Succession of Fields

62 So. 2d 495, 222 La. 310, 1952 La. LEXIS 1335
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1952
Docket40662
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 62 So. 2d 495 (Succession of Fields) 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 Fields, 62 So. 2d 495, 222 La. 310, 1952 La. LEXIS 1335 (La. 1952).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

This is a suit brought to set aside an ex parte judgment rendered in the district court of East Baton Rouge Parish on the petition of an alleged widow who was thereunder so recognized and placed in possession of all of the property of the decedent. In her petition to be recognized, Harriet Vaughn Fields had alleged that she was married to Sam Fields on January 26, 1944; that he died intestate on August 17, 1946; that no children were born of their marriage and that both his parents had predeceased him by several years. As surviving widow she claimed to be entitled to-one-half interest in all the property belonging to the community which had existed between them and to the other half as his.sole and only heir.

On September 10, 1947, about five months, after the judgment of court which recognized her claim had been rendered, the present proceeding was instituted by Mary Eliza Smith Fields, Vernel Fields and Nathaniel Fields. In their petition it is alleged Mary Eliza Smith Fields was married to Sam Fields on December 4, 1904,. that they were never divorced nor legally separated and that she is the surviving *315 ■widow in community of th'e said decedent. It is further averred that Vernon Fields and Nathaniel Fields are her children, born during her marriage to Sam Fields, and they are therefore his sole and only heirs.

It is then averred that the ex parte .judgment -recognizing Harriet Vaughn Fields as widow in community and placing her in possession of the property left by the decedent was procured through fraud since the said Harriet Vaughn Fields well knew at the time that the said decedent had been previously married and never divorced, and should be declared of no force or effect.

In the petition of these parties it is shown that besides certain real estate consisting of two lots of improved property in the Third Ward of East Baton Rouge Parish, the decedent’s estate consisted of the sum of $77.62 due him by the Trustees of the Thrift Fund of Employees Thrift Plan, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey; the sum of $95 being the death benefit value held by the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New-York, for death benefit value of Group Annuities purchased by him under an employees’ thrift plan; the sum of $73.50 representing unpaid wages due decedent by the Standard Oil Company ■of New Jersey.

In addition it is alleged that Harriet Vaughn Fields has received from the Standard Oil Company $822, being death benefits payable to the widow of Sam Fields of which Mary Eliza Smith Fields is the true 'and lawful owner by reason of her status as legal widow and that the said Harriet Vaughn Fields has also received the sum of $2,000 from Equitable Life Assurance Society, being the proceeds of a Group Annuity insurance policy taken by the decedent, Sani Fields, and made payable to his widow, of which therefore Mary Eliza Smith Fields is the true and lawful owner by reason of her status as legal widow.

The petition also sets out that Harriet Vaughn Fields has been collecting certain rents from property belonging to decedent’s estate for which she is indebted to petitioners as well as for the rent she owes herself for having occupied one of the houses belonging to the estate of the decedent since his death and finally that'all of the furniture situated in the said-house belongs to his succession and that petitioners are the rightful owners thereof.

The prayer of the petition is for the annulment of the ex parte judgment recognizing Harriet Vaughn Fields as widow in community and as sole heir of the decedent and entitled as such to the property of his estate; that Mary Eliza Smith Fields be recognized as the decedent’s surviving spouse in community and that Vernel and Nathaniel Fields be recognized as his sole heirs. Further petitioners pray that Mary Eliza Smith Fields be sent and placed in possession of all the property of decedent’s estate in the proportion of an undivided %o, Vernel Fields and Nathaniel Fields in the proportion of an undivided %o each and their attorneys, A. J. Spedale and David E. *317 Cooley, an undivided %o under the contract of employment entered into with them. Judgment is also prayed for against Harriet Vaughn Fields, in favor of Mary Eliza Smith Fields and Spedale and Cooley, her attorneys, for the proceeds of the death benefits and insurance received by the said Harriet Vaughn Fields from the Standard Oil Company and the rents received and due by her.

Harriet Vaughn Fields answered the petition denying that Mary Eliza Smith was ever married to Sam Fields and that she is therefore his widow and surviving spouse in community entitled to any property left by him. She then avers that she was lawfully married to Sam Fields on'January 26, 1944 and they lived continuously as man and wife until his death. That all the property left by him was community property acquired during their marriage. ' In the alternative she alleges that if it should he held that Mary Eliza Smith was lawfully married to Sam Fields and never divorced from him and that Vernel and Nathaniel Fields are children of such marriage, that in contracting her marriage with Sam Fields she did so in good faith and' the said marriage therefore produced its civil effects in her favor and she is entitled to be recognized as the owner of an undivided one-half of all the property accumulated during the community of acquets and gains which existed between them.

On the issues as thus made up, trial was had in the district court and, by judgment entered on July 18, 1949, plaintiff’s suit was dismissed as of nonsuit, the trial judge stating that though a certified copy of a marriage license issued by the Clerk.of Court of East Feliciana Parish December 13, 1904, authorizing the marriage of Sam Fields and Mary Eliza Smith was produced, there was no return showing that the marriage was actually performed and that whereas parol evidence was admissible to show that the marriage took place, the testimony offered in proof of said marriage fell short of convincing him that it was performed. The dismissal as of nonsuit was rendered in order to allow plaintiffs to obtain convincing proof of the marriage which the judge had found lacking.

Suit was re-instituted on July 20, 1949, and the testimony and offerings produced on the original trial were re-offered in addition to the testimony of two witnesses and the deposition of a third witness. Judgment was then rendered on December 4, 1951, dismissing plaintiff’s suit, the district judge stating that plaintiffs had failed to prove the allegations of their petition. The plaintiffs thereupon took this appeal.

As indicated in the foregoing statement of the case, the issues are whether plaintiffs have shown a celebration of the marriage between decedent Sam Fields, and plaintiff, Mary Eliza Smith, and .if so, whether Harriet Vaughn Fields, the defendant, was in good faith in her marriage to him; and further, whether plaintiffs can proceed directly against defendant to recov *319 er the proceeds of the life insurance received by her, or whether their action should be against the insurance company. It can be stated at this time that the demand for the proceeds of the death benefit in the sum of $822 also received by the defendant, has been abandoned.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 2d 495, 222 La. 310, 1952 La. LEXIS 1335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-fields-la-1952.