Sessions v. Succession of Sessions

23 So. 3d 954, 2008 La.App. 1 Cir. 1683, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1574, 2009 WL 3074733
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 10, 2009
DocketNos. 2008 CA 1683, 2008 CA 1684
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 So. 3d 954 (Sessions v. Succession of Sessions) 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
Sessions v. Succession of Sessions, 23 So. 3d 954, 2008 La.App. 1 Cir. 1683, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1574, 2009 WL 3074733 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

PARRO, J.

]2The plaintiff in a suit for partition of former community property, which was consolidated with her ex-husband’s succession proceeding, appeals a judgment relating to the partition in favor of the succession and the person serving as its executrix. On appeal, the plaintiff has also filed an exception raising the objection of prescription with respect to a claim for reimbursement filed by the succession. For the reasons that follow, the judgment is vacated, and the exception and this matter are remanded.

Factual and Procedural Background

Judith Len Caldwell Sessions McKillop (McKillop)1 and Charles Robert Sessions [955]*955(Sessions) were divorced by judgment dated February 9, 1987.2 During their marriage, McKillop and Sessions purchased a home, subject to a mortgage executed on May 24, 1979, securing a debt evidenced by a promissory note payable to bearer in the amount of $46,500 with an interest rate of 10 percent, which note was payable in monthly installments of $408.27 for a term of 30 years. Following their divorce, no steps were taken by McKillop or Sessions to partition the patrimony that belonged to their former community of acquets and gains, including the home in which Sessions continued to reside. At some point, Evelyn Marie Rosier (Rosier) moved into the home with him.

On January 2, 1994, Sessions died in an automobile accident. In his handwritten testament dated January 29, 1990, he left all of his “real and personal property to Evelyn Marie Rosier the woman I love,” with whom he had been living. On April 22, 1994, Rosier filed a petition for probate of Sessions’ olographic testament, praying for the probate of Sessions’ testament, the confirmation of her as the testamentary |gexecutrix, and the issuance of letters testamentary to her.3 In the detailed descriptive list that was filed with the petition for probate, Rosier identified a one-half interest in the home in question as Sessions’ separate property, with a related indebtedness as a separate debt.

On April 25, 1994, McKillop and members of Sessions’ family4 filed a petition to appoint an administrator of Sessions’ succession and to appoint a notary to search for a testament and life insurance policies. Sessions’ mother sought to be appointed as the administratrix. Following the denial of their motion for the appointment of an administrator, McKillop and the others (claiming to be creditors of the succession) filed a motion on August 22, 1995, to compel the payment of their claims against the succession and for an accounting of the assets and liabilities of Sessions’ succession. In that motion, McKillop alleged that their community property had not been partitioned and that the home listed by Rosier in the detailed descriptive list belonged to McKillop and Sessions’ former community. Thus, by that motion, McKil-lop sought to partition the community property and to recover from Rosier one-half of the fair rental value of the home from the date of Sessions’ death through the present. Pursuant to this motion, Rosier was ordered on August 24,1995, to file within 30 days a tableau of distribution and an accounting of the succession’s assets and liabilities.

Rosier then filed an exception styled as an objection of unauthorized use of a summary proceeding and/or improper cu-mulation of actions in connection with McKillop’s request for a partition in the succession proceeding. On September 29, 1995, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:2801, McKillop filed a separate action against Sessions’ succession to partition the community property and for an accounting by the executrix |4of Sessions’ succession.5 [956]*956In her petition, McKillop sought to have Rosier, as the executrix of Sessions’ succession, file a sworn detailed descriptive list of assets and liabilities belonging to the former community. McKillop prayed for a judgment partitioning the former community property. On October 6, 1995, Rosier was ordered to file a detailed descriptive list within 60 days of the service of McKillop’s petition. In connection with a subsequent ex parte motion, Rosier was ordered on December 20, 1995, to file a sworn detailed descriptive list within 90 days.

In a supplemental and amending petition in the partition proceeding, McKillop, among other things, sought reimbursement for the fair rental value of the community home from the date of the divorce until a full and final partition of the community and, in the alternative, sought sequestration of Rosier from the community property pending the partition due to a conflict of interest.

In the succession proceeding, Rosier was again ordered on January 28, 1996, to file within 60 days a tableau of distribution and an accounting of her administration. At the end of January 1996, Rosier’s counsel withdrew as counsel of record in both proceedings. New counsel did not enroll on Rosier’s behalf until August 23, 2001, after which Rosier, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:2801(A)(1)(a), sought an order requiring McKillop, as the petitioner in the partition proceeding, to file a sworn detailed descriptive list within 45 days.6 In the absence of McKillop’s compliance with the resulting September 19, 2001 court order, Rosier by rule to show cause filed on December 19, 2002, sought to have the court accept her sworn detailed descriptive list, filed that same day, as a judicial determination of the community and to have the court partition the property between the parties, ie., McKillop and Sessions’ succession. In the memorandum in support of her rule to show cause, Rosier proposed the following partition:

|5(a) that the only available asset, namely the house, be partitioned to the Succession with the Succession assuming the current mortgage[,] (b) the Succession and [McKillop] each to keep the [movables] in their possession^] and (c) to equalize payments, there be judgment in favor of the Succession and against [McKillop] for payment, plus each party to pay their own costs.

Rosier’s list identified the home as community property valued at $75,000 and set forth a claim by the succession for reimbursement from McKillop for one-half of the payments on the mortgage note from February 9, 1987, through December 1, 2002, in the amount of $38,581.52.7 Rosier’s list also set forth a principal balance of $22,550 remaining on the mortgage note (a community obligation) as of December 1, 2002.8

In response to Rosier’s motion for the acceptance of her list, McKillop argued that LSA-R.S. 9:2801 was not applicable in this case since the property was also in[957]*957volved in a succession proceeding, citing Succession of Brown, 468 So.2d 794 (La.App. 1st Cir.1985). McKillop instead urged the applicability of former LSA-C.C. art. 1328, pertaining to judicial partitions by co-owners.9 McKillop’s subsequently filed sworn detailed descriptive list disclosed a present value of $100,000 for the home and included a reimbursement claim for one-half of the rental value of the home from the date of Sessions’ death to February 21, 2003, in the amount of $30,136.42.

On January 22, 2003, McKillop and members of Sessions’ family filed a motion to have Rosier removed from the position of executrix and to have Sessions’ mother appointed as the administratrix of the succession.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 3d 954, 2008 La.App. 1 Cir. 1683, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1574, 2009 WL 3074733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sessions-v-succession-of-sessions-lactapp-2009.