Jones v. James

125 So. 761, 12 La. App. 224, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 363
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1930
DocketNo. 3611
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 125 So. 761 (Jones v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. James, 125 So. 761, 12 La. App. 224, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 363 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Archie and Malinda Fields, two aged colored persons, were man and wife and owned a tract of land in Rapides Parish which belonged to the community which existed between them. Archie died leaving neither father, mother nor descendants, and without having disposed by last will and testament of his share in the community property. His undisposed of share in the community was therefore inherited by his surviving spouse, Malinda. Civil Code, art. 915.

Malinda died a short time thereafter, leaving neither ascendants nor nor did she leave a last will. A short time prior- to her death, there was executed in Malinda Fields’ name a purported deed conveying her real estate to these defend[225]*225ants, Amos James and his wife, Julia, who went into possession of the property under the deed and were in possession of it at the time this suit was filed.

The plaintiff, Walter Jones, Sr., alleging that he was a brother and sole heir of Malinda Fields, brought this suit to set ■aside the purported transfer from Malinda Fields to the defendants, setting up that the same is null and void for reasons not necessary to mention here, and praying that it he set aside, and further praying for judgment “decreeing and adjudging your petitioner as the sole and only heir of the late Malinda Fields and further decreeing and adjudging your petitioner to be the owner of the property described in Paragraph Four of this petition.”

Defendants in limine filed an exception of no cause and no right of action grounded upon the proposition that as plaintiff claimed the property as a collateral heir of Malinda Fields, it was necessary for him to allege, in order to set out a cause and right of .action, that .he had been judicially recognized as heir of the deceased, which was not done. This exception was overruled. Defendants, reserving their rights under the exception, filed answer specifically denying that plaintiff was a legitimate brother of the deceased and setting up that he had inherited and could inherit nothing from her, not being a lawful heir.

The district judge held that the purported transfer by Malinda Fields to these defendants was null and void and of no effect. He further held and ordered “that plaintiff, Walter Jones, Sr., be recognized an heir (not the sole heir as alleged) of the late Malinda Fields and decreed the owner of the following described property in the proportion odue him as an heir of the late Malinda Fields, and that the heirs at law of the late Malinda Fields be decreed the owners of the following described property and entitled to the possession of same.”

OPINION

We have not found it necessary to pass on the ruling of the lower court overruling defendants’ exception of no cause and no right of action, as we prefer to rest our decision on the merits.

Plaintiff alleged that he was an heir of the deceased and had inherited her succession. The burden was upon him to prove that. This, he failed to do and the judgment recognizing him as such or as “an heir” of deceased, must be reversed.

Plaintiff is a colored man and was born a slave. His father, Robert Jones, and his mother, Mary Argrove, both slaves, were married during slavery with the consent of their master, the marriage ceremony being celebrated by a minister of the gospel. This marriage produced no civil effect until and unless ratified by the parties by continued cohabitation after their emancipation or by acknowledgment, as required by the Act of 1868.

Johnson vs. Raphael, 117 La. 967, 42 So. 470;

Succession of Walker, 121 La. 865, 46 So. 890;

Succession of Blackburn, 154 La. 618, 98 So. 43.

While there is no testimony showing that Robert Jones and Mary Argrove ratified their slave marriage by living together after their emancipation, it seems to be conceded that they did; at any rate, counsel for both plaintiff and defendants refer to Walter Jones, plaintiff, as a legitimate child and we shall so consider him.

[226]*226Plaintiff claims to be a brother and an heir of Malinda Fields. He testified, however, that he was only a half brother. Aside from plaintiff’s bare statement that he was a half brother of the deceased, the only testimony in the record showing any blood relationship between plaintiff and the deceased, Malinda Fields, was given by Mr. Jefferson Wells, a white man, 95 years old, whose father owned both plaintiff and deceased. Mr. Wells testified that his father owned Robert Jones and Mary Argrove and that plaintiff was born on his father’s plantation and that he had known plaintiff all of his life. He testified further that he had known the deceased, Malinda Fields,, all of her life; that she was also born a slave on his father’s plantation and that “the whole plantation called her ‘Malinda Jones’ and looked upon her as Robert’s daughter.” The “Robert” referred to was Robert Jones, plaintiff’s father. Mr. Wells explained, however, that Malinda was not born of the marriage between Robert Jones and Mary Argrove, but of a union between Robert Jones and a woman named Maria Clark. Robert Jones and Maria Clark, he said, lived together on his father’s plantation with his father’s consent and, while he did not specifically say so, he evidently meant to convey the impression that the deceased, Malinda, was the child of Robert Jones and Maria Clark. He testified that Robert Jones lived with this woman, Maria Clark, before he married Mary Argrove and that they separated “and he married Mary (Argrove) who was my nurse, and she had four children— there was Matilda, Christine, born on Christmas, Dan and this boy (plaintiff) was the last one.” Conceding, therefore, that plaintiff and deceased were the children of a common father, Robert Jones, and it being shown that they had a different mother, plaintiff has proved that he was a half brother of deceased, as he testified. Having made this showing, counsel contend that plaintiff’s right of inheritance has been established. They are in error.

Malinda Fields, the deceased, was born of a union not sanctioned as a slave marriage even by slave custom. Her father and mother lived together, it is true, with the consent of their master, but there was no marriage between them, according to slave custom — they simply “took up together,” and Mr. Wells says that was a common practice among slaves. But deceased’s father left her mother and married another woman, plaintiff’s mother. The deceased was therefore an illegitimate child of plaintiff’s father and was never acknowledged by him. She was, therefore, a bastard. Civil Code, art. 202. So this question is presented: Did plaintiff inherit from his bastard half sister? The answer is, no.

Article 912 of the Civil Code, found under the heading, Of the Succession of Collaterals, provides that:

“If a person dies, leaving no descendants nor father nor mother, his brothers and sisters, or their descendants, inherit the whole succession to the exclusion of the ascendants and other collaterals.”

But this has reference to lawful brothers and sisters, lawful collaterals.

“Illegitimate children generally speaking, belong to no family, and have no relations; accordingly they are not submitted to the paternal authority, even when they have been legally acknowledged.”

Civil Code, art. 238.

In the case of Montegut vs. Bacas, Executor, 42 La. Ann. 158, 7 So. 449, 450, it was held that ‘‘an illegitimate child has no relations in a legal sense in the ascending or collateral line,” and further, that “in Art. 917, Rev.

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Related

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85 So. 2d 528 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1956)
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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 761, 12 La. App. 224, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-james-lactapp-1930.