Estate of Littell

23 So. 314, 50 La. Ann. 299, 1898 La. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 24, 1898
DocketNo. 12,665
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 So. 314 (Estate of Littell) 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
Estate of Littell, 23 So. 314, 50 La. Ann. 299, 1898 La. LEXIS 445 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Mrs. Eleanor A. Littell died in 1895, well advanced in years and leaving a considerable estate. There were no forced heirs. She left a last will and testament, olographic in form, which was duly admitted to probate. Dr. T. T. Tarlton and Dr. R. M. Littell were named as executors and qualified as such. Her property was bequeathed in the main to her nieces and their children. There were some other legacies.

The executors filed what was called a partial account and classification of debts and projet of distribution to legatees and heirs.

Oppositions were filed by various parties, and from judgments thereon this appeal is prosecuted.

Opposition ok Dr. R. M. Littell.

This opposition is founded upon a claim for professional services rendered to the deceased during the last three years of her life. The amount of the claim is three thousand four hundred and eighty dollars.

For several years prior to her death the deceased was suffering from a chronic ailment. She needed the almost constant care of a physician. Near her lived Dr. T. T. Tarlton. Some twelve miles distant lived Dr. R. M. Littell, the opponent. Both were practising physicians and brothers-in-law. Each had married a niece of the deceased, and opponent was also a relative by blood. The families [301]*301of both were on terms of the closest intimacy with the deceased. Indeed, they were looked upon by her as members of her family, and they so regarded themselves. She named the two physicians as her joint executors, and the members of their families were the chief beneficiaries of her bounty.

During her long period of illness and suffering it was natural that she should rely upon these two physicians, her nephews by marriage and members of her family, for professional attention. Both attended her, rendering about the same degree of care and service. They came at her request — were sent for. Oftentimes they came without being set for. Their wives were there, too, as was to be expected, nursing and ministering to their old and infirm relative. Sometimes the families of one or the other of these physicians would remain for weeks at a times in the house of the deceased.

Neither of the physicians at any time during the lifetime of the deceased made any charge for professional services rendered her, though these services extended through the long period of three years.

It is shown the deceased was particular and exact in the matter of paying her debts, had abundant means to meet her obligations and did not want bills to remain outstanding against her.

After her death Dr. Littell came forward with the claim herein declared on. Dr. Tarlton makes no claim.

It is not disputed that Dr. Littell’s services were valuable, his visits frequent and often protracted. He was not Seldom called at night. Once he accompanied her to New Orleans to consult a physician there, and it is claimed that his general practice suffered in consequence of the time taken up by his attendance upon the deceased.

It is not pretended there was any agreement between the opponent and the deceased in reference to compensation to be paid him. The suit is upon a quantum meruit. He charges for eighty-seven days’ attendance at forty dollars per day, including mileage.

The claim is resisted on the ground that its presentation against the succession is an afterthought; that it was not considered by opponent a debt due him prior to the death of Mrs. Millard; that he never intended to make a specific charge against her; that she never understood he would do so; that the service was rendered as one of her family; that he and his family were beneficiaries of her bounty, [302]*302and that he had relied upon her generosity for recompense and had been fully recompensed.

The testimony establishes to our satisfaction this contention of the defence.

We are convinced that the opponent did not render his professional services under contract, either express or implied, and depended entirely on the beneficence of his patient and relative for remuneration. Asked on cross-examination whether or not he had ever notified the deceased or intimated to her that he intended to charge for his services, he replied “no,” and added that she had told him she would compensate him for what he would do for her. She did not state in what manner she proposed to compensate him, whether in her will or otherwise, whether to him directly or to members of his family, and he seems to have been perfectly satisfied to leave the compensation, and the manner of it, he was to receive to her.

That she did compensate him is shown by the evidence. Shortly before her death she made a donation of five thousand dollars in money to him or to his wife. The amount was either handed directly to opponent himself, or collected by him. He says this was a donation to his wife. Whether to him or her, it was a manual gift delivered into his hands and a remunerative donation. C. C. 1523, 1525, 1539.

He and his family received other benefactions from her. She paid part of the tuition of his children; his family lived for a while at her house, she became security for a large sum for him, signing the notes with him; and she had previously given to his wife two thousand dollars with which to buy a house and lot.

The donations to opponent’s wife, became, under our law, paraphernal in character, it is true, but the husband in this case has the administration and benefit of the same, and, besides, we are satisfied that the five thousand dollars given twenty days before Mrs. Millard’s death was the kind of compensation she had reference to when she told him she would compensate him, and that he at that time expected.

Under the circumstances developed by the evidence in this ease, unlike those of Danenhauer vs. Succession of Brown, 48 An. 341, the Succession of McNamara, 48 An. 46, and other eases cited in behalf of opponent, we do not think he is entitled to recover.

[303]*303The ease is controlled by the principle announced in Jacob vs. Ursuline Nuns, 2 M. 269, and Tilghman vs. Lewis, 8 La. 108. See also Keever on Quasi Oontracts, p. 315 et seq.

Opposition oe Dr. Vincent Boagni.

This opponent claims to be a creditor in the sum of two thousand dollars and interest, as the holder of two notes executed in solido by R. M. Littell and the deceased, which he alleges he acquired in good faith before maturity for a valuable consideration.

The executors declined to recognize the claim for the reason that so far as the deceased was concerned she had signed the notes merely as security for Dr. Littell; that opponent was well aware of this when he accepted it; that at the time he acquired the notes he had received along with them as collateral security certain assignments and transfers of the salary to become due to Dr. Littell as coroner and parish physician of the parish of St. Landry for the years 1894 and 1895; that he knew Dr. Littell had executed these assignment8 of his salary for the purpose of securing payment of the notes; that opponent collected the salary transfers in full, amounting to two thousand one hundred dollars, and instead of applying the proceeds to the extinguishment of the notes, he had diverted the same by and through the connivance of Jos.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Muse v. Muse
33 So. 2d 128 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1947)
Farrar v. Johnson
133 So. 352 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)
Succession of Brand
111 So. 267 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1927)
Succession of Palmer
68 So. 405 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 So. 314, 50 La. Ann. 299, 1898 La. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-littell-la-1898.