Succession of Dykes

258 So. 2d 606
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1972
Docket8673
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 258 So. 2d 606 (Succession of Dykes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Dykes, 258 So. 2d 606 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

258 So.2d 606 (1972)

Succession of Willie Hardy DYKES.

No. 8673.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

January 31, 1972.
Rehearing Denied March 22, 1972.
Writs Refused April 13, 1972.

*607 L. B. Ponder, Jr., of Ponder & Ponder, Amite, and Burrell J. Carter, Greensburg, for appellants W. E. Dykes, Individually and as Administrator of the Succession of W. H. Dykes & H. T. Dykes.

Joseph H. Simpson, of Schilling & Simpson, Amite, for plaintiff-appellants-appellees Garfield Dykes.

Before LOTTINGER, SARTAIN and ELLIS, JJ.

SARTAIN, Judge.

Willie Hardy Dykes, hereinafter referred to as W. H. Dykes, died testate on June 23, 1969. He had no children and was predeceased by his parents and his first wife. He was divorced from his second wife. His will provided for a particular legacy of his interest in certain immovable property in favor of two nephews, W. E. Dykes and H. T. Dykes, the sons of a predeceased brother, and provided that the remainder of his estate would go to his first wife, who, however, died after the will was executed.

W. H. Dykes's legal heirs included five surviving brothers and sisters and the children, or others claiming through them, of a predeceased brother and sister. One of the nephews, W. E. Dykes, was appointed administrator of the succession with the consent of the other heirs.

This suit was brought by the deceased's five brothers and sisters and others claiming through the predeceased sister against W. E. Dykes, individually and as administrator, and against his brother, H. T. Dykes, individually. It was alleged that W. E. Dykes had failed to include in the inventory and tableau of distribution a certain sum of cash and other funds on deposit in three banking institutions, which allegedly belonged to the succession. It was further alleged that W. E. Dykes had converted the sum of cash and the funds from two of the bank accounts to his own use and that he had aided his brother, H. T. Dykes, in converting the funds in the third bank account to the latter's own use. Plaintiffs prayed for the return of all such *608 funds to the succession, for the removal of W. E. Dykes as administrator and for the imposition on him of the statutory penalty of twenty percent, under La.C.C.P. Art. 3222, based on the funds allegedly concealed or mismanaged.

The defendants answered that the sum of cash and the funds in the bank accounts belonged to them as a result of donations inter vivos made by the deceased, either as manual donations or as remunerative donations for services allegedly rendered. Both in support of the claim of remunerative donations and as an independent claim, the defendants alleged that they had performed certain valuable services for the deceased and were entitled to reimbursement and compensation for such services on a quantum meruit basis. Defendant W. E. Dykes also reconvened for damages to his character and reputation, alleging that certain allegations made by the plaintiffs against him in his position as administrator were donation to Mrs. W. E. Dykes was perfectdefamatory.

The trial judge found that the sum of $1,400.00 in cash had been given by the deceased to a Mrs. Stone with instructions to give it to Mrs. W. E. Dykes and that Mrs. Stone had delivered it. The court found that, since cash may be the subject of a manual donation, under La.C.C. art. 1539, the donation to Mrs. W. E. Dykes was perfected and the $1,400.00 was properly excluded from the succession inventory. We agree that there was clearly a donative intent, a divestiture of possession and control of the cash by W. H. Dykes and actual delivery to and acceptance by Mrs. W. E. Dykes. We affirm that portion of the judgment.

Two of the three bank accounts were in the names of "W. H. Dykes or W. E. Dykes" and the third was in the names of "W. H. Dykes or H. T. Dykes". The trial judge ruled that accounts such as these, which were actually a savings account, a time deposit open account and a homestead stock certificate or full paid stock account, were not subject to a manual donation, inasmuch as they are considered incorporeal rights and, under La.C.C. 1539, manual donations are restricted to corporeal movables. The trial judge ordered the defendants to return those funds to the succession. We also affirm that portion of the judgment.

The trial judge did allow a portion of the defendants' claims for compensation for expenses incurred on behalf of the deceased on a quantum meruit basis. We find that the parol evidence by which the defendants attempted to prove those claims and on which the trial judge based the awards was legally inadmissible and we will reverse that portion of the judgment in order to deny those claims.

Finally, the trial judge rejected, without assigning reasons therefor, the plaintiffs' prayer for the removal of W. E. Dykes as administrator, for the forfeiture of his fee and for the imposition on him of the statutory penalty and also dismissed the reconventional demand of W. E. Dykes. In our view, the expense and inconvenience of this litigation and the resulting delays in settling this succession have all resulted from the actions of W. E. Dykes as administrator. For reasons hereinafter stated, it is our opinion that he should be removed from office and be held personally responsible for his attorneys' fees in these proceedings. Further, his fee as administrator should be forfeited to the succession.

The plaintiffs and the defendants have appealed. The plaintiffs reurge that the $1,400.00 cash should not have been declared a manual donation, that the awards made to the defendants on the basis of quantum meruit were excessive, and that the administrator should have been removed and penalized. The defendants contend that the funds in the three bank accounts had been donated to them by W. H. Dykes and that the awards to them on the basis of quantum meruit were inadequate; W. E. Dykes reurges his reconventional demand for damages on the ground of defamation.

*609 With respect to the $1,400.00 in cash, it is plaintiffs' contention that W. H. Dykes gave it only for the purpose of paying his last expenses and not as a gift or pure gratuity. Conceding that this is true, the transfer would still have been valid as an onerous donation. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Dykes testified, and it was either corroborated or not refuted by all other witnesses, that they used the money to pay off the doctor bills, hospital bills, funeral expenses and miscellaneous bills which were unpaid at the time of W. H. Dykes' death. Indeed, no such debts or expenses were listed on the tableau of distribution. Whatever charges may have been imposed, they were fulfilled by the donees. Even if the $1,400.00 exceeded by one-half the amount of the last expenses, the balance, being cash, would still be susceptible of a manual gift. See La.C.C. Arts. 1524, 1526 and 1539.

At the time of the death of W. H. Dykes, the following deposits existed:

(a) Guaranty Bank and Trust Company, Amite, La., Time Deposit Open Account Certificate No. 346 dated December 14, 1968, in the amount of $10,362.29. This certificate was in the names of "W. H. Dykes or H. T. Dykes" and bore annual interest at the rate of 5%. The certificate was in the possession of W. E. Dykes at the time of W. H. Dykes' death and was later given to H. T. Dykes who cashed it.
(b) Community State Bank, Independence, La., Savings Account No. 2004046 in the names of "W. H. Dykes or W. E. Dykes". The exact amount at the time of death was not ascertained; however, on January 2, 1970, W. E.

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Bluebook (online)
258 So. 2d 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-dykes-lactapp-1972.