Santoine v. Maser

172 So. 534, 186 La. 482, 1937 La. LEXIS 1100
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1937
DocketNo. 34106.
StatusPublished

This text of 172 So. 534 (Santoine v. Maser) 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
Santoine v. Maser, 172 So. 534, 186 La. 482, 1937 La. LEXIS 1100 (La. 1937).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment sustaining certain oppositions to a proposed judicial partition by recognizing the claims asserted by both the plaintiffs and defendants and dismissing the opposition as to other claims of the defendants. The defendants alone appealed.

Joseph Santoine, who originally owned the feal estate involved, died on April 20, 1923, intestate, and his succession was duly opened in the civil district court, parish of Orleans. His father and mother survived him and were recognized as forced heirs, entitled to one-half of the property. The deceased’s brothers, Oscar, Walter J., and Robert M., and his sister, Mrs. Bertha Santoine, wife of Benjamin Oldstein, were recognized as heirs at law, entitled to an undivided one-tenth each of the property. Lionel H. (Jr.), Dexter P., and Gloria B. Hemard, children of a predeceased sister of the deceased, inheriting by representation through their mother, were recognized as heirs of the deceased, entitled to an undivided one-tenth of the property. In these proceedings, the interest of the minors was ordered sold for the price and sum of $1,500, and by notarial act of sale dated August 28, 1928, the interest of the minors in the property was sold to their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Santoine, for $1,500. It is admitted that the purchase price was not paid to the tutor, who signed the act of sale acknowledging receipt of the money. Previously, on August 17, 1928, the major collateral heirs, Oscar, Robert M., Walter J., and Mrs. Bertha Santoine, wife of Benjamin Oldstein, sold their respective interests in the property to their father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Santoine, for the sum of $3,000. It is also admitted that the purchase price was not paid to these parties.

On August 13, 1929, Frank Santoine, father of Joseph Santoine, died, intestate, and his succession was duly opened in the parish of Orleans, and the heirs placed in possession thereof.

On November 10, 1930, Mrs. Alice Loze, widow of Frank Santoine and the mother of Joseph Santoine, died intestate and her succession was opened in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, and the heirs recognized and placed in possession.

Subsequent to these two judgments, Walter J. Santoine sold all of his rights, title, and interest in the real estate in question to Mrs. Alva Margaret Maser, divorced wife of Dominick D. Sequeria.

In a partition proceeding entitled Santoine et al. v. Sequeria, filed in the civil *485 district court, the real estate was sold at public auction on December 19, 1935, to Oscar and Robert M. Santoine and Mrs. Bertha Santoine, wife of Benjamin Old-stein, for the sum of $6,500. These parties, as purchasers, demanded that the amount of their respective claims of $783 each, for the unpaid purchase price in the sale when the property was sold by them to their mother and father, be credited on the amount of their bid. The request was refused, resulting in a proceeding by these three parties, wherein they claimed that this amount was due each of them for the unpaid purchase price resulting from the sale by them to their parents. The duly appointed and qualified tutor of the minors, Lionel H. (Jr.), Dexter P., and Gloria B. Hemard, opposed these claims on the ground that they had been remitted by the claimants. The tutor claimed, in behalf of the minors, the $1,500 representing the unpaid purchase price of the sale by them to the maternal grandfather and grandmother, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Santoine; and also claimed that Oscar Santoine, their agent, had failed to account to the minors for the deposits in the savings department of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company amounting to the sum of $2,000, plus interest, and the sum of $266.33 on deposit with the D. H. Holmes Company, Limited, branch of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company, as well as the income from dividends of two shares of stock of the American Tel. & Tel. Company, and three shares of the common stock in the United States Steel Corporation.

The claim of the minors to the $1,500 was not resisted, but liability for the other items was denied on the ground that a full settlement had been made by Oscar Santoine with the tutor of the minors.

The district judge rendered judgment in favor of the major heirs, including Walter J. Santoine, for the sum of $783 each, representing the claimed unpaid purchase price, and judgment in favor of the minors for the sum of $1,500, representing the unpaid purchase price due them, but denied the tutor’s other claims in behalf of the minors.

The tutor appealed and there was no answer to the appeal."

We shall take up these issues in the reverse order:

The tutor of the minors denied that he had ever received any portion of the two deposits in the savings account of the bank. Counsel for the major 'heirs confronted him with a receipt dated at New Orleans, La., January 5, 1931, showing that receipt of the sum of $2,035 was acknowledged by all of the heirs including the tutor for the minors, in full settlement and satisfaction of the amount due them as heirs of the succession of Mrs. Alice Loze, widow of Frank Santoine, represented by savings passbook No. 87,583 (Hibernia Bank & Trust Company), in the name of Mrs. F. Santoine.

After some hesitation, he admitted his signature, but denied that he had received the minors’ portion of the money, and stated that the receipt was signed at the request of the attorney for the succession, in the attorney’s office and not at the bank. To show that he was not present at the *487 bank on January 5, 1931, he introduced in evidence a copy of the pay roll record and the testimony of an officer of his employer showing that he had worked six hours that day, beginning at 8 o’clock a. m., in the morning. It was shown by the major heirs that the bank remained opened until 3 o’clock in the afternoon, which allowed time for the tutor to present himself at the bank.

Walter J. Santoine testified that he did not remember ever having received any portion of the money, and on cross-examination admitted that he did not remember this transaction at all, although he did not deny his signature to the receipt.

Oscar, Robert M., and Mrs. Bertha Santoine, wife of Benjamin Oldstein, all testified that the parties met at the bank, signed the receipt, and received the respective amounts due them.

Counsel for the tutor argues that since the major heirs stated that a Mr. Jay, representing the bank, was present, their failure to produce him as a witness raised the presumption that his testimony would have been unfavorable to the position of the major heirs.

We conclude, as the trial judge, that the clear statements of the three major heirs, corroborated by the receipt, establishes the fact that Oscar Santoine had properly accounted for these moneys. The testimony of Walter J. Santoine and the tutor of the minors is not convincing and is insufficient tó overcome the evidence of the major heirs.

As to the small dividends from the. stocks, it appears that this money was distributed to the year 1934 and the dividends accruing thereafter were deposited in the Continental Bank, which failed. No attempt is made to fasten the liability on Oscar Santoine for this loss.

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Related

Doucet v. Dugas
165 So. 754 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 534, 186 La. 482, 1937 La. LEXIS 1100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santoine-v-maser-la-1937.