Heirs of Henderson v. Rost

7 La. Ann. 692
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 7 La. Ann. 692 (Heirs of Henderson v. Rost) 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
Heirs of Henderson v. Rost, 7 La. Ann. 692 (La. 1852).

Opinion

By the court: (Rost, J. declined sitting.)

Eüstis, C. J.

Stephen Henderson died in New Orleans, in March, 1838, leaving two wills, which were admitted to probate. The heirs at law of the estate were: 1st, Thomas and Jean Henderson, the only children of Patrick or Peter Henderson, deceased, the eldest brother of the testator. 2d. Ann Henderson, his sister. 3d. John Henderson, his brother. The interest of the heirs of Peter Henderson, 'Was extinguished by a compromise, dated on the 17th of April, 1839. They were not mentioned in'-the will. The interests of the other [693]*693two branches, who, under the will, would have been entitled to claim certain legacies, were settled by an agreement, allotting one fourth part of the succession to each of the following parties, viz : One-fourth to Ann Henderson, one-fourth part to John Henderson, one-fourth part to Stephen Henderson, Junior, and one-fourth part to George Henderson and Caroline Eugenie Henderson, wife of Whitman Willcox, who, as well as Stephen Hendersen, Jr., were the children of John Henderson, by his first marriage. Of these, all are now living, except John, who died, leaving, by a second marriage, John, George, Helen, and Jean Henderson, who are parties to this suit, by the trustees and executors of their father’s will.

A suit had boen instituted, by Thomas Henderson and Jean Henderson, the heirs of Peter Henderson, to set aside the provisions of the wills of the testator, which was terminated by the compromise before spoken of. The donations in favor of the general charitable institutions, were satisfied by transfers of property in the city, and the residue of the property of the succession was disposed of. The Forest plantation, and the slaves attached to it, were transferred to George and Caroline Engenie Henderson, wife of Whitman Willcox, and the Elm Park plantation and its slaves to Stephen Henderdon. The Destrehan plantation and its slaves were sold to P. A. Rost, and the undivided half of the Mount Houmas plantation was sold to the owner of the other half,. Henry Doyal. It is not necessary to note the various agreements of the parties, relating to this settlement, it is sufficient, for the present inquiries, to state, that the slaves and plantations were sold together, under an obligation of the parties acquiring them, to comply with the provisions of the will, in relation to the slaves, if the same should be adjudged to be valid, and to be carried into execution.

The wills of the testator are published in full, in the report of the case, in which the court determined certain testamentary dispositions to be invalid. 5 Ann. 458, et seq.

This appeal is taken by the plaintiffs, who are the heirs of the late Stephen Henderson, from a judgment of the Court of the Fourth District of New Orleans, by which their petition was dismissed, with costs.

The suit was instituted for the purpose of compelling the defendants, who are the executors of the testator, to account for, and to pay over to them, their several shares of the assets of the succession. The defendants insist on their right to retain certain funds, for the purpose of carrying into effect the testamentary dispositions of the testator, and ask such a decree from the court as will enable them to liquidate the succession under their charge.

The case was before the court in May term, 1850, and certain articles of the will were declared void and of no effect. It is reported in 5 Ann. 467. One of the questions upon which the opinion of the court was reserved, related to the liberation of the slaves of the testator; that, and the one relating to the legacy in favor of the poor of the town of Dunblane, in Perthshire, in Scotland, have been argued at bar. The judgment in the court below, seems to have been pro forma merely; the argument before us, has been very thorough, and well prepared.

The questions concerning the condition and liberation of the slaves having been reserved for consideration, it only remains for us to consider the validity of the legacy in favor of the poor of the town of Dunblane.

It is in these words: “ Two thousand dollars pey annum to be paid to the poor of the town of Dunblane, in Perthshire, North Britain. This sum to be [694]*694divided, by the resident minister of the Presbyterian church and the two highest civil officers in the town; to be paid upon due proof of their acceptance of the trust, say $2000. Two thousand dollars for the erection of a school house in the town of Dunblane, for ten years only, and for the purpose of educating the poor, this being the place of my birth.”

We have been favored with the depositions of two witnesses, in relation to this legacy, which, as matters of legal learning of the law of Scotland, we should be glad to give entire, but the length to which the opinions in this case have already been extended, prevents it. The witnesses, Allen Alexander Maconochie, Esq., member of the Faculty of Advocates and Professor of the Roman law in the University of Glasgow, and John Watkins, Esq., of Glasgow, one of the writers of her Majesty’s signet. The result of their testimony appears to be this:

The town of Dunblane is not an incorporated town; it has no corporative powers, privileges, or establishment, but is, and has been, since the passage of the jurisdiction act of George II., as it is called, a mere village in the Barony of Cranlix and Dunblane, and county of Perth, since which time the town, as part of the county of Perth, has been under the ordinary jurisdiction of the Queen’s courts. The hereditary office of Bailie, of the Regality of Dunblane, with the jurisdiction and powers anciently appertaining thereto, was abolished by the act of Parliament referred to, and there are no officers or persons who, in any legal or judicial sense, would answer the description of the two highest civil officers in the town of Dunblane. There is a resident minister, who resides in his manse, situated on the glebe, in or near that town, and who is minister of the parish of Dunblane, of which the town of Dunblane forms only a small portion.

In the interrogatories and answers, the terms used are, the two highest civil officers of the town of Dunblane. The word “ in ” is made use of in the will, instead of “of the town.” But we think the difference, in this respect, is merely verbal, and that the true meaning of the will is, “ officers of the town.” Under the circumstances, we can only consider it as applying to persons in the condition of magistrates, belonging to the town of Dunblane. Although there may happen to be justices of the peace, or one of the sheriff’s substitutes, residing within the town, yet they would no more answer the description than any other of the justices or sheriffs’ substitutes of the county of Perth.

These two learned gentlemen, whose opinions appear to have been prepared with great care and research, concur in stating that, in the courts of Scotland, the legacy in question would not be sustained, but would be held as lapsed, from uncertainty and the want of proper persons qualified to accept the same.

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7 La. Ann. 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heirs-of-henderson-v-rost-la-1852.