Succession of Curtis

109 So. 832, 161 La. 1045, 1926 La. LEXIS 2176
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1926
DocketNo. 27199.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 109 So. 832 (Succession of Curtis) 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 Curtis, 109 So. 832, 161 La. 1045, 1926 La. LEXIS 2176 (La. 1926).

Opinion

BRUNOT, J.

Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis died, leaving an estate consisting of real and personal property. An alleged will was probated, but it was successfully attacked. A suit was then filed in which the title to two pieces of real estate was- involved, both of which were finally decreed to belong to the succession, and the present suit for a partition of the estate' followed. The real issue in this case is whether Mrs. Elizabeth M. Ryder, deceased, was the legitimate daughter of the late Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis.

The admitted facts are that Harriet M. Curtis was married to Michael F. Rogers, and the sole issue of the marriage was Joseph Curtis, the plaintiff in this suit, and Louis A. Curtis, Sr., deceased, the father of Louis A. Curtis, Jr., and Emma Curtis, wife of Paul L. Bechtel, the defendants herein; that Michael F. Rogers obtained a divorce from Harriet M. Curtis, who thereafter assumed her maiden name, obtained the custody of her two sons, the issue of her marriage to Rogers, and reared them under the name of Curtis. Plaintiff alleges that Harriet M. Curtis was married twice; that she was first married to James Sheldon; and that Mrs. Elizabeth Ryder was the sole surviving issue of that marriage; that Mrs. Ryder was the daughter, and one of the forced heirs, of Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis; and that Mrs. Ryder died without issue, but left a last will and testament, in which she named the plaintiff as her universal legatee. The defendants denied that Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis was married twice, or that Mrs. Elizabeth Ryder was her daughter. On these issues the matter was heard, submitted to the court, and a judgment was rendered recognizing Mrs. Ryder as the daughter and one of the heirs of Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis; recognizing the plaintiff as the universal legatee of Mrs. Elizabeth Ryder, and entitled, as such, to the one-third interest in the estate inherited by her; recognizing the plaintiff as the only surviving child of Harriet M. Curtis, and, as such, entitled to one-half of her estate, and recognizing Louis Adolph Curtis and Emma *1047 Curtis, wife of Paul L. Bechtel, as grandchildren of Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis, and, as such, entitled to one-third of the estate. The judgment also sends the heirs into possession in the proportions named, orders a partition of the estate hy licitation, and reserves to the defendants the right to conlpel the plaintiff to account for the rents and revenues of the property of the estate received by him. Prom this judgment the defendants appealed.

A mere reading of the judgment shows that, unless a typographical error was committed in copying the judgment in the transcript, a mistake was made in its apportionment of the estate among the heirs. It gives plaintiff óne-half of the estate, in his own right, one-third as universal legatee of his half sister, and one-third jointly to the two grandchildren. Such a division of the estate is manifestly impossible. It was the evident intention of the court to divide the estate, as the law requires, into three equal parts, and to give to the plaintiff one-third thereof in his own right, and one-third as universal legatee of Mrs. Ryder, and, to the two grandchildren, the remaining one-third. Inasmuch as neither counsel has directed our attention to this part of the judgment, we must assume that the original judgment as rendered in the civil district court apportions the estate correctly. These comments are made merely to save the situation from possible dispute when the property of the succession is finally partitioned.

Defendants contend that the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove the alleged marriage of I-Iarrie.t M. Curtis to James Sheldon, and that Mrs. Elizabeth Ryder is a child of that marriage, because he is claiming a one-third interest in the estate thereunder. Defendants do not review the evidence, but on page 4 of their brief say:

“Joseph Curtis has not proved even the existence of the alleged James Sheldon; he has not proved the celebration or the existence of a marriage between Harriet M, Curtis and James Sheldon; nor has he proved that Elizabeth Ryder -was a child of Harriet M. Curtis as the-issue- of any marriage.”

Defendants offered no testimony whatever except five acts of sale showing that Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis acquired the properties described ip said acts, and one act showing the alienation by her of certain property. On the other hand, Joseph Curtis, the plaintiff, Mrs. Margaret Curtis, Andrew Schmitt, and Philip Wang testified in support of the averments of the petition, and the depositions, of Mrs. C. H. Fletcher, taken under commission, were offered by the plaintiff and admitted as evidence in the case.

Plaintiff testified that he was 61 years-old when this case was heard in 1925; that his mother, Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis, died in 1919 at the age of 92 years; that Mrs. Elizabeth Ryder was 74 years old when she-died; that Mrs. Ryder was the daughter of Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis; that her maiden name was Elizabeth Sophia Sheldon; that she married Ryder some time in the Ws before the recollection of witness; that he does not know when his father and mother were married; that his mother always called Mrs. Ryder daughter, and the latter always called and spo-ke of Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis as Mother or Ma; and that, after Mr. Ryder died, Mrs. Ryder lived with her mother, Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis.

Mrs. Margaret Curtis, wife of the plaintiff, testified that she had known Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis and Mrs. Elizabeth Ryder for about 12 years; that during all of that time Mrs. Ryder lived with her mother, Mrs. Margaret Curtis, and her brother, Joe Curtis; that Mrs. Curtis and Mrs. Ryder treated one another, and addressed one another, as mother and daughter; that Mrs. Curtis called Joe Curtis her son, and Mrs. Ryder and Joe Curtis treated each other as sister and brother; and that they were one family, mother, brother, and sister.

Mr. Andrew Schmitt testified that he had *1049 known Mrs. Harriet M. Curtis for 18 years; that he also knew'Mrs. Ryder; that Mrs. Ryder lived with Mrs. Curtis; and that Mrs. Curtis told witness that Mrs. Ryder was her daughter and Joe Curtis was her son.

Mr. Philip Wang testified that he knew Mrs. Curtis and Mrs. Ryder from some time in 1917, until they died; that he met them at his store and at the house of Mrs. Curtis; that they addressed one another as mother and daughter; and Mrs. Curtis told him Mrs. Ryder was her daughter.

Mi’S. Carrie Hill Fletcher, of West Chelmsford, Mass., whose testimony was taken under commission, sáys, in answer to interrogatory No. 3:

“My mother had a sister named Harriet Curtis, who was born January 21st, 1831.”

In answer to interrogatory No. 4, the witness says:

“I knew of my mother’s sister as Aunt Harriet Sheldon, wife of a Mr. Sheldon, but do not remember his first name.”

Interrogatory No. 7 and the answer of the witness thereto follow:

“Have you any family record of your grandparents and of their children? and, if you have, please have the officer who takes this testimony make a copy thereof and have you sign it, and attach it to your answer.
“Answer: Family record as furnished me by my mother and from records in an old family Bible.”

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 832, 161 La. 1045, 1926 La. LEXIS 2176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-curtis-la-1926.