Succession of Gaudinse

175 So. 595, 187 La. 844, 1937 La. LEXIS 1218
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 21, 1937
DocketNo. 34321.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 175 So. 595 (Succession of Gaudinse) 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 Gaudinse, 175 So. 595, 187 La. 844, 1937 La. LEXIS 1218 (La. 1937).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice,

On July 5, 1933, Joseph Gaudinse (colored) died, intestate at his domicile in the city of New Orleans. In February 1935, Jules Gaudinse, claiming that he was the brother of the deceased, made application to be 'appointed administrator of the estate, alleging that the deceased died without having been married and without any heir other than himself. After having been appointed and duly qualified as administrator of the succession, he obtained an • order from court to sell the immovable property belonging to the estate for the purpose of paying the debts.

While the property was being advertised for sale, Marguerite Maximillian Gaudinse intervened, alleging that she was the surviving widow in community of the deceased, having been married to him in the year 1896. She was joined in the petition by her five children, who claimed to be the surviving legitimate offspring of the marriage. They prayed that the order of sale be revoked; that the administrator be ordered to file an account of his gestión; and that they be recognized as the widow in community and the forced heirs of the deceased, respectively, and placed in possession of his estate.

There was judgment in favor of the interveners, as prayed for, and the administrator has appealed.

On the trial of the case on the merits, the interveners sought to prove the marriage by secondary evidence, stating that the record of the marriage was unavailable. Counsel for the administrator objected to the alleged widow’s testimony on the ground that parol evidence is incompetent to prove marriage until it is first shown that there was a record'of the marriage and that it had been lost or destroyed and cam not be produced. The obj ection was overruled by the court, with the understanding that it would be equally applicable to all similar evidence. She then testified that in the year- 1896, when she was 14 or 15 years of age, because her parents objected to her marriage, she eloped with the de *847 ceased and went to Mississippi by train; where she was married to him by a minister; that she could not remember’the date or place of the marriage because it took place so many years ago when she was a mere girl, at a place she had never been before, and nothing occurred since then to impress upon her memory the date and place of the ceremony; that she returned to the home of her parents, where she lived with her husband as his wife until his death in July, 1933; that the marriage certificate was given to her husband after the marriage by the minister and he kept it in a small cotton sack with other valuables; that this sack and its contents were stolen by thieves who burglarized their home.one night; that the certificate was similar to the one her daughter has; and that there were nine children born of the marriage, four of whom died in infancy, the other five surviving children being the interveners herein. She corroborated her testimony by producing baptismal certificates dated from 1897 through 1919 from the registry of the St. Louis Cathedral, the St. Augustine Church and -the Holy Redeemer Church, all located in New Orleans, showing that each of her five children were batized as the children “of Joseph Gaudinse and his wife, Marguerite Maximillian.” She stated that she is the Marguerite Maximillian named in the baptismal certificates and that the Joseph Gaudinse named therein is the deceased. She also produced certificates showing that Holy Communion was received by the children of Joseph Gaudinse and Marguerite Maximillian, and that they were confirmed by the Catholic Church.

The assistant priest and archivist of the St. Louis Cathedral testified that those certificates produced by the alleged widow were true and correct certificates from the baptismal records of that Church; that under the Canon Law of the church and the rules of the St. Louis Cathedral, when children are presented for baptism, the priest performing the ceremony inquires if the parents are married; that, if they are not married, the priest will marry them, unless there is some civil or ecclesiastical impediment;- that if the parents are not married and cannot be married, the baptismal records are marked with the notation “natural child”; that the baptismal records concerning these children bore no such inscription; that the marriage records of the St. Louis Cathedral contain no record of the marriage of Joseph Gaudinse and Marguerite Maximillian; that the absence of such a record and the notation of “natural child” from the baptismal records created a strong presumption that the parents were legally married before the first baptism was performed at the Catholic Church.

The alleged widow also corroborated her testimony by producing seven different certified copies of authentic acts of sale, all signed by the deceased, whereby he acquired the real estate forming a part of his estate, bearing the respective dates of July 25, 1912, January 20, 1923, February 17, 1923, November 2, 1923, October 1, 1926, and May 25, 1928. All of these acts were executed before different notaries and con.tained the recital that Joseph Gaudinse “under oath, declared that he was married but once and then to Marguerite Maximil *849 lian, with whom he is living and residing in this City.”

She testified that it was through their joint efforts and earnings during the marriage that this property was ■ acquired.

The cashier and secretary-treasurer of two building and loan associations in New Orleans testified that Olga Gaudinse, one of the interveners and the daughter of Joseph Gaudinse, had for many years called at their respective offices to make payments on account of the real estate which deceased was purchasing through their association, and that this property is included in the inventory herein.

The alleged widow also corroborated her testimony by exhibiting a membership certificate of the New Orleans Undertaking Company, issued to Joseph Gaudinse for death benefits, dated July 19, 1909, reciting the names of his children, who had been born and were living at that time, and who are some of the interveners herein.

Several neighbors testified that they knew the deceased before his marriage; that he introduced Marguerite Maximillian to them in New Orleans shortly after their marriage, as his wife'; that the parties lived together as husband and wife for nearly 35 years, publicly and openly; that there was born to them nine children, five of whom they reared, supported, and educated; that Joseph Gaudinse gave them his name and introduced them in the community generally as the offspring of his marriage; and that five of the interveners herein are those chlidren.

These five interveners, claiming to he legitimate children and heirs of the deceased, testified that they lived with their parents, Marguerite Maximillian and Joseph Gaudinse, and were always considered and introduced as the offspring of the marriage-, until the latter’s death in 1933; and that they had seen the marriage certificate and had heard their parents state that it had been stolen.

The evidence of the administrator consisted of the testimony of four witnesses. One witness stated that she. was 68 years of age and had lived with the deceased as his common-law wife from 1883 to 1893; that she bore him a child, and that she had never heard of the deceased being married. Another woman corroborated this witness.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Lytell v. LOUISIANA STATE BOARD OF HEALTH THROUGH REIN
153 So. 2d 498 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Succession of Gaines
79 So. 2d 322 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1955)
Patin v. T. L. James Co.
42 So. 2d 304 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1949)
Cameron v. Rowland.
23 So. 2d 285 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 So. 595, 187 La. 844, 1937 La. LEXIS 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-gaudinse-la-1937.