Succession of Dugas

39 So. 2d 750, 215 La. 13, 1949 La. LEXIS 921
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 14, 1949
DocketNo. 38920.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 So. 2d 750 (Succession of Dugas) 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 Dugas, 39 So. 2d 750, 215 La. 13, 1949 La. LEXIS 921 (La. 1949).

Opinions

FOURNET, Justice.

This case was previously before us on an appeal taken from the judgment of the district court dismissing the appellant’s opposition to the final account filed in the Succession of Erazie Dugas, as well as the opponent’s claim as an heir to a fourth of the decedent’s estate, but the amount involved being less than $2,000 we transferred the matter to the court of appropriate jurisdiction, the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit. Succession of Dugas, 211 La. 544, 30 So.2d 425. The matter is now before us for a review of that court’s affirmation of the lower court judgment, Succession of Dugas, La.App., 33 So.2d 133, on a writ óf certiorari granted the opponent.

It appears that Erazie Dugas, a deaf mute, died intestate on April 10, 1943, leaving an estate consisting of a small tract of land that was appraised at $1,200 but brought $1,500 at the subsequent sale ordered by the court. She left surviving her as heirs the children of two pre-deceased brothers and two sisters, Mrs. Cecile D. Dugas and Mrs. Amelie Dugas Breaux. The former, as administratrix of the succession, filed a final account showing as the only asset the $1,500 received from the sale of the property, which amount she proposed to dispose of by paying funeral debts amounting to $95.32 and legal charges of $212, with the remainder to herself as a creditor of the succession in the amount of $4,291, compensation due for the care, maintenance, and custody of the decedent, all in accordance with the statement filed when she obtained the court’s order for the sale of the property, which statement shows the claim covers the period from March 1, 1926, to April 10, 1943, at the rate of $1 per day, or a total of $6,246. To this amount she added a claim for $170 for *17 taxes and maintenance of the property for 17 years, aggregating in all a sum of $6,-416, less a credit of $2,125.

After the exceptions of vagueness to the claim of the administratrix had been overruled, Mrs. Amelie Dugas Breaux, by way of opposition, sought to recover a fourth of the estate, that is, the sum of $298.17, claiming the amount listed by the adminis-tratrix was not due and owing. Before judgment was rendered the claimant died and she was succeeded in this litigation by Dumas A. Dugas, appointed by the court as the administrator of her estate and against whom the proceedings were continued. There was judgment in the lower court dismissing the opposition.

Counsel for the opponent, invoking the rule of law relative to services rendered pursuant to a procuration or mandate as set out in Article 2991 of the Revised Civil Code, argued in the courts below, as he does here, that providing a person with board, lodging, and maintenance, without any contract either express or implied, is presumed to be gratuitous; in any event, that the claim was not legally proved as required by Act 207 of 1906, as amended by Act 11 of 1926.

The learned trial judge in disposing of the first issue in a carefully considered and well-reasoned opinion concluded the ad-ministratrix was entitled to recover in quantum meruit for the services she rendered the decedent. It was his opinion that one in penurious circumstances, as was the claimant, barely eking an existence from the soil in a section frequently subjected to overflow, in assuming the additional burden of caring for a sister who was not only a deaf mute but was, during the major portion of the 17 years she lived with the claimant, totally blind, requiring constant supervision and care and calling for a devotion seldom encountered between sisters, was entitled to compensation for such services out of the estate of the decedent. He divided the claim into two categories, the first for the personal services rendered the decedent and the second for her board and lodging. Finding the former subject to the prescription of one year under Article 3534 of the Revised Civil Code and the latter subject to the prescription of ten years under Article 3544, he allowed recovery accordingly and, after fixing their value at 250 a day for services and 500 a day for board and lodging, he reduced the claim from $4,291 to $1,916.25. However, even as reduced, the estate of the decedent was insufficient to liquidate this amount and there was, therefore, nothing to be divided with the opponent. In disposing of the second issue, he concluded the law requiring proof of claims of this nature against a deceased person, when such claims are filed more than a year after death, had no application because “it should be considered that the claim was filed December 10, 1943, when the administratrix attached a list of debts to her petition seeking an order, for the sale of the property of the succession. *19 This was less than one year from the death of the deceased, as she died April 10, 1943.” He therefore dismissed the opposition.

The Court of Appeal in affirming this judgment reasoned that the law of procuration and mandate as found in Article 2991 of the Revised Civil Code has no application in this case since the condition under which the services were rendered in the several cases relied on by the opponent were not similar to the one now being considered but were, rather, more of the same nature as those rendered in the case of Muse v. Muse, La.App., 33 So.2d 128, and ■concluded'the principle of law announced by this court in the case of Latour v. Guil-lory, 134 La. 332, 64 So. 130, is more appropriate to the facts of the case. In that case, although the court refused the claim on the facts — the son-in-law advancing the claim was actually residing with the deceased father-in-law who had been enjoying the usufruct of the family homestead through the common consent of all of the children — pointed out that the plaintiff, one of the children against whom the claim for board and lodging for the deceased was made, was under no greater obligation to support his father than any of the other five children, observing: “Where there are a number of children, the obligation to maintain the father is solidary. The richest is not Obliged to contribute more than the'others to the discharge of the common debt.” [33 So.2d 131] The Court of Appeal, applying this principle of law to the facts of this case, reasoned that “Where one of them is afflicted as was the decedent in this case and there are more than one of the others who can render the services required, the obligation should not fall on the shoulders of only one of them. If the others let one discharge it alone that one should have recourse against the estate of the decedent if the estate is shown to be solvent.” [33 So.2d 135]

While an examination of the jurisprudence on this subject shows that claims made by children of a deceased parent for services rendered the parent during his lifetime are presumed to be gratuitous unless rendered pursuant to a contract, express or implied, and recovery therefore cannot be had — particularly when the claim is for furnishing these services to parents in necessitous circumstances — as the children are only fulfilling the obligation imposed upon them by the express provisions of Article 229 of the Revised Civil Code. Succession of Guidry, 40 La.Ann. 671, 4 So. 893. But where there is more than one child, this court has held that inasmuch as this obligation is imposed upon all of the children equally, recovery may be had for the services rendered the parent by one of the children against the other children, who can be made to contribute their share rata-bly, and the claimant may recover this amount from the succession of the deceased parent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 So. 2d 750, 215 La. 13, 1949 La. LEXIS 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-dugas-la-1949.