Succession of Bidwell

52 La. Ann. 744
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1900
DocketNo. 12,965
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 744 (Succession of Bidwell) 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 Bidwell, 52 La. Ann. 744 (La. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This action was brought by certain persons who allege themselves to be the only collateral relations and legal heirs of the de[745]*745ceased, to annul her last will and testament, on the ground that the heirs whom she instituted were legally incapacitated to take the he-, quests therein provided.

The alleged incapacity of the instituted heirs is based upon the precepts of the Civil Code, notwithstand.ng the determination of the issae involved, rests, exclusively, upon a question of fact.

On the trial of the cause, there was judgment rendered rejecting the plaintiffs'’ demands, and they have appealed.

On the 4th oí June, 1890, Mrs. Louisa J. Bidwell made her last will, nuncupative in form and evidenced same by a public act; and she therein bequeathed to Mrs. Louise Moore Pratt, one pair of solitaire diamond earrings, and the residue of her property to the children of George II. Pratt and Mary Louise Moore Pratt, his wife, and appointed George Iv. Pratt testamentary executor, and dispensed him from giving bond. The will is attacked by Isabella Pamelia Babcock, and Agnes Emily Babcock, who allege themselves to be nieces and nearest of kin of the deceased testatrix, on the ground that Dr. George K. Pratt, who is named as executor, is the husband of one of the legatees, and the father of the other legatees; that he was and is a doctor of physic or medicine, and as such, attended the deceased, in his said professional capacity, during the sickness of which she died; that the will was made during the sickness of which she died, and his wife and children are incapable of receiving any bequest therein, as the law presumes that they were interposed for their husband and father, and that the legacies in their favor are, therefore, absolutely null, and should be so decreed; and that they should be recognized as her heirs at law, and as such, placed in possession of her estate.

It is conceded that Dr. George K. Pratt is and was; at the date of the execution of the will of the deceased, and at the date of her death, a practicing physician, and in that capacity, professionally attended her at those dates, and that he so attended her at various times intermediately between those dates.

It is further conceded, that Dr. George K. Pratt sustains the relation of husband to one of the legatees, and that of father to the other legatees; and also, that the plaintiffs are nieces of the deceased, and her nearest of kin, and her legal heirs if her will should be avoided.

The incapacity of the legatees is claimed to arise under the following provision of law, viz:

[746]*746“Doctors of pbysic, or surgeons, who have professionally attended a “ person during the sickness of which he dies, cannot receive any ben- “ efit from donations inter vivos or mortis causa, made in their favor “ by the sick person during that sickness, etc.” R. C. C., 1489.

“Every disposition made in favor of a person incapable of receiving, “ shall be null and void, whether it be disguised under the form of an “ onerous contract' or be made under the name of persons interposed.

“The father and mother, the children and descendants, and the hus“band of the wife, shall be reputed persons interposed.” R. 0. 0., 1491.

In view of the concessions that are made by the defendants’ counsel, the applicability of the foregoing provisions of the Code is so clear and undoubted, that there is no controversy on that score; and this being the case, the only open question open for discussion is one of fact, whether the decedent’s will was made during the sickness of which she died.

The will having been made on the 4th of June, 1890, and the decedent’s death having occurred on the 16th of May, 1897, and several years having intervened between those two events, the contention of the plaintiffs is, that for a great number of years previous to the making of the will, and continuously thereafter, up to the time of her death, she suffered from heart disease, which resulted in her death, and consequently she made the same during the sickness of which she died; whilst that of the defendants is, that she was taken sick on the 17th of March, 1897, and her sickness continued until the 16th of May following, when she died — the sickness of which she died having been certified by the attending physician to have been phlebitis and heart disease.

Consequently, the propositions to which our attention must be directed are (1) whether Mrs. Bidwell was afflicted with heart disease during the period of time mentioned, and, if so, to what extent; (2) whether heart disease is, speaking scientifically, a predisposing' cause of phlebitis, and if so, whether the evidence discloses that, as a matter of fact, it originated the attack of which the attending physician certified she died.

Wo think it may be safely assumed, from the general trend of the testimony of lay witnesses, that Mrs. Bidwell was a sufferer from a heart trouble of some kind for many years prior to the execution of her will, and for many years thereafter, and up to the date of her [747]*747death; and that there is none of it which contradicts the statement of the attending physician that her death resulted from phlebitis, and which, in his opinion, was superinduced by a relapse from an attack of the grippe — same extending1 to the heart and producing endo-carditis.

Our learned brother of the district court, in assigning his reasons for judgment, made the following- statement, viz:

“It is established, beyond doubt, that the deceased had some affection “ of the heart before and after the date of making the will, and that “ she continued to be so affected up to within twelve months of her “ death, when Dr. Pratt called the attention of Dr. Washington to the “ abnormal action of her heart; and I think it may fairly be deduced “ from the testimony, that the same abnormal condition existed at the “ time of her death.”

But, notwithstanding this expression of opinion predicated upon the testimony, he was convinced that sufficient evidence had not been adduced to show that the heart affection of the deceased produced the phlebitis of which it is claimed she died; or, in other words, it was not proven, to the satisfaction of the judge, to have been the predisposing cause thereof.

With reference to the decedent’s heart affection, there were various witnesses interrogated at the trial — non-professional persons — and they related a great number and variety of details and circumstances tending to show that she had been, for a number of years, afflicted with heart affection of some kind.

One of those witnesses states that she complained of heart-failure frequently, and that on those occasions she always summoned Dr. Pratt, and he attended her professionally. That on these occasions, she told the witness that the doctor said she had “a heart trouble.”

Another witness states that in 1881, and subsequently, she frequently complained of having “heart disease”; and that on those occasions she had Dr. Pratt summoned.

That in 1891 she had a sudden and severe' attack of heart disease for which Dr. Pratt treated her.

Another witness relates similar occurrences as having taken place in 1890, -the year in which she made the will; another in 1895; and another as long ago as 1878.

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Related

Succession of Price
134 So. 907 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)
Thomas v. Fisher
129 S.E. 317 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1925)
Succession of Herber
54 So. 579 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-bidwell-la-1900.