Hearsey v. Craig

53 So. 17, 126 La. 824, 1910 La. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 23, 1910
DocketNo. 18,054
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 53 So. 17 (Hearsey v. Craig) 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
Hearsey v. Craig, 53 So. 17, 126 La. 824, 1910 La. LEXIS 736 (La. 1910).

Opinion

[825]*825Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Plaintiffs are grandchildren of Mrs. Evalina Gamper, who died in April, 1909, and they seek to annul an act of conveyance made by her to defendant on November 26, 1907, which reads, in part, as follows:

“Said Mrs. Evalina Gamper declared to me, notary, and witnesses, that the said Mrs. Edna S. Craig is her niece, and that during her continued and painful illness the said Edna S. Craig has devoted her entire time in nursing and caring for declarant, and for that purpose has abandoned a lucrative position, her only means of support, and she further declared that in consideration of the devoted services thus rendered to her by the said Mrs. Edna S. Craig, and in further consideration of the undertaking by Mrs. Craig, as hereinafter set out, she does hereby give to the said Mrs. Edna S. Craig, in part consideration for her devoted services, past, present and to be rendered, the following described property [describing a piece of real estate, No. 749 Dryades street, New Orleans, .worth about $1,500]. And, in addition to the said property, she hereby pays to her the sum of $1,755.59, now on deposit with Mr. Harry H. Hall of this city, authorizing him hereby to transfer and deliver the said sum tc the said Mrs. Edna S. Craig; and the said Mrs. Edna S. Craig, on her part, hereby declares that she obligates herself to devote her entire time and services to said Mrs. Evalina Gamper so long as she shall live, and to defray from said sum, or, if necessary, the above-described property, all the expenses of her illness and support, and to provide for such expense as may be rendered necessary by her death.”

The grounds of attack are: (1) That there is no estimation of the value of the services or real estate; (2) that the act conveys all the property j)ossessed by the donor, or transferrer, leaving her without means of support; (3) that the donation or transfer was not the voluntary act of the donor or transferrer; (4) that the defendant rendered no services to the decedent, or that the services were of Insignificant value. The prayer of the petition is that the act in question be annulled; that the petitioners be decreed the owners, in the proportion of one-third each, of the money and real estate purported to be therein conveyed; that they have judgment against the defendant for the rental of the real estate, at the rate of $25 per month during the time that she has retained possession of the same; and that Harry H. Hall be served with a copy of the petition, “in order that he may retain in his hands whatever balance of the said sum of cash he may now have.” The answer admits the execution of the act of conveyance sought to be annulled, and avers that decedent paid defendant the sum of $1,755.59 on deposit with Mr. Hall—

“and thereby authorized him to transfer and deliver the same to your respondent; that, while Mr. Hall was so authorized, respondent instructed him to retain said sum and to use the same for the purpose of supporting and caring for the said Mrs. Gamper during her life, and discharging her funeral expenses after her death, and that said sum has been solely and exclusively employed for those purposes, and for no other purposes; and that at the time of the death of the said Mrs. Gamper there remained of the said sum * * * only a balance of $601.84, the difference having been expended as above stated, and for taxes and other incidental and necessary expenses * * *; that the real estate * * * was likewise held by her, subject to the support and maintenance of the said Mrs. Gamper, who not only occupied a portion of the said house, but received the entire rental from the remainder thereof as long as she lived; and respondent says that she did not cause to be registered in the conveyance office the said contract, * * * until after the death of the said Mrs. E. Gamper.”

Further answering, respondent says:

“That on the 11th of January, 1905, the said Mrs. Gamper, by last will and testament, in nuncupative form, before Charles G. Rebentisch, notary public, donated to the respondent the said property known as 749 Dryades street.”

The answer then recites the services alleged to have been rendered 'by respondent to the decedent and the sacrifice thereby entailed, alleges that the property and money conveyed by the contract in question would but moderately compensate the same, and prays that plaintiffs’ demand be rejected.

It is shown beyond dispute that Mrs. Gam-per was an intelligent woman, of determined will, and no attenrpt has been made to support, by proof, the allegation of the petition that the transfer here attacked was other [827]*827than her voluntary act, or that she was mentally incapable of mating it. It appears that she was first married to a Mr. Hearsey, and that the three plaintiffs, Sidney, George, and Clement Hearsey, are the sole living descendants from that marriage and the sole, forced heirs of the decedent. Clement Hear-sey is married, and he and his wife keep house to themselves. Thg other two, with their mother, Mrs. Columbia Hearsey (widow of Mrs. Gamper’s deceased son), live together, as another household. The defendant is a niece, being a daughter of Mrs. Gamper’s deceased sister. After the death of her first husband, the decedent had married a Mr. Gamper, and, for some years, they lived together in this city as people in comfortable circumstances. A good many years ago, however, Gamper went to California, and his wife removed to the house No. 749 Dryades street, which appears to have belonged to him and to have been devised to her at his death (in, say, 1904), and which is described as a, “ramshackle old shanty,” and a “tumble-down old rattletrap,” dilapidated in the extreme, and situated in a dingy and undesirable neighborhood; a place where Mrs. Clement Hearsey objected to visiting; in which defendant was ashamed to have it known that she was staying; and from which all parties were ashamed that decedent should be buried. The decedent occupied the upper front room, from the walls of which the plaster had partly fallen, and rented the lower part of the house to a family at a rental of $15 per month. She kept no servant, but waited on herself, save for occasional services rendered by the wife of her tenant. If we understand the testimony correctly, she received remittances of $20 per month from her husband, which, added to the $15 per month rental, gave her a total income of $35 per month. For a number of years before her death (at which time she was about S4 years old) she suffered from some stomach or heart troubles, or perhaps both, which at times threatened to result fatally, and on such occasions her relatives and connections were summoned, and Mrs. Columbia Hearsey and defendant would spend the night with her; and they visited her at other times, and Mrs. Hearsey now and then sent her things to eat which she had cooked for her. Upon the occasion of one of the attacks, whilst calling- at Mrs. Iiearsey’s house, and perhaps on other occasions, that lady invited her to make her home there, though we do not understand that she was invited to come as a guest, since she was understood to be possessed of some means and Mrs. Hearsey had none, and her unmarried sons do not appear to have been engaged in any remunerative employment. Mr. and Mrs. Clement Hearsey rarely visited the decedent, save when summoned as stated above, and saw but little of her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 So. 17, 126 La. 824, 1910 La. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hearsey-v-craig-la-1910.