Gaines v. Lizardi

9 F. Cas. 1042, 9 Chi. Leg. News 305
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1877
DocketCase No. 5,175
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 1042 (Gaines v. Lizardi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaines v. Lizardi, 9 F. Cas. 1042, 9 Chi. Leg. News 305 (circtdla 1877).

Opinion

BILLINGS, District Judge.

The full argument of counsel, occupying seventeen entire days and an examination of the records, have satisfied me that the various decisions rendered by the supreme court of the United States have concluded me upon very many of the questions of law which have been pre. sented. I shall first consider the suit for the revocation of the probate of the will.

The supreme court of the United States in their opinion pronounced in this case (Gaines v. Fuentes, 92 U. S. 10), in order to determine whether it was removable from the state to the United States court, has defined its nature and has characterized it as follows: “The action cannot be treated as properly instituted for the revocation of the probate, but must be treated as brought against the devisee by strangers to the estate to annul the will, as a muniment of title and to restrain the enforcement of the decree by which its validity was established, so far as it affects their property.”

It is a suit which was instituted as an adjunct and means of defense to the numerous other suits for the recovery of real estate in which the complainant rested her title upon a will, the substantial allegation being that the will was admitted to probate upon false and insufficient testimony. It has now been cumulated with these other actions. It is therefore to be viewed and tried as if it were a pleading in these other actions, presenting the issue devisavit vel non. It presents the broad question, was there a will, unfettered by the restrictions of the Code relating to actions to annul the probate of wills? Before considering the cause upon the merits, I will dispose of the plea of prescription of five years. Civ. Code, art 3540 (3505), provides as follows: “That actions for the nullity or revision of contracts, testaments or other acts are prescribed by five years.”

I think this article refers to actions brought against parties who are in possession under a will, and that it has no application to a will invoked as here, by a party out of possession as a muniment of title against those in- possession not claiming under the same will, and that whenever by and against such parties a will is relied upon to establish a link in the chain of title it may be attacked. I think, therefore, the plea should be overruled.

The other exception, viz., that the plaintiffs (complainants'), Fuentes et al.. could not maintain their actions, as strangers to the estate of Daniel Clark, is disposed of by the fact that in the supplemental petition they claimed to have derived title from Rolf and Chew, executors, or as attorneys in fact of Myra Clark, universal legatee, under the will of Daniel Clark, known as the “Will of 1811;” and by the further fact that the consideration ■of this case with the others renders the petition or bill of complaint in this action in effect a plea interposed in the others, which may be termed direct actions.

This brings me to the question: Was there, according to the evidence presented before me, a will? Has the will of 1813 been established before me as an instrument executed by Daniel Clark, and clothed with the requisite formalities of a last will and testament according to the laws of Louisiana? It is urged by the complainants, Fuentes and others: 1. That the proees verbal which entitles this will to be received as a probated will is wanting. 2. That the will as probated is not shown to have been dated, and thus does not, in that respect, comply with the requirements of the law in respect to olographic wills. 3. That the evidence disproves, or fails to prove, that such a will ever existed; and, 4. That if such a will was ever executed, since it was not found after the death of the testator, the presumption of law is, that it was destroyed by the testator animo cancellandi, and that this presumption has not been rebutted by the proofs.

1. As to the absence of the proees verbal. Articles 492, 493, Code Pr., give the textual provisions of the law as to what the proees verbal shall contain; but it is clear they cannot, with the exception of that provision which relates to the order for executing and recording the will, apply to wills, which, as in this case, are lost.

The reasoning of the supreme court of Louisiana, and their decree in which they order the recording and execution of this identical will without any such proees verbal, and when in the nature of things no such recital as is pointed out in the requirements of the Code of Practice before referred to could exist, is an authoritative decision upon the law of Louisiana on this point. Succession of Clark, 11 La. Ann. 123. Judge Lee, sitting as a probate judge, while finding the proofs sufficient to establish the will, decreed against its being admitted to probate on the ground that the proof was not, in manner and form, such as the statute required. There was, therefore, no probate of the will in the lower court, but on appeal the supreme court reversed the decree and ordered the will executed. What they did in that case is a practical construction of the law upon the point as to how a lost will may be probated, and of its admissibility when so probated.

The second objection: “That the will is not shown to have been dated.” Article 158S (1581), Civ. Code, declares “an olographic will shall be enirely written, dated and signed by the hand of the testator.” On this point of date the testimony adduced before me is precisely the same as that before the supreme court of Louisiana at the time the will was probated. They found it sufficient —that is — they must have found that the will was dated; that the.year, month and date were written by the testator.

[1044]*1044Again, the two witnesses who read the will were Mrs. Smythe and Mr. Bellechasse. Mrs. Smythe, at page 141, probate record, in answer to the twenty-sixth interrogatory, says: “The whole of this will was in Mr. Clark’s handwriting; it was dated and signed by Mr. Clark at the time I read it.” At page 143, in answer to the thirty-second interrogatory, she says: “It was dated in July, 1813.” Bellechasse. at page 162, probate record, says in answer to interrogatory twelve:

“The last will of Clark, to wit, the will of 1813, was legal in form because it was written wholly in his (Clark’s) handwriting, and was dated and signed by him.” These witnesses both testify that the will was dated, and one of them adds, “it was dated in July, 1813.” The fair meaning of their language is that it bore the year, month and day; and the meaning of the language of Mrs. Smythe, that it bore date on a particular day of July, Anno Domini 1813..

If a jury had found a special verdict that the will bore date on some day in July, 1813, though they did not specify what day, so long as being in July, left it the last will of Clark, would not a court be bound to give judgment that the will was dated ? And the testimony of these two witnesses, uncontra-dicted, is on this point equivalent to a special verdict. It is proven that the will bore date on some one of the days in July, 1813, and this is sufficient.

The third objection, that the evidence disproves, or fails to prove, that this will ever existed; and, fourth, that if it was ever executed, since it was not found after the death of the testator, the presumption of law is that it was destroyed by him for the purpose of canceling, and that this presumption has not been rebutted.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 1042, 9 Chi. Leg. News 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-lizardi-circtdla-1877.