Succession of Anderson
This text of 656 So. 2d 42 (Succession of Anderson) 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.
Opinion
SUCCESSION OF Annie Mae Fuller ANDERSON.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*43 Iverson, Amman & Wood by Frederic C. Amman, III, Monroe, for appellant.
Blackwell, Chamblis, Henry Harrod, Caldwell & Cagle by Murphy Blackwell, West Monroe, for appellee.
Before HIGHTOWER and BROWN, JJ., and GUIDRY, J. Pro Tem.
HIGHTOWER, Judge.
The primary legatee and executrix under a statutory will appeals from an adverse judgment declaring a subsequently executed olographic testament to be valid, appointing another heir as dative testamentary executor, and assessing court costs against her. We affirm.
Background
After spending three years in a Monroe nursing home, Annie Mae Fuller Anderson, a resident of Ruston, died on February 27, 1994 at the age of 93, leaving an estate valued at approximately one million dollars. She had no descendants but was survived by eleven nieces and nephews and two great-nieces; her husband died some 14 years earlier.
One of the great-nieces, appellant Nancy Wiggers Baggette, and her husband, Wade Baggette, started caring for Anderson in 1983, after they moved back to Louisiana. Under powers of attorney, Wade, an attorney, managed the elderly aunt's financial and legal affairs, while Nancy handled numerous personal matters involving groceries, clothing, utility bills, lawn maintenance, and medical needs. The couple assumed even greater responsibilities as Anderson's health deteriorated.
The day following Anderson's death, Nancy sought to be appointed provisional administratrix. Shortly thereafter, the Baggettes filed a petition to probate a statutory will executed on November 21, 1984. That document, naming Wade as succession attorney and executor, and Nancy as alternate executrix, provided a total of $11,600 for memorials at two universities and for small legacies to certain nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews. More importantly, the testament awarded the bulk of the deceased's estate to six named universal legatees: Nancy and Wade; Eloise Fuller Wiggers, a niece who died in 1989; George Edward Wiggers, *44 the father of Nancy and husband of Eloise; and James Egan Fuller and Robert Lane Fuller, two nephews. By order dated March 9, 1994, the court confirmed appellant as executrix, after her husband declined to serve in that capacity.
About two weeks later, several nieces and nephews petitioned the district court to probate an olographic will dated July 22, 1986,[1] revoke the statutory testament, discharge Nancy as executrix, and appoint James Roy Fuller, Jr. as dative testamentary executor. In the subsequently executed document, the testator simply stated:
I Annie Mae Fuller Anderson, revoke all prior wills and give my entire estate to all my nieces and nephews in equal portions and if any my nieces or nephews die before me then his or her share to their descendants.
Soon after the district judge rendered a proces verbal of probate, appellant and her husband filed a pleading to annul the handwritten will on grounds of undue influence, challenging the appointment of Fuller as succession representative, and seeking to reconfirm Nancy to that position.
The trial court addressed the abovementioned petitions at a hearing. With stipulations resolving all other aspects[2], the parties presented evidence concerning only the issues of undue influence and the qualifications of the two applicants for executor. Thereafter, the district judge rejected the Baggettes' contentions, revoked the statutory will in its entirety, and vacated Nancy's appointment as testamentary executrix. The court further confirmed Fuller as dative testamentary executor and assessed all costs to appellant. This appeal ensued.
Discussion
Undue Influence
In her initial assignments of error, Nancy maintains that the trial court erred in rejecting her claim of undue influence and in failing to invalidate the olographic will.
The testimony of several witnesses, including some with no interest in the litigation, reveals that Anderson frequently indicated she wanted her nieces and nephews to share equally in her estate. Moreover, she repeatedly expressed disappointment about the legal contest that had raged among her relatives concerning a statutory will very similar to her own, after her sister, Clara Fuller Tobin, died in 1985.[3] Thus, on July 22, 1986, decedent indicated to her visiting niece, Jo Helen Fuller Green, that she wished to write a new testament.
Green initially advised her aunt to talk to a lawyer about her decision. When Anderson indicated she wished to write the document that day, however, her niece suggested that they call attorney John Lane Sheehan, decedent's great-nephew, and ask how to prepare it. Upon Green telephoning Sheehan, who considered himself a helpful family member, he told his cousin that an olographic will would need to be dated, handwritten, and signed by his aunt. He also recommended that Anderson express her intent to have the estate distributed equally and include words revoking her prior wills, language that he regularly placed in testaments in the course of his practice. That information, Green wrote on a piece of paper and relayed to her aunt, who never spoke with Sheehan.
After obtaining Sheehan's advice, Anderson, a well-educated person with teaching experience at Louisiana State University, immediately drafted the olographic will while her niece sat across the table. Green denied *45 coercing or forcing her aunt to write the testament or dictating it to her. Similarly, she stated that decedent asked her to take the completed document to Sheehan to inspect. Green complied and left the will with the attorney for safe keeping after his review. Subsequently, the deceased never again brought up the subject of her estate.
In brief, appellant suggests that the course of these events, along with the alleged "boilerplate language" of the testament, proves by clear and convincing evidence that Green, Sheehan, and other family members conspired to force Anderson to write the contested document. Relying on her own and her husband's testimony, Nancy maintains that Anderson's true intent had always been to reward the Baggettes for the care they provided. Considering the record before us, however, we cannot agree with that contention.
In his reasons for judgment, the trial judge determined that the opponents of the olographic testament failed to show, either clearly and convincingly or by a preponderance, any evidence of undue influence. He further concluded that the challenged will expressed the deceased's true intent concerning the distribution of her estate.
Under the circumstances at hand, a party challenging a testament on grounds of undue influence must prove the invalidity by clear and convincing evidence. LSA-C.C. Art. 1483; Succession of Hamiter, 519 So.2d 341 (La.App. 2d Cir.1988), writ denied, 521 So.2d 1170 (La.1988).[4] Such issues involve questions of fact, and the trial court's determination will not be disturbed unless clearly wrong. Succession of Hamiter, supra. Even where conflicts appear in the testimony, reasonable credibility evaluations and inferences of fact are not manifestly erroneous. Stobart v. State through DOTD, 617 So.2d 880 (La.1993).
Obviously, after Anderson contacted him through his cousin, Sheehan's suggestion that certain language be placed in the testament falls short of undue influence.
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656 So. 2d 42, 1995 WL 271516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-anderson-lactapp-1995.