Jackie wanted the family to be able to enjoy the property.
Joe and Don introduced the depositions of their three elderly aunts that were taken for trial purposes. Effie Broadway Parker, Minnie Merle Thompson, and Tura Jean Broadway Lee Thompson all testified about the conversation during Jackie's and Gerri's visit with them. They all testified that Jackie said she was not making her brothers pay back the money she had loaned them. They recalled that Jackie wanted the family to be able to visit and enjoy the property as a place where they could all be together.
Tiki testified that she spoke to Jackie the night before she disappeared. During their conversation, Jackie mentioned the work being done on the Arkansas cabin by her brothers and how proud she was of them. Tiki recalled Jackie saying that she told her brothers to use the money to fix up the cabin and that they would worry about paying on the note later. Although Joe and Don had asked her to try to recall the conversation in Vicksburg during which Jackie forgave the loan, Tiki testified that she did not recall that conversation.
The estate introduced the trial deposition of Mitchell. He testified that Jackie had contacted him in the spring of 1995, about being a partner in a hunting camp venture in Arkansas. Because he did not want to have financial dealings with Don, he turned her down and warned her that Don would not pay her back. Jackie told him that she was neither naive nor stupid and that she would either be paid or would take the property. Mitchell did not recall whether this conversation occurred before or after she had loaned the money to Joe and Don.
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960 So. 2d 1235, 2007 WL 1760760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-levitz-v-broadway-lactapp-2007.