Succession of Cotton

129 So. 361, 170 La. 828, 1930 La. LEXIS 1829
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 30550.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 So. 361 (Succession of Cotton) 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 Cotton, 129 So. 361, 170 La. 828, 1930 La. LEXIS 1829 (La. 1930).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

Frederick G. Cotton died in the city of New Orleans, February 22, 1929.

He left a daughter and son and two grandchildren, issue of his daughter’s max-riage with H. P. Sisk.

On the day of his death he executed a last will and testament, in which he named the Canal Bank & Trust Company of New Orleans as executor.

After making some special legacies, the testator directed that the portion of his es *832 tate reserved to his daughter and son as their legitime he placed in trust for ten years, designating the Canal Bank & Trust Company, trustee.

The net annual income from the legitime was to be paid by the trustee to the daughter and son.

The residue of his estate he gave to his two grandchildren to be held in trust by the Canal Bank & Trust Company until their respective thirty-first birthday. The income from this residue was subject, however, to the payment of annuities of $1,500 per annum each to his half-sister and to his divorced wife and $600 to his brother’s widow.

The balance of the income after paying the annuities was to be devoted to the education of the grandchildren.

The will was duly probated, and the Canal Bank & Trust Company qualified as executor and trustee.

The inventory and supplemental inventory showed real and personal property in this city amounting to $451,881.17.

Some of the property owned by the deceased was situated in Kentucky, and a copy of the will was presented to the proper court of that state and ordered registered and executed, and the Fidelity & Columbia Trust Company was named administrator of the property in Kentucky.

The executor under orders of court converted sufficient of the assets into cash to pay certain interest-bearing debts and to discharge the cash legacies. The payments so made are not involved in this appeal.

On June 21,1929, the executor filed its first provisional account. This account showed in detail the receipts and disbursements up to that date and listed for approval the annuities to be paid and the delivery to be made of. certain household effects to a special legatee. The account also showed the payments of income to Sam Cotton and his sister on their respective legitimes.

The account after due advertisement was approved, but on application of Sam Cotton the judgment was set aside, and thereafter Cotton filed an opposition to several of the matters embraced in the account.

The account later was homologated in so far as not opposed. The items and matters contained in the opposition will be considered later on in this opinion.

Gn September 23, 1929, the executor and trustee applied to the court contradictorily with Sam Cotton, for authority to sell the real estate in New Orleans. The daughter Mrs. Sisk consented to the sale, but Sam Cotton opposed it, and that is the subject of one of his complaints on this appeal.

On September 6, 1929, Sam Cotton filed in the circuit court of Jefferson county, Ky., a suit to annul all of the proceedings taken in the civil district court of Orleans parish on the ground that his father, at and prior to the time of his death, was domiciled in Kentucky and that the courts of Louisiana were without jurisdiction. He also asked that the will be annulled on the ground that his father was not, on the day the will was made and for some time prior thereto, mentally or physically capable of making a will.

Before the opposition, to the account was heard, Sam Cotton filed a motion in the civil' district court to stay all proceedings in that court until the matters relating to the domicile and the ability to make a will should be decided by the Kentucky court.

The motion was overruled, the opposition of Sam Cotton was rejected, and the account was duly homologated.

From, that judgment the opponent appeals.

*834 The first question in logical order is the motion to stay proceedings in deference to the courts of Kentucky. The motion is not supported by any authority or sound reason. The only reason offered is that the Kentucky court was the court first seized with jurisdiction on the question of domicile and of the validity of the will and that under the principle of comity the Louisiana courts ought to await the action of the Kentucky court.

In one of the cases cited by opponent it was held that the exercise of the power to stay suits on the principle of comity between courts of different sovereignties is purely discretionary, even where neither court has possession of the res. Jennings-Heywood, etc., v. Houssiere, etc., Oil Co., 119 La. 872, 44 So. 510.

In that case the court held that it saw no good and sufficient reasons for staying the suit in the state court which first exercised its jurisdiction in the premises. The same may be said here.

The testator made and executed his will in this city. In that last solemn act he declared that his domicile had been and was then in the city of New Orleans at his home No. 2639 Carrollton avenue. He appointed as executor and trustee to carry out the wishes expressed in his will a banking institution domiciled in the city where he died.

A large portion of his real estate was situated in said city. The will was admitted to probate in the court of New Orleans. The executor and trustee qualified under the will and proceeded to execute the same and had so executed it, partially, without any question raised by the opponent, who is himself a- resident of the city of New Orleans, as to the domicile of his father or as to his capacity to make a will.

The Code of Practice, art. 929, declares that the plaee in which a succession is opened shall be (1) in the parish where the deceased resided, if he had a domicile or fixed place of residence in this state. (2) In the parish where he left land property, if he had neither domicile nor place of residence in the state. (3) In the parish in which it appears from the inventory that his principal property was situated, if he had property in several parishes. And (4) in the parish where he died, if he had no certain domicile nor any fixed property.

Article 935 of the Civil Code contains practically the same provisions as the article of the Code of Practice.

Under the articles of the Codes cited, it is clear that the civil district court of Orleans parish had jurisdiction to probate the will and to order its execution, at least in so far as concerns the property situated in this state.

However that may be, and whether the actual domicile of the testator was in Louisiana or in Kentucky, the fact remains that he had a residence in this state, that the succession was opened in this state, and jurisdiction having once attached and having been exercised by the courts of this state, all suits to annul such proceedings for any cause properly belong to the court first seized with and exercising jurisdiction.

The legal situation is not altered by the mere fact that the question of domicile and the mental capacity of the testator was first presented to the Kentucky court.

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 361, 170 La. 828, 1930 La. LEXIS 1829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-cotton-la-1930.