Le Blanc v. Le Blanc

80 So. 2d 715
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1955
DocketNo. 4014
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 715 (Le Blanc v. Le Blanc) 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
Le Blanc v. Le Blanc, 80 So. 2d 715 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinions

TATE, Judge.

This appeal by Mrs. Alvin A. LeBlanc is from judgment ordering partition of certain property, insofar as said judgment: ’(a) included as property partitioned a cheeking account in the amount of $1,028.15, alleged by. appellant to be her separate property; (b) allowed an intervention by a third party debtor and reduced the indebtedness due by him to the community of the deceased Alvin A. LeBlanc; and-(c) refused-to allow judgment for, or to tax against the mass, certain supplementary succession expenses incurred by--appellant on behalf of both co-owners.

Mrs. Alvin A. (Anna) LeBlanc is the widow of Alvin A. LeBlanc. Since no children were born of this marriage, decedent’s only surviving parent (Mrs. Desire LeBlanc, defendant) is his forced heir in the proportion of one-fourth of the total community left by decedent, Article 915, LSA-Civil Code. Afte'r Alviti LeBlanc died September 8, 1952, plaintiff' and defendant were sent into possession- by judgment of the community property reflected by inventory in said proceedings, and immediately thereafter by cash sale the. widow purchased the mother’s one-fourth interest in the property so shown.

According to uncontradicted testimony - in -these present partition proceedings, the-property herein soug-ht to be partitioned (13 head of cattle, a 1946 Pontiac automobile, and an outboard motor boat) was by mutual agreement omitted from the succession inventory and judgment of possession, since for certain sentimental and practibal reasons it was felt that the surviving wife should receive the; entire interest therein. Subsequently, however, certain ■ disagreements arising, the defendant-mother (assisted- most actively by her "other son, J. Carrol ■ LeBlanc) filed -suit to secure recognition of her one-fourth interest in this' omitted property.

Plaintiff-wife acquiesced in this demand and filed the present suit seeking partition' by licitation of this property and also of’ certain credits owing the former Alvin LeBlanc community by the aforesaid J. Carrol LeBlanc in the total sum of $302.82. Defendant-mother answered, requesting also recognition of her one-fourth interest [718]*718in a checking ac’c'ount in the amount of $1,028.15 which had been in plaintiff’s name.

J. Carrol LeBlanc intervened, requesting that the amount of his indebtedness be reduced to $102.82.

Judgment was rendered ordering partition by licitation of the property sought to be partition, and further ordering pai-tition' in kind of the bank account, and reducing the balance of the account owed by J. Carrol LeBlanc to $102.82.

We have been favored, neither by written or oral reasons of the court, nor by brief of defendant or of intervener.

1. 'Intervention and amount of account of J. Carrol LeBlanc

Plaintiff-widow excepted to J. Carrol LeBlanc’s intervention, which prayed for reduction in the indebtedness owed by him to the former community of Alvin A. LeBlanc, which debt was included in the property sought to be partitioned herein.

There is considerable merit to plaintiff’s contention that the intervention should have been dismissed upon his exception, since an ordinary creditor cannot ordinarily intervene in a suit for partition. Moreau v. Moreau, 25 La.Ann. 214. The intervention herein is not related to the main demand, which is not whether the account is due and-owing or in what amount; the issues in a partition suit being solely whether the parties are co-owners, and in what propor-. tions, and whether the property is divisible, in kind or not, Mitcham v. Mitcham, 186 La. 641, 173 So. 132; Faure v. Faure, 117 La. 204, 41 So. 494; City of Baltimore v. City of New Orleans, 45 La.Ann. 526, 12 So. 878.

But the District Court permitted the intervention and admitted evidence concerning it. ■ Since the intervener submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court, and since determination of the actual amount owing by him will be beneficial to the parties to the suit in that purchasers at the partition auction sale will bid on a known and uncontested amount of liability, we will not dismiss this intervention in view of the evidence having been admitted and trial had thereon, and in view of the liberal policy of admitting interventions to avoid multiplicity of actions announced in State ex rel. Pope v. Bunkie Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Inc., 222 La. 603, 63 So.2d 13.

On July 11th, 1952, Alvin A. LeBlanc bought for the account of J. Carrol LeBlanc certain furniture in total amount of $302.82. On June 14, 1952, J. Carrol LeBlanc had furnished his check to Alvin A. LeBlanc in the amount of $100, which J. Carrol Le-Blanc admitted to be down payment (or security therefor) upon the furniture, which he admitted receiving. J. Carrol LeBlanc also admitted that the check was never cashed and that he had made no. further payments for the furniture.

Despite this uncontradicted testimony and' admission, the District Court inexplicably allowed this uncashed “hold” check as a credit upon the, admitted additional balance due of $202.82, thus reducing the indebtédness of J. Carrol LeBlanc owing to Alvin A. LeBlanc’s community to $102.82! This action was clearly erroneous, and the judgment should be amended to include in the property to be partitioned at auction the total indebtedness owing by J. Carrol Le-Blanc in the amount of $302.82.

2. Account maintained in the Assumption Bank & Trust Company

At date o.f decedent’s death, his surviving wife had a checking account' maintained in her name (“Mrs. Anna Le-Blanc”) and subject to withdrawal solely upon her signature, in the amount of $1,028.15. The testimony is further uncon-tradicted that this checking account contains the unexpended proceeds of a salary received by plaintiff as postmistress commencing in 1947. The deceased husband had been postmaster until this date, when, he-had relinquished the post, to which his wife was appointed immediately thereafter. The postoffice was and had been situated in the [719]*719country general store owned and operated by decedent, Alvin A. LeBlanc.

The District Court sustained objections to any testimony by plaintiff, and also testimony tendered through other witnesses called for this purpose by plaintiff, to the effect that the salary of plaintiff wife as postmistress was (although a community asset) donated to her by the decedent husband during his lifetime.

The objection was based upon the assumption that parol evidence is inadmissible to prove the donation of an incorporeal right, which must be donated by authentic act, Article 1536, LSA-C.C., and also on the ruling of the court that a husband cannot donate to a wife any future salary payments before the compensation is due and paid.

The learned District Court overlooked Article 1539, LSA-C.C., providing that the manual gift of corporeal movable effects, accompanied by a real delivery, is subject to no formality. Thus .where the husband donated $100 per month to his wife, which she received and kept separate, such funds and the property purchased therefrom were held to be the wife’s separate property in Succession of Byrnes, 206 La. 1026, 20 So.2d 301. The proceeds of checks payable to the wife, but endorsed by her and delivered to her husband, with the intention to make a gift, were held to be the husband’s separate property in Succession of Desina, 123 La. 468, 49 So. 23.

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-blanc-v-le-blanc-lactapp-1955.