Starns v. Hadnot

12 So. 561, 45 La. Ann. 318, 45 La. Ann. 324
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1893
DocketNo. 10,986
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 So. 561 (Starns v. Hadnot) 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
Starns v. Hadnot, 12 So. 561, 45 La. Ann. 318, 45 La. Ann. 324 (La. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, C. J.

The plaintiffs, Charles H. Starns, George L. Starns and Philip Ursory, urge that the two former are the children of Martha E. Starns, and that the said Ursory is the heir of his deceased child, George Ursory, the issue of his marriage with Margaret A. Starns, the daughter of the said M. E. Starns; that Margaret A. Starns died leaving the said minor her sole heir, and the said minor died about the year 1886, leaving the said Ursory her sole heir.

[320]*320That, subsequent to the death of her first husband, the father of C. H. and G. L. Starns and of the wife of Philip Ursory, the said M. E. Starns married Alfred O. Lewis, on or about the 30th November, 1856; that at the time of that marriage she owned a number of slaves and personal property, consisting of cattle and household furniture; that immediately after her marriage, Lewis moved all of said property to his plantation in Grant parish, where he and his wife resided until their respective deaths. That the said Lewis worked his farm with the joint labor of the said property belonging to his wife and his own, which consisted of about the same number of slaves and work stock, with the slaves until 1866 and with the stock until it was worn out; that Lewis had only two milk cows and calves, which were mingled with those of M. E. Starns, and the increase of said joint stock, at the death of M. E. Starns, amounted to about one hundred and sixty head; that at the death of the said Mrs. M. E. Starns, the community property between her and her husband Lewis consisted of a plantation on Red river in the parish of Red river, consisting of about thirteen hundred and nineteen acres of land, also the undivided half of a plantation on Red river, in the parish of Rapides, known as the Oorinne plantation, besides a number of mares, horses, colts, work stock and cattle; that Lewis failed to have any inventory made of the property of his wife at her death, but took possession of all of said community property as well as what remained of the property owned at their marriage; that he sold a portion of the cattle and left a portion, which with the said plantations have been taken possess’on of by her heirs and used by them; that the rent of the plantation in Red river parish has been worth twelve hundred dollars a year from 1876, and that of the undivided half of the planta - tion in Rapides parish one hundred ¡dollars per annum; that the cattle were worth twelve hundred dollars at the time they were disposed of, and would have been worth at the time of his death a much larger amount; that the work stock, mares and colts were worth six hundred dollars.

That Lewis left the following children, issue of his marriage with petitioner’s mother: Lavinia A., wife of John P. Hadnot; Luella D., wife of H. G. Goodwin, and Joseph P. and Alfred W. Lewis, and three minor children, issue of his marriage about the year 1880 with Julia Ferrand. The plaintiffs prayed that these parties be cited, and the said heirs of A. C. Lewis be decreed to account to the said com[321]*321munity for the rent of the plantation in the parish of Red River, at $1200 a year, and for the rent of the undivided half of the plantation in Rapides at $100 per annum, and for the rent of each from 1876.

That the estate of A. O. Lewis be also decreed to account to the said community for the cattle, at the value of $1200, with 5 per cent, per annum interest from the time they were sold or disposed of by A. O. Lewis, for the work stock, mares and colts, at $700, with like interest, and that said community be partitioned, for trial by jury, and for general relief.

Defendants first pleaded the general issue. They then alleged that the property claimed to be community, and sought to be partitioned, was and is the separate property of the late A. O. Lewis, and that it was not and is not community property, as the plaintiffs have declared. That the said Alfred O. Lewis and Widow Martha E. Starns, their father and mother, just previous to their marriage, made and entered into a marriage contract, by and in which it was stipulated and contracted that no community of acquets and gains should exist between the contracting parties or future spouses, and that their property should be separate. That said contract was executed before Rosemond Le Gras, then a notary public in and for the parish of Rapides, on or about the 29th day of November, 1856, and that it was forthwith deposited by the said notary in the recorder’s office of Rapides parish, was duly recorded, and there remained, until it, together with the court house of that parish and all the records of said parish, were destroyed by fire in 1864. That the marriage contract was sought to be re-established in 1868, and was so re-established by a decree or judgment of the District Oourt of Rapides, in the year 1870, under the law providing for the reestablishment of the lost records by the said fire in 1864.

That their mother’died in the year 1876, leaving no property. That before her death, and in view of that event, she divided in kind all the property she owned and possessed, between her two sets of children and heirs, and that the plaintiffs then received and accepted their full part and share of all their mother’s property, and that they never claimed or pretended to claim or set up any other or further rights to any other property than that so divided by their mother and so accepted and received by them until after the death [322]*322of Alfred O. Lewis in the latter part of the year 1889, and that their pretensions are stale and without foundation. They, therefore, prayed that plaintiffs’ demand be rejected.

Before the trial in the lower court the parties entered into an agreement to the effect that they shall at this trial try only the issue whether there was an ante-nuptial contract between Alfred C. Lewis and Martha E. Starns regulating the community of their marriage, and that all other issues in the case are to be held in abeyance.”

The special issue so submitted to the jury by consent, was by a division of nine to three in that body, determined in favor of the defendants, whereupon the District Court rendered a judgment that ‘ there is and was no community of acquets and gains existing between the late Martha E. and Alfred O. Lewis, and that plaintiffs’ demand be rejected at their costs.”

It was admitted between the parties that A. C. Lewis and Martha E. Starns were married on the 30th of November, 1856; that Mrs. Lewis died on the 22d of December, 1876, and that Mr. Lewis died on the 16th of December, 1888; also that the notary who passed the act did not make or keep a copy of the marriage contract or any of his acts, and that there is no copy of said marriage contract in existence.

In support of the position that there was a marriage contract between their father and mother, stipulating there should be no community and their property should be kept separate, defendants offered first the testimony of Rosemond Le Gras, the notary public, who, it is alleged, passed the marriage contract, taken in New Orleans under commission. Le Gras testified as follows: “ I was a resident of Alexandria, La., during the year 1856; I had resided there continually from 1830 to 1863. During that period I was mayor of the town, justice of the peace and notary public. I occupied those positions at different times and held that office for several years. I was intimately acquainted with Alfred C. Lewis; was also acquainted with Mrs. Widow Martha E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 So. 561, 45 La. Ann. 318, 45 La. Ann. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starns-v-hadnot-la-1893.