In Re Rupp

132 So. 405, 171 La. 866, 1931 La. LEXIS 1601
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 30924.
StatusPublished

This text of 132 So. 405 (In Re Rupp) 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 Rupp, 132 So. 405, 171 La. 866, 1931 La. LEXIS 1601 (La. 1931).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

' Charles J. Rupp is the son of Annie Charlotte Kneipp by a former marriage. He was married twice. His first wife died in Texas in 1927. By this marriage there was born the minor, Constance Jane Rupp, concerning whom this litigation arose. After the death of his first wife, Rupp moved to Baton Rouge, in this state, with his child, where he served in the capacity of an employee of the Standard Oil Company. In the year following his first wife’s death he married his present wife. After this marriage, the Standard Oil Company sent Rupp to Sumatra, intending that he should remain there for two years. While Rupp was in Sumatra, his child lived in Baton Rouge with Mrs. Kneipp. On February 4, 1930, while Rupp was far distant in Sumatra, Mrs. Kneipp died, leaving a will by which she left a substantial interest in her estate to her grandchild, Constance Jane Rupp, but by which she left nothing to her son, Charles J. Rupp. Acting under instructions received from her husband, the second Mrs. Rupp, applied to be appointed dative tutrix of her stepchild. H. Leonard Allen, a maternal uncle of the child, who resided in Texas, applied to be appointed legal tutor of the child, alleging that the child’s father would be absent from the state for a period of two years. The father of the child intervened in these proceedings, asking that his wife be appointed dative tutrix, and, in the alternative, that he be appointed natural tutor. The court disregarded, it is said, this intervention on proof that no one had authority to file it for the father, whO' ‘was absent in Sumatra. The trial of these proceedings resulted in the appointment of the child’s maternal uncle, H. Leonard Allen, legal tutor of the minor, though whether any judgment, based on these proceedings, was signed, does not appear. A motion for a new trial was filed, which was eventually overruled. No appeal has been taken from the appointment made.

On the day following the overruling of the motion for a new trial, the father of the minor, having made arrangements with the Standard Oil Company to leave Sumatra, appeared in Baton Rouge, and filed an application for appointment as natural tutor of his child, and ruled Allen and Mrs. Rupp, as applicants for the appointment as legal tutor and dative tutrix, respectively, of the minor, to show cause why he should not be appointed natural tutor. About the same time the father of the minor filed a proceeding to reduce the bequests made by Mrs. Kneipp in her will to the disposable portion, on the ground that, as the child of Mrs. Kneipp, he was entitled to his legitime. The minor was maíe a party defendant to this proceeding through a tutor ad hoc.

Allen appeared and filed an answer to Rupp’s demand to be confirmed natural tutor of his child, opposing the confirmation on three grounds, one of which possesses no merit,- and has been abandoned. The remaining two are, first, that Rupp is incapacitated to act as tutor of his child on the ground that he is a party to a lawsuit, on the result of which *869 the condition of the minor or part of her fortune may depend, he having attached the legacy made by Mrs. Kneipp to the minor, as being in excess of the disposable portion; and, secondly, on the ground that, as head of the community existing between him and Mrs. Rupp, he is indebted to the minor in the sum of $40, for money withdrawn from the savings account of the minor, on February 12, 1930, by Mrs. Rupp, which sum was not used for the benefit of the minor, and has not been repaid.

The second objection urged by Allen to the appointment of Rupp may be disposed of on the facts of the case. The record leaves the question in grave doubt as to whether Rupp is indebted to his child in any sum whatever, It is true that Mrs. Rupp drew $40 from the minor’s savings account, and did this with the sanction of her husband. However, the record leaves it uncertain whether the $40 was anything more than money which belonged to Rupp, and was placed by him in the minor’s savings account. In fact, the record strongly suggests that it was such money. Hence it does not appear that the indebtedness urged exists.

However, the first ground of opposition to the appointment of Rupp presents a serious question. His suit against the minor, to reduce the bequests made, was still pending when this suit was tried. Touching the question, presented by this ground, articles 302, 303, 304, and 305, of the Civil Code, appearing under the title, “Of the Incapacity for, the Exclusion from, and Deprivation of the Tutorship,” must be considered. Article 302 reads:

“The following persons can not be tutors, to-wit:

“1. Minors, except the father and mother;

“2. Women, except the mother and grandmother ;

“3. Idiots and lunatics;

“4. Those whose infirmities prevent them from managing their own affairs;

“5. Those whom the penal law declares incapable of holding a civil office;

“6. Those who are themselves, or whose father or mother are parties to a law suit, on the result of which the condition of the minor, or part of his fortune, may depend;

“7. Those who are debtors to the minor, unless they discharge the debt, prior to their appointment.”

Article 303 relates to the exclusion and removal of tutors, and reads:

“The following persons are excluded from the tutorship, and are even liable to be removed from it, if in the actual exercise of it:

“1. Persons of a conduct notoriously bad;

'“2. Those whose management shall manifest either incapacity or dishonesty.

“3. Those who shall have neglected to cause an inventory to be made of the minor’s property within the time prescribed by law.”

Article 304 relates to the causes of removal from the tutorship, and reads:

“The following persons are liable to be removed from the tutorship:

“1. The tutor who becomes insolvent after his appointment;

“2. The tutor who fails to have the bonds, the purchase of which is authorized by article 34S, certified, countersigned and registered in the manner required by law;

“3. The tutor who neglects to cause to be inscribed, in the manner required by law, the evidence of the minor’s legal mortgage against his tutor.”

Article 305 relates to the father’s exclusion or removal from the tutorship, and reads;

*871 “No cause of exclusion or removal is applicable to the father, except the following:

“1. Unfaithfulness of his administration;

“2. Notoriously bad conduct;

“3. Abandonment of his children and failure to support and maintain them for more than one year.”

Articles 302 and 303 were in the Code of 1808, and also in the Code of 1825, though the Code of 1808, had two additional grounds of incapacity, and the Code of 1825 one, in the articles therein corresponding to article 302 of the present Code, while, in the Code of 180S, in the article corresponding to article 303 of the present Code, only two grounds for exclusion or removal are provided, the third ground of article 303 being omitted, and to the first ground, relating to notoriously bad conduct, is added depraved morals.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 405, 171 La. 866, 1931 La. LEXIS 1601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rupp-la-1931.