Succession of Baronet

64 So. 2d 428, 222 La. 1051, 1953 La. LEXIS 1242
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 23, 1953
DocketNo. 37936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 So. 2d 428 (Succession of Baronet) 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
Succession of Baronet, 64 So. 2d 428, 222 La. 1051, 1953 La. LEXIS 1242 (La. 1953).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

August Baronet, who was appointed and qualified as the administrate of the succession of Jules Baronet, Sr. on June 18, 1930, filed an account of his administration on May 9, 1938, after having been ordered to do so by the court upon the motion of one of the heirs. The mover, Lovenia Baronet Aubé, opposed this account — challenging each and every item, alleging various irregularities, charging that the assets of the estate had been dissipated and employed for illegal purposes, and praying that the Administrator and the surety on his bond be jointly and severally condemned to pay the penalties provided by law. She is now appealing from a judgment of the lower court dismissing her demands and approving and homologating the account.

The record shows that Jules Baronet, Sr., died intestate in Acadia Parish on May 21, 1930, leaving as heirs nine children and one grandchild (child of a predeceased son), all majors or eriiancipated by marriage. His estate consisted of separate property, movable and immovable, in Acadia and Vermilion Parishes (the marriage to his former wife having been dissolved by divorce in 1923, when a final partition of the community was made), and included two farms, each with an irrigation well and pumping plant, devoted to the raising of-rice and cotton. It was necessary that someone immediately take these properties in hand in order to provide water for the growing rice crops, under existing agreements with the tenant-lessees; and pursuant to application filed on May 26, 1930, August Baronet, one of the sons of the deceased, was appointed and qualified as administrator without opposition. An inventory and appraisal disclosed that the estate in Vermilion Parish consisted of a farm of 702 acres valued at $21,078.60; in Acadia Parish it consisted of a 720-acre farm ($48,194.75), eight town lots' with warehouse situated thereon in Rayne ($2,-500), and the home residence in South Crowley located on three and a half city blocks ($3,500), these immovables being valued at a total of $54,194.75; as well as movable property (farm implements, . a truck, an automobile, some cattle and mules, equity in rice and cotton crops for 1930, two shares of stock in the Rayne State Bank, and cash) valued at $3,864.22. The combined inventories amounted to a total of $79,137.57, btit failed to reflect that all of the immovable property, with the exception of the home place at Crowley, was heavily encumbered with mortgages placed thereon at various times by the decedent.

It was the plan of the heirs to wind up the estate within a period of nine months by converting the land and water rentals for 1930 (represented by shares of the crops) into cash, selling the movable property and all of the immovable property with [1055]*1055the exception of the Acadia Parish farm; and with the proceeds, estimated at $18,-864 after payment of mortgage indebtedness on the lands sold, to apply $9,000 to payment of unsecured creditors, legal fees, costs and other expenses, and the balance of $9,864 as a credit on the mortgage resting on the Acadia farm, which land would subsequently be divided among the heirs, each to place a mortgage on the share received by him or her to clear the land of the remaining indebtedness under the existing mortgage. On this representation to the Court, attached to which was a detailed and itemized statement of the probable cash to be handled by the administrator ($18,864), August Baronet in his petition for appointment sought a reduction in the amount of bond to be furnished, which bond was then set by the Court at $25,000.

At the time of decedent’s death, his cash assets amounted to only $94.22. Shortly after appointment the Administrator sought and obtained from the Court authority to borrow from the Rayne State Bank $2,000, “to pay all bills and accounts out of the proceeds,” and to execute - as security a crop lien, payable December 1, 1930, on the crop shares due as land and water rental from the farms, alleging that there were certain listed bills and funeral expenses of the deceased to be paid, as well as current and anticipated expenses incidental to the operation and maintenance of the irrigation plants. Of this amount, the Administrator borrowed a total of $1,250, which was shortly repaid; the balance of the authorized loan was not used. Again, on January 21, 1931, he sought and obtained from the Court authority to sell, after due and legal advertisement, the two shares of Rayne State Bank stock and the South Crowley property, with buildings and improvements thereon, “to realize sufficient funds to pay some of the ordinary and privileged debts of the deceased and charges of his succession.” The stock was sold and the proceeds deposited in the bank, but the South Crowley property was not sold.

The plan to sell the immovable property did not materialize, and the Administrator leased portions of the farm lands for the year 1931 on a share-crop basis. Reciting these facts, he petitioned the Court, in June, 1931, for authority to execute a c^op lien in favor of the Rayne State Bank, in amount of $3,750, payable November 1, 1931, to defray the expenses incidental to furnishing water, also for making necessary repairs on the engines and machinery of the pumping plants. Of this amount a total of $1,650 was' borrowed, and was timely repaid.

The early part of 1932 saw foreclosure proceedings on the mortgages affecting three of the four pieces of immovable property. In January, the Rayne State Bank instituted foreclosure proceedings on its $8,000 mortgage, executed by the deceased in 1921, bearing on the eight lots and warehouse in Rayne, and this property was adjudicated to the Bank for $1,734.'-In February, the Prudential Insurance [1057]*1057Company, which held a $15,000 mortgage executed by the deceased in 1926 on the farm in Vermilion Parish, foreclosed and became the adjudicatee for $1,000, leaving a large deficiency claim. And in May, the Federal Land Bank foreclosed its first mortgage on the Acadia Parish farm, executed in 1924, on which there remained a balance due of $21,305, and became the purchaser for $2,500, leaving a large deficit and obliterating the second mortgage of $10,000 on that property, dating from 1927,' held by the Rayne State Bank. Mr. Lozen Leger, surety on the Administrator’s bond, later purchased this farm.

Authority to sell the only remaining piece of immovable property, the home place at Crowley, was granted by the Court on March 3, 1938, the proceeds to be used to “pay privileged debts of the deceased and charges of his succession,” and after due advertisement was sold at public auction to the highest bidder — the attorney for the estate — for $2,335.

The opponent, charging the Administrator with misuse of funds, negligence, sham and subterfuge, claims that he engaged in adventurous crop operations in 1930 and 1931, thus exploiting the estate with the hope of personal gain and eventually to its entire dissipation. His course • of conduct from the time of obtaining a reduction of his administrator’s bond upon alleged misrepresentations of fact and illusory promises, to the time of filing his account under compulsion, is said to have been a series of illegal ventures confected with fraudulent intent and accomplished by abuse of a credulous court.

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258 So. 2d 606 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 2d 428, 222 La. 1051, 1953 La. LEXIS 1242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-baronet-la-1953.