In Re Andrus

60 So. 2d 899, 221 La. 996, 1952 La. LEXIS 1281
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 3, 1952
Docket40499
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 So. 2d 899 (In Re Andrus) 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
In Re Andrus, 60 So. 2d 899, 221 La. 996, 1952 La. LEXIS 1281 (La. 1952).

Opinions

LE BLANC, Justice.

On July 12, 1935, Flomer Andrus and his wife, Elvena Vidrine Andrus, appeared before a Notary Public in Opelousas where they each executed a nuncupative will by public act in which they disinherited two of their sons and bequeathed their property to their remaining four children.1 At the same time they jointly executed before the same Notary, two acts of donation inter vivos in the first of which they donated to their two sons, Lee and Ambroise Andrus, a 68 acre farm in Evangeline Parish, in return for the sons’ furnishing them a place •of habitation for the duration of their lives and also paying them the sum of $200 annually and in the other they donated a 100 acre farm near Chicot to their two daughters. This last act contains certain clauses which will later be referred to.

• Homer Andrus died on June 16, 1938 and •on October 13, 1938 his will was offered for probate in the district court of Evangeline Parish by the executors, named by him, Joseph Lee Andrus and Ambroise Andrus. The executors were confirmed and the will ordered registered and executed by the court and although an inventory had been asked for, none appears ever to have been taken.

Mrs. Elvena Vidrine Andrus died on June 16, 1940 but her will was never probated nor were any proceedings taken regarding her succession.

The present proceeding arose in this probate matter entitled “Estate of Homer Andrus” in the District Court of Evangeline Parish. It is presented on the petition of Willy Andrus and Mary Andrus. Willy Andrus is one of the disinherited sons and Mary Andrus is one of the children and heirs of Jean Baptiste Andrus, the other. Jean B. Andrus had four other children besides Mary, who later on all intervened and joined her and Willy Andrus in the demands they are making herein. They are Crowell Andrus, Odette Andrus, Lillian Andrus and Esther Andrus.

In their joint petition, Willy Andrus and Mary Andrus set out the foregoing facts in more detail and they allege as follows with regard to the will of Homer Andrus:

That they did not receive written notice of the probate of the will as required by law, although they resided in Evangeline Parish and therefore, they seek to have the order probating the same annulled and rescinded, and since the other heirs did not meet the requirement of the law that they prove the facts on which the disinherison contained in the will is founded, [1002]*1002the will itself, for that reason and for the further reason of want of testamentary capacity in the testator, is null and invalid.

With regard to the will of Elvena Andrus they allege that it was never offered for probate in Evangeline Parish where she lived all her life, and died, and that it also should be declared invalid for want of testamentary capacity or because of the insufficiency of cause of the disinherison clause which it contains. With regard to this they allege, in the alternative that even •though the disinherison clause respecting Willy and Jean B. Andrus should not be invalid that the provision insofar as it disinherited Jean B. Andrus can have no •effect against Mary Andrus and his other •children since Elvena Andrus died after he •did.

With respect to the property donated in ■the acts of donation they aver that the :same is subject to collation and should be returned to the succession and further they .allege, in the alternative, that these donations,' taken in conjunction with the testa■ments (if not invalid) amounted to a donation of an extra portion which they desire .and are entitled to have reduced so as not •to exceed the disposable portion of the ■ estates of their deceased parents.

They finally aver that they desire and are ■ entitled to an accounting of the disposition • of all the movable property left by the decedents and now in the possession of the ■.defendants.

In accordance with the allegations of the petition they pray for judgment sending them, together with the other descendants of the decedents, in possession of the property left by them in the proportions fixed by law; that the judgment of probate entered in the matter of the Estate of Homer Andrus on October 13, 1938, be annulled and vacated; that the last wills and testaments of both Homer Andrus and Elvena Andrus be declared null and invalid and that the portions donated by them in their lifetime be collated and returned to their successions according to law. In the alternative they pray that the donations inter vivos be reduced insofar as they exceed the disposable portion allowed by law. Finally they prayed for an accounting by the defendants of all the movables left by the decedents.

What this proceeding amounts to, as can readily be seen, is a contest between a disinherited child and the children of another, and the other children of the decedents who had been favored by their parents. The matter was presented to the district court on pleas of prescription and exceptions of no cause or right of action which were sustained by the trial judge. Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of the defendants rejecting the demand of the plaintiffs and dismissing their suit, whereupon this appeal was taken and perfected.

The case was submitted on the documents involved and a short note of testi[1004]*1004mony relating to the circumstances under which they were executed and also to show that there was no notice given plaintiff, Willy Andrus, of the probate of the will of Homer Andrus on October 13, 1938. On these questions there is no dispute and therefore the issues presented are strictly some of law.

As we are of the opinion that the attack made on the will of Homer Andrus can readily be disposed of we will consider the contentions of the plaintiffs in regard thereto first and then consider them, as well as the attack on the will of Elvena Andrus, separately. We might mention at this time however that some of the grounds on which both wills were attacked have been abandoned, particularly those relating to the want of testamentary capacity and undue influence.

The remaining grounds on which the Homer Andrus will is attacked and urged to be declared null and void is because it was probated without notice to the presumptive heirs as required by Article 935 of the Code of Practice and because the disinherison clause it contains makes it void.

Whilst it is true that the article of the Code of Practice prescribes that’ notice to the presumptive heirs who “reside in the place” shall be given them so “that they may attend, if they think proper, at the opening and proof of the will”, it is well established in the jurisprudence that a judgment of probate of the will is prima facie valid and cannot be annulled on the ground solely that it was rendered without the giving of such notice whether the heirs were present or absent. Succession of Price, 197 La. 579, 2 So.2d 29 and cases-therein cited. The attack on this ground cannot be supported. •

The attack based on the alleged' illegal disinherison clause in the will is also without merit because by the provisions of Article 1502 of the LSA-Civi! Code, “Any disposal of property, whether inter vivos or mortis causa, exceeding the quantum of which a person may legally dispose to the prejudice of the forced heirs,, is not null, but only reducible to that quantum.” The only action that is left to the forced heir who is prejudiced is one-for reduction of an excessive donation, and this action, as appears from Article 3542. of the LSA-Civil Code, is prescribed by five years.

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In Re Andrus
60 So. 2d 899 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 2d 899, 221 La. 996, 1952 La. LEXIS 1281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-andrus-la-1952.