Perot v. Arnold

99 So. 2d 26, 234 La. 68, 1958 La. LEXIS 1082
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1958
DocketNo. 43280
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

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Bluebook
Perot v. Arnold, 99 So. 2d 26, 234 La. 68, 1958 La. LEXIS 1082 (La. 1958).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

The administratrix of the succession of Mrs. Maude Y. Tranum instituted this action to set aside certain purported donations inter vivos made by Mrs. Tranum to Calvin G. Arnold, a. nephew and the defendant herein. In her petition plaintiff alleged that the decedent was notoriously insane and incapable of managing her person and her affairs for approximately five years prior to her death which occurred on February 7, 19S5, and hence she lacked the capacity to make donations (particularly the ones in question) during that period.

The assailed purported gifts to defendant were the following: (1) January 4, [71]*711952, stock in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Natchitoches having a value of $2,000, (2) April 7, 1953, funds on deposit in the Continental-American Bank and Trust Company of Shreveport amounting to $5,648.79 and (3) June 15, 1953, eighty-two shares of the capital stock of Woodley Petroleum Company.

The district court, after trial of the merits, concluded that Mrs. Tranum was mentally incapable of managing her affairs on and after March 7, 1953; and, accordingly, it rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor annulling and setting aside the transfers of April 7, 1953 and June 15, 1953. But the court rejected plaintiff’s demand to set aside the donation of building and loan stock made on January 4, 1952.

Defendant appealed, and the plaintiff has filed an answer to the appeal in which she prays that this court annul also the building and loan stock transfer of January 4, 1952.

In the trial of this action appellee, as she concedes, was faced with a presumption of sanity on the part of the decedent; and, for overcoming it, she carried the burden of proving decedent’s alleged lack of capacity by strong, clear and convincing evidence. After carefully reading the testimony of the various witnesses and thoroughly considering the numerous documents introduced we agree with the trial judge that such burden has been discharged with respect to the purported donations of April 7, 1953 and June 15, 1953.

From the record it appears that Mrs. Tranum and her husband (they were childless) lived together in Shreveport for a number of years. After his death in 1939 she resided for some seven months in Campti, Natchitoches Parish, with Mrs. Myrtle Y. Perot (a sister and the plaintiff herein) and then returned to Shreveport, she living alone there in an apartment. On August 6, 1951, she suffered a collapse, due largely to malnutrition, and was hospitalized. Five or six days later she was removed to Campti where she made her home with Mrs. May Arnold, another sister and the mother of this defendant. It was while she was so living with Mrs. Arnold that the purported donations herein attacked were made. Subsequently, during July of 1954, and while still residing with Mrs. Arnold, Mrs. Tranum again became quite ill; and on October 14, 1954, by a judgment of the Natchitoches Parish District Court, she was interdicted. She died February 7, 1955.

To establish the decedent’s alleged incompetence^the plaintiff introduced the testimony of Dr. J. N. Brown, of Campti, who had attended and treated Mrs. Tranum from March 7, 1953, until her death. A part of it we quote as follows:

[73]*73“Q. You recall seeing Mrs. Tranum then on March 7th, 1953? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You saw her on (and) after that, you say, on through 1954? A. I saw her, yes, I saw her in ’54 and some in ’55.
“Q. Up until the time just before she died — not too long before she died? A. Yes, I saw her the day she died. I saw her several times.
“Q. Now, at the time you saw her in March of 1953 what was her mental condition at that time? A. Oh, she was mentally off. She didn’t seem to know anything. She didn’t seem to respond to any questions. She didn’t seem to know anything especially. Her mind was not clear.
“Q. Would you say that at that time she was incapable of handling any business affairs ? A. Oh, I would say so, yes. I would say she was.
“Q. It would have been totally impossible for her to handle any business? A. I would say so, yes, sir.
“Q. In other words, she was really in bad shape mentally? A. Yes, she was in bad shape mentally and. physically.
* * * * * *
“Q. Well, then from March 7th, 1953 on until the day of her death— you say you saw her at the date of her death? .A. Yes, sir.
“Q. I mean, during all of that period was she mentally incompetent to handle her business affairs? A. I think so, yes.
* * * * % *
“Q. Doctor, as I understand your testimony in 1953 you saw Mrs Tranum at intervals and you saw her in 1954 at intervals and you saw her up until the date of her death and you saw her on the date of her death in January of 1955? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. I want to ask you if she was mentally off on every occasion that you saw her? A. Mentally off everytime that I saw her, yes, sir.”

This testimony is largely corroborated by that of Dr. A. A. Herold, of Shreveport, who had treated Mrs. Tranum during her illness in 1951 and who was called to see her in 1954. He said that in 1951 she had high blood pressure, suffered from some cerebral arteriosclerosis, and' showed signs of mental incapacity. As to her condition when he last saw Mrs. Tranum he testified:

“Q. You were called in when she was admitted to the Physicians and Surgeons Hospital on July 31, 1954, is that right, Doctor? A. Yes. She was admitted to Dr. Rougon’s service. Knowing that' I had seen her before, he called me over there to see her again.
[75]*75"Q. What was her mental condition in 1954, in July? A. It had deteriorated a good deal by that time. She wasn’t clear on anything we asked her.
“Q. In other words, her mentality was entirely gone, you might say, in 1954? A. More or less, yes, sir. More or less.
“Q. Now, in 1954, I might ask you, at that time was she capable of handling her business affairs or managing her person, even? A. I am sure that she was not.
“Q. I believe you so certified in her interdiction suit, did you not, Doctor? A. Yes.”

Further corroboration of Dr. Brown’s testimony is found in that of Dr. Edith W. Rigsby, a specialist in mental disorders who treated Mrs. Tranum in July and August, 1954 and who said that Mrs. Tranum was at that time suffering from the last stages of cerebral arteriosclerosis and cerebral anemia — a condition that results in actual organic deterioration of the brain cells. As to the decedent’s then mental competence Dr. Rigsby testified in part:

“Q. I Want to bring out just one more thing. Doctor, at the time you examined Mrs. Tranum in July and August of 1954, was she mentally capable of handling her person and her business affairs ? A. She was definitely mentally not capable of handling her person or her business affairs. In fact, I recommended that she be given permanent institutional care. She was incontinent, and she demanded constant supervision.
“Q. She could not control her person? A. That is right.

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99 So. 2d 26, 234 La. 68, 1958 La. LEXIS 1082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perot-v-arnold-la-1958.