Slater v. Culpepper

99 So. 2d 348, 233 La. 1071, 1957 La. LEXIS 1386
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 12, 1957
Docket43140
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 99 So. 2d 348 (Slater v. Culpepper) 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
Slater v. Culpepper, 99 So. 2d 348, 233 La. 1071, 1957 La. LEXIS 1386 (La. 1957).

Opinions

HAMITER, Justice.

Mrs. Bella Conner Bynum, wife of Charles E. Bynum, departed this life on July 24, 1948. Following probate of her will and qualifying of the testamentary executrix (Mrs. Elizabeth Schulze Culpepper) an inventory of the property of her succession was taken. In due course most of such property was sold, on an order of court, for liquidation purposes.

Charles E. Bynum, the husband, died on March 7, 1950, being survived only by collateral heirs. Thereafter, these heirs, along with Lewis C. Slater (the duly appointed administrator of his succession), instituted this suit against the legatees of [1079]*1079Mrs. Bella Conner Bynum and her testamentary executrix to recover one-half the value of 36 certain items of property which were listed in the succession of Mrs. Bynum as belonging to her separate estate.

The theory of the action is that such items were owned by the community of acquets and gains that formerly existed between Mr. and Mrs. Bynum. The items (for convenience we shall refer to them hereinafter by the numbers used by the trial judge) consisted of 34 government bonds (items 1 to 34, inclusive), a certificate for 50 shares of stock in the Peoples Homestead and Savings Association (item 35), and cash on deposit in the Central Savings Bank and Trust Company (item 36).

In their answer the defendants generally denied the allegations of the petition. In the alternative they averred that plaintiffs were indebted unto them in the sum of $364,306.43 and they demanded restitution of Mrs. Bynum’s separate funds in that amount which, allegedly, were used by Mr. Bynum (and not accounted for) toward the enrichment of the community and of his separate estate.

After a lengthy trial, from which a voluminous record resulted, the district judge decreed that items 1, 2, - 3, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 33 and 34 were the separate property of Mrs. Bynum, plaintiffs’ attorneys having conceded after submission of the case (as is shown by the judge’s well considered written reasons for judgment) that they were purchased with Mrs. Bynum’s separate funds. Further, he held that the remainder of the items in dispute belonged to-the community formerly existing between-: Mr. and Mrs. Bynum and, consequently, he-rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs-for one-half of their value, together with-legal interest thereon from judicial demand. The alternative demand of defendants was-rejected in its entirety.

From the judgment the defendants are appealing.

Acquiescing in the judgment as to the items decreed to be separate property, plaintiffs have filed an answer to defendants’' appeal in which they urge that they should have been awarded interest on the value of' the bonds at the coupon rate from the date-of death of Mrs. Bynum (1948) until judicial demand.

As stated in the comparatively recent case of Succession of Hemenway, 228 La. 572, 83 So.2d 377, 380, “Property acquired' by either the husband or wife during the existence of the community of acquets and gains is presumed to belong to the community. Anyone claiming and alleging that it does not so belong must prove his claim-clearly and with legal certainty. LSA-C.C. Articles 2402 and 2405; Succession of Manning, 150 La. 1008, 91 So. 435; Montgomery v. Bouanchaud, 179 La. 312, 154 So. 8; Succession of Land, 212 La. 103, 31 So.2d 609; Cameron v. Rowland, 215 La. 177,. [1081]*108140 So.2d 1 and Succession of Schnitter, 220 La. 323, 56 So.2d 563.” Here, it is undisputed that all of the property possessed by Mrs. Bynum at the time of her death had been acquired during her marriage with Mr. Bynum and while their community of acquets and gains existed. Accordingly, the presumption is that it belonged to the community, and these defendants carry the burden of establishing its separate character for which they are contending.

The trial judge concluded that there was no evidence adduced in proof of the source of the funds used in the purchasing of items 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 and 25. After a thorough and careful consideration of the entire record, we agree with that conclusion. True, some of the interest on such bonds was deposited in Mrs. Bynum’s bank account (some was also deposited in Mr. Bynum’s account) ; but that circumstance alone would not overcome the presumption that such items were community, particularly since (as will hereinafter be shown) substantial sums that were admittedly community were likewise deposited in Mrs. Bynum’s account. These items, therefore, belonged to the community.

Next we consider item 36 — a cash balance of $22,183.57 in the account of Mrs. Bynum at the Central Savings Bank & Trust Company. For many years prior to the opening of that account, which occurred in the early part of 1938, the income of the Bynums had been deposited in the name of Mr. Bynum at such bank. It included revenues from Mrs. Bynum’s one-fourth separate interest in the T. N. and N. E. Conner Estates which she had inherited (they were her mother and father) and also those from a like interest which the community had purchased from other heirs. Within two- months after Mrs. Bynum’s account was commenced (in February and March, 1938) there was transferred to it from Mr. Bynum’s account, through several deposits, the sum of $46,167.90 (a total of $52,167.90 less a withdrawal of $6000). Notations on the deposit slips, along with other memoranda, indicate that the transfers were intended to be in restitution of Mrs. Bynum’s separate revenues from the Conner properties. Thereafter certain bonds and time deposits were acquired with checks (in the amounts of $30,388.96, $5000 and $10,000) drawn on Mrs. Bynum’s account, the time deposits later being used to purchase additional bonds. These are the bonds which plaintiffs concede, and the district court held, were Mrs. Bynum’s separate property, the funds used in acquiring them being directly traceable to-revenues from her separate interest in the Conner Estates. And as a result of the mentioned withdrawals there was left in Mrs. Bynum’s account only $2,786.44.

While the bank account of Mrs. Bynum commenced as a predominantly separate [1083]*1083one the record reveals that it did not long remain so. Following the withdrawal of the large sums above referred to numerous substantial deposits of both community and separate funds were made therein. In addition to her separate revenues (from bonds, interest in Conner Estates, and certain properties left her by a predeceased son and stepdaughter), the account received deposits of revenues from community bonds and other community property, monthly payments made to Mr. Bynum as an officer of the Mary Goss Charities organization, and considerable money from unidentifiable sources which presumably belonged to the community.

With particular reference to the revenues produced by Mrs. Bynum’s separate property during the four year period from and after the effective date of Act 286 of 1944 (until her death in 1948), and which were deposited in her account, they must be treated as community funds. That statute, amendatory of Revised Civil Code Article 2386, in part recites: “The fruits of the paraphernal property of the wife, wherever the property be located and however administered, whether natural, civil, including interest, dividends and rents, or from the result of labor, fall into the conjugal partnership, if there exists a community of acquets and gains; unless the wife, by written instrument, shall declare that she reserves all of such fruits for her own separate use and benefit and her intention to administer such property separately and alone.

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99 So. 2d 348, 233 La. 1071, 1957 La. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slater-v-culpepper-la-1957.