Succession of Coco

171 So. 70, 185 La. 901, 1936 La. LEXIS 1240
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1936
DocketNo. 33893.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 171 So. 70 (Succession of Coco) 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 Coco, 171 So. 70, 185 La. 901, 1936 La. LEXIS 1240 (La. 1936).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Albert Dominique Coco died intestate, leaving as his sole legal heirs two broth *903 ers and two sisters. Lestan L. Coco, the elder brother,'applied for the appointment as administrator, and, pending the publication of his application, as temporary administrator of the succession. His application to be appointed temporary administrator was opposed by Jules A. Coco, the other brother, and by Mrs. Eliza Coco Woodruff, one of the sisters. After due hearing the judge of the district court appointed Lestan L. Coco as temporary administrator and ordered the publication of his application as permanent administrator. This application was also unsuccessfully opposed by Jules A. Coco, who sought the appointment for himself, and Mrs. Eliza Coco Woodruff. The opponents appealed from the judgment, but before their appeal could be heard Lestan L. Coco died. Later, the appeal was dismissed, without prejudice to any right which Jules A. Coco might have to be appointed administrator of the succession. Succession of Coco, 183 La. 517, 164 So. 326.

Immediately-upon the death of Lestan L. Coco, his son A. Blumes Coco applied to be appointed temporary administrator of the succession of his unde Albert D. Coco. His application was granted and he was appointed as such temporary administrator on a bond of $69,000. In his application to be appointed temporary administrator, A. Blumes Coco also prayed for his appointment as permanent administrator, and his application wás ordered published according to law.

Jules A. Coco and Mrs. Eliza Coco Woodruff filed a rule to vacate the appointment of A. Blumes Coco as temporary administrator on numerous grounds, among which was that A. Blumes Coco was not a beneficiary heir of Albert D. Coco, but that Jules A. Coco was, and, as such, entitled to the office. The rule was dismis-sed and the-appointment of A. Blumes Coco as temporary administrator was maintained by the judge of the district court. Jules A. Coco and Mrs. Eliza Coco Wood-ruff then applied to this court for writs of certiorari and prohibition. A rule nisi with a stay order was granted, but the order was later modified so as to permit A. Blumes Coco, temporary administrator, to operate the plantation and mercantile establishment of the deceased until the final disposition of the application for writs, upon a bond of not less than $70,000.

On the original hearing of the rule nisi this court held that A. Blumes Coco was not a beneficiary heir of Albert D. Coco, but that Jules A. Coco was such an heir. And the court, in accordance with that holding, set aside the appointment of A. Blumes Coco as temporary administrator and ordered the appointment forthwith of Jules A. Coco as administrator of the succession of Albert D. Coco, on giving bond in the sum of $70,000.

On the application of A. Blumes Coco a rehearing was granted, and on the rehearing, because Jules A. Coco and Mrs. Eliza Woodruff had not formally opposed the appointment of A. Blumes Coco as administrator, temporary or permanent, and had not asked for the appointment for either or both this court held the matter was never at issue in the district court; and the court set aside its original decree and or *905 dered the dismissal of relators’ application, with full reservation of the rights of all parties concerned to have the issues with reference to the appointment of a permanent administrator determined in a proper proceeding in the district court. Succession of Coco, 184 La. 144, 165 So. 646.

Thereafter, the case was tried on the formal opposition filed by Jules A. Coco and Mrs. Eliza Coco Woodruff to the application of A. Blumes Coco to be appointed permanent administrator of the succession of Albert D. Coco. The trial resulted in a judgment dismissing the opposition and appointing A. Blumes Coco as permanent administrator of the succession. From that judgment the opponents, Jules A. Coco and Mrs. Eliza Coco Woodruff, are prosecuting the present appeal.

In the choice of the administrator the preference shall be given to the beneficiary heir over every other person, if he be of age and present in the state. Civ.Code, art. 1042.

If there be two or more beneficiary heirs of age and present in this state, the judge shall select one or two he shall consider the most solid for the administration. Civ. Code, art. 1043.

It is not disputed that Jules A. Coco is a beneficiary heir of Albert D. Coco and the paramount question presented for decision is whether A. Blumes Coco is also a beneficiary heir of the deceased and therefore entitled to compete with the admitted beneficiary heir for the appointment as administrator of the succession.

An heir is defined by our law as the person who is called to the inheritance of the deceased person, acquiring his rights and property and incurring his obligations. Civ.Code, art. 884; Succession of Justus, 44 La.Ann. 721, 11 So. 95. And a legal heir is an heir of the blood, Civ.Code, art. 879.

Succession is the transmission of the property, rights, and obligations of the deceased to the heir. Civ.Code, arts. 871, 872, and 873. And a succession is acquired by the legal heir by mere operation of law immediately after the death of the deceased person whom he succeeds. Civ.Code, arts. 940, 941.

The foregoing codal provisions leave no room for doubt as to the fact of the rights and property of a deceased person being transmitted directly and immediately to his legal heir or heirs. Tested by these provisions the claim of A. Blumes Coco'that he is a beneficiary heir of Albert D. Coco is not well founded.

A. Blumes Coco was not called to the succession of Albert D. Coco at his death. Albert D. Coco died intestate and left neither ascendants nor descendants. Therefore under article 912 of the Civil Code, his two brothers, Lestan L. Coco and Jules A. Coco, and his two sisters, Mrs. Eliza Coco Woodruff and Mrs. Emma Coco Bordelon, inherited the whole succession to the exclusion of all other persons.

A. Blumes Coco was a son of Lestan L. Coco, who was living at the time of the death of his brother Albert D. Coco, and, as a consequence, inherited an undivided one-fourth of his succession. In other words, Lestan L. Coco became the owner of an undivided one-fourth interest in the *907 rights and property, subject to the charges, left by Albert D. Coco, inheritance being one of the modes by which the ownership of things or property is acquired. Civ. Code, art. 870.

On the death of Lestan L. Coco, his son A. Blumes Coco became one of his heirs, because as a legal heir he was called to the succession of his father. As such he inherited an interest in all the rights and property left by his father, including the undivided one-fourth interest owned by Lestan L. Coco in the succession of Albert D. Coco.

A. Blumes Coco inherited nothing in his own right from the succession of Albert D. Coco, either by disposition of the law or by representation of his father, since a person may not represent another who was alive at the.time of the opening of the succession. He can take only that which his father had already acquired by inheritance .from his predeceased brother. A. Blumes Coco is an heir of his father Lestan L. Coco, but not of his uncle Albert D: Coco.

Lestan L. Coco, who died eight days after Albert D.

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 70, 185 La. 901, 1936 La. LEXIS 1240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-coco-la-1936.