Oglesby v. Turner

50 So. 859, 124 La. 1084, 1909 La. LEXIS 593
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1909
DocketNo. 17,938
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 50 So. 859 (Oglesby v. Turner) 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
Oglesby v. Turner, 50 So. 859, 124 La. 1084, 1909 La. LEXIS 593 (La. 1909).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, J.

In plaintiff’s petition he alleged: That Mrs. Amanda Delmas, widow of John T. Delmas, departed this life at her home on Hope Plantation, near the town of Patterson, parish of St. Mary, state of Louisiana, on the 5th day of August, 1909, leaving a succession consisting of real and personal property, moneys in bank, etc., amounting to some $50,000. That by olographic will, perfect in form, and dated the 2d day of August, 1886, he is the universal legatee of the said Mrs. Amanda Delmas, deceased. That on or about the 9th day of August, 1909, there was presented to the honorable court for probate a pretended nuncupative will by public act by Miss Emmeline Turner, a resident of the city of New Orleans, state of Louisiana.

That under said pretended will the said Miss Emmeline M. Turner, after certain special bequests, is made the universal legatee of Mrs. Amanda Delmas, deceased. That the said pretended nuncupative will by public act is utterly, and upon its face, null and void, for failure to comply with the requirements and legal forms in the confection of such documents. That said will was never signed by the alleged testatrix, witnesses, or notary, who pretended to act in the construction of the same, but that the signatures only appear at the end of what the notary terms a codicil, and after the conclusion of the will proper and the turning aside of the' notary to this so-called codicil, and without the completion of the will proper.

That the will is absolutely void for other legal defects fatal to its maintenance, which will be pointed out upon the trial of this suit.

The premises considered, petitioner prayed for the citation of the various legatees named in said alleged will, and that the document filed for probate by the said Miss Emmeline Turner, and which pretends to be the last will and testament of the said Mrs. Amanda Del-mas, deceased, be declared illegal, invalid, and no will, and that the parties named as legatees thereunder be decreed to take nothing by virtue of the same, and as to all the property, real and personal, rights, credits, rents, income, moneys in bank, and other profits of petitioner, that in due course of law he be placed in possession of the same, and that there be a full accounting of all the property belonging to said succession. And petitioner prays for costs and general and equitable relief.

On September 1, 1909, several of the defendants appeared and prayed for oyer of the alleged olographic will. The court ordered plaintiff to produce the same. The defendants, on September 6, 1909, appeared and declared that they did so before pleading to the merits and solely for the purpose of filing the exception they then filed, excepting to plaintiff’s petition on the ground that the same disclosed no cause of action. They prayed that their exception be maintained and plaintiff’s suit be dismissed and rejected.

The minutes of September 16, 1909, contained the following entry:

“Exception of no causé of action, fixed for today, taken up, argued, and submitted. In this case it is agreed between counsel that ‘both wills be considered by the court as a part of this record in this exception and that’ counsel for either side shall have the right to have copies made of any other document in the record No. 3,340 (Probate) succession of Mrs. Amanda Del-mas, Deceased, and (have?) same filed in the present suit, and that the same shall form and constitute a part of this record.”

The minute entry, as found in the transcript, is mostly typewritten; but the words “both wills be, considered by the court as part of this record in this exception and that” are in writing.

[1087]*1087The reason assigned for this condition of the minutes is that the typewritten portion of the minutes was the original entry, but it was amended or corrected by order of the judge when read out.

In his certificate to the transcript the district court certifies that:

“It contains a true and correct abstract of the minute entries of said (this) case,” and “a true and correct copy of the last will and testament of Mrs. Amanda Delmas, deceased, as filed in her succession, No. 3,340 of the probate docket of said court, and of the last wiil and testament of said deceased as is in the possession of the plaintiff in said suit, both of which said wills having been copied by me, said clerk, and made a part of the transcript by consent of the attorneys therein.”

The present suit was filed in the district court under the number 12,518 of the docket of that court under the title “Joseph I-I. Oglesby v. Miss Emmeline M. Turner et al.”

The succession of Mrs. Amanda Delmas (widow of John T. Delmas) was opened in the district court of St. Mary under the (‘number 3,340” of the probate docket of that court, and was entitled “Succession of Mrs. Amanda Delmas, Deceased.” In the last-mentioned proceeding the alleged last will and testament in nuncupative form by public act of the deceased (that which is attacked in the present suit) was presented for probate, probated, and ordered executed. When the exception of no cause of action filed by the defendants herein was taken up for trial, the fact that the will which was attacked, while probated in the Court, had not been filed in the present proceeding, was noticed, and an attempt was made by the defendants to have the two causes consolidated; but plaintiff’s counsel objected, and the agreement between counsel, which is referred to in the minutes, was entered into.

The exception of no cause of action was then taken up and tried. The trial judge sustained the exception of no cause of action and dismissed plaintiff's suit. In doing so he took up the different grounds set up for the nullity of the will, discussed them separately, and declared .them not- to be well taken.

The plaintiff excepted to his doing so, and, as we understand, insists that he should have limited himself to declaring either that the exception of no cause of action was “overruled,” or “was sustained and the suit dismissed.” Plaintiff urges that he should not have taken up the different grounds for nullity, passed upon their merits, and announced that they had no legal merit. Plaintiff says that the case was before the court purely on an exception that it was not at issue, and that the trial court had no right or authority under that condition of affairs to pass upon the merits of the controversy.

Opinion.

In his brief plaintiff’s counsel uses the following language:

“On taking up the exception defendants’ counsel proposed to consolidate the proceedings in the succession of Mrs. Amanda Delmas with the action of nullity, and to this proposition plaintiff’s counsel in the action of nullity objected, upon the ground that the exception of no cause of action which was then on trial depended solely upon the allegations of the petition for its determination. Counsel for defendants then requested that for the purpose of having the Supreme Court inspect said will, in case it so desired, the nuncupative will be allowed to be attached to the transcript which would go to the Supreme Court. It was finally agreed between counsel that both wills and such other documents as counsel would agree upon should be transcribed from the succession record and attached to the transcript which would go up to the Supreme Court upon the action of nullity then pending on the exception of no cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 So. 859, 124 La. 1084, 1909 La. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oglesby-v-turner-la-1909.