Succession of Gaines

38 La. Ann. 123
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1886
DocketNo. 9450
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 38 La. Ann. 123 (Succession of Gaines) 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 Gaines, 38 La. Ann. 123 (La. 1886).

Opinions

The opinion oí' the Court was delivered by

Roché, J.

On the 12th of January, 1885, Mrs. Marie P. Evans presented for probate, as the olographic will of the deceased, the following instrument:

“New Orleans, January 8, 1885. — I, Myra Clark Gaines, being of sound mind, bequeath to my excellent friend, Mrs. Julietta Perkins, as a token of my esteem and love, that part of my estate known as the Fuentes property, and to my friend, Mrs. Marie P. Evans, one-third of the remainder of my entire estate, the balance to be divided equally between my grandchildren. I appoint Mrs. Marie P. Evans, my testamentary executrix and detainer of my entire estate, without, bond.”

(Signed) “MYRA CLARK GAINES.”

In connection therewith, she exhibited another document, in the shape of a letter, and which reads as follows:

“ Confidential. — Washington, D. C. August 23, 1884.

“ My dear Mrs. Evans — I have been very unwell but am quite well' again. I am pleased to learn the news of the bank suit, but feel most anxious about your success. With love, I bequeath to your excellent mother that portion of my estate known as the Fuentes property; and to you, dear Mary, one-third of the remainder of my whole estate. As yon are the friend I trust above all others, I appoint you my testamentary executrix and detainer of my entire estate, without bond. With love to your excellent mother and the kindest regards to to your husband,

I am ever your friend,

MYRA CLARK GAINES..

“Excuse this scrawl, my hand trembles and I am very weak.

“Adieu again, MYRA.”

To these two documents, she supplemented another instrument, indicating similar testamentary dispositions, and which is in the following words:

Washington, D. C., November 10, 1881.

[126]*126“ I, Myra Clark Gaines, bequeath, in this, one-third of my estate to Mrs. Marie P. Evans, and my Fuentes estate to her mother, Mrs. Perkins, in token of my love for them.

“I, Myra Clark Gaines, sign the above most heartily.

(Signed) “MYRA CLARK GAINES.

“New Orleans, December 18, 1884.”

On the same day, the court was asked to probate a will in nuncupative form under private signature, purporting to have been executed by the deceased Myra Clark Gaines on the 5th of January, 1885. This will was presented by W. H. Wilder and I. Y. Christmas, who had 'been therein appointed as executors, and who, on the same day, resisted and opposed the probate of the will presented by Mrs. Evans on the ground that it was not a genuine will written by Mrs. Gaines.

Probate of the nuncupative will of the 5th of January, was resisted by Mrs. Evans on the ground that it had been superceded by the will ■of January 8, and of non-observance of legal formalities.

Further opposition was made to the alleged will of January 8, by I. Y. Christmas in his capacity of natural tutor of his children, who ■are the grandchildren and heirs at law of the deceased.

By agreement of counsel, the issues presented under these several pleadings, were tried and determined together. The result was a judgment which rejected the nuncupation will of January 5, as defective in form ; and decreed that the instrument purporting to be the ■olographic will of Mrs. Gaines, was fraudulent and forged, and not ■entitled to probate as a will.

No appeal was taken from the judgment in so far as it annuls the nuncupative will, hence that question is eliminated from the present discussion.

This appeal is prosecuted by Mrs. Evans, and it presents the question of the validity of the alleged will of January 8, 1885.

The undisputed facts of the case are as follows:

Mrs. Myra Clark Gaines died in the city of New Orleans, on Saturday the 9th of January, 1885, at two. minutes past eleven o’clock at night, at the age of 78 years, after a lingering illness, (capillary broucliites), of twelve days, at the house of L. L. Davis, No. 150 'Thalia street.

Her disease progressed steadily, without any reaction, her condition growing worse day after day, until death ensued.

During her illness, she was attended to and nursed by Mrs. Virginia Davis, the wife of L. L. Davis, by the latter’s niece named Adolphine [127]*127Case, by Mrs. I. M. Walsh, a near neighbor and a relative of Mrs. Davis, and by a Mrs. Letitia Bringier Gonzales, a life-long friend of Mrs. Gaines, who became afterwards Mrs. Bradley. Her physician was Doctor W. H. Holcomb, from whose testimony it appears that on the 5th of January, 1885, Mrs. Gaines was unable, through weakness and exhaustion, to sign her name to the will made on that day, and that in order to affix her cross thereto she required his assistance to hold and guide her hand.

It also appears that, between that day and the day of her death, Mrs. Gaines signed several documents in the presence of witnesses, ■and that in each case she made her cross with the assistance of some ■one of the persons present, after declaring that she was too weak to sign her name. '

All other facts connected with the case are disputed and very warmly contested. Hence the truth had to be searched through a mass of conflicting testimony, composing an enormous record, and by means of comparison of the hand-writing in the three documents which are hereinabove transcribed, with the hand writing admitted to be that of Mrs. Gaines, in some eighty documents, mainly letters which, by consent of counsel, have been brought up in their original form.

In the performance of our painful task, we have divided the subject into four different branches of inquiry:

1. The alleged inability of Mrs. Gaines, on January 8, 1885, to execute in whole or in part, the will of that date, on account of her great weakness and exhaustion, through sickness, and of other surrounding circumstances.

2. The manner by which Mrs. Evans claimed to have obtained possession of said will.

3. The alleged improbability of the dispositions contained in said will.

4. The genuineness or forgery of the hand writing of the body and of the signature of said will, and of the two documents presented therewith.

We must, however, first lay down the rules by which our courts should be guided in the investigation of such cases.

We note in this connection that appellant’s counsel urge the rule that after proof of the signature 'of the testator by at least two credible witnesses, under the requirements of Article 1655 of the Civil Code, the burden of proof is on the party who opposes the execution ■of the olographic will.

[128]*128We understand tliat rule to apply to the probate of a-will which is not opposed, as a part of the mortuary proceedings looking to the settlement of the succession of the deceased. When the olographic will is presented and due proof is administered of the genuineness •of the testator’s hand-writing and signature, the will is ordered to be-probated and executed. If thereafter any party seeks to annul or sot aside the will on any legal grounds, he is met by these preliminary proceedings which have established thejprima/acie validity of the will, and under the effect of which he is charged with the burden of proof in support of his attack.

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Bluebook (online)
38 La. Ann. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-gaines-la-1886.