Succession of Glover

153 So. 496, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 602
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1934
DocketNo. 14794.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 153 So. 496 (Succession of Glover) 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 Glover, 153 So. 496, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 602 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On December 31, 1891, James Washington Glover was married in the city of Bluefields. Republic of Nicaragua, to Helen Olivia Hodg-son who at the time of his death in December, 1931, was still living and who had never been separated or divorced from him.

On May 18, 1909, after the issuance by the clerk of court of Harrison county, Miss., of the necessary license, there was performed a so-called marriage ceremony between the said Glover and Athanise B.radda, who also survived him..

The death of Glover in 1931 occurred at his domicile in Bluefields, Nicaragua, and his legal widow, Mrs. Helen Olivia Hodgson Glover, was recognized by the probate court in that jurisdiction as the surviving widow and sole heir of the said Glover, and was ordered sent into possession of his entire estate "wherever situated.

Thereupon the said legal widow by power of attorney appointed Mabel Springer as her agent and attorney in fact and authorized her to apply for letters of administration in the parish of Orleans and to administer the succession of the said Glover to the extent of the property found within this jurisdiction. ■'

The application of Mabel Springer for letters of administration was opposed by Athanise Bradda on the ground that the latter was the legal widow of Glover and as such was possessed of superior right to the appointment. This opposition was dismissed and' the applicant thereupon qualified as administra-trix.

An inventory showed that there was within this jurisdiction as the property of the succession the sum of $1,250.83, being cash in the savings department of a bank in this city.

The administratrix thereupon filed a final *497 account in which she proposed, after payment of the succession debts and legal expenses, to pay to the legal widow, Helen Olivia Hodgson Glover, the balance of the fund, one-half as widow in community and the other one-half as legal heir.

To this account Athanise Bradda filed opposition, and it is from the dismissal of this opposition that the matter is now before us on appeal.

The opposition is in alternative form, opponent claiming first as putative wife in community that she is entitled to' one-half of the fund which is within this jurisdiction and, in the alternative, that if she be not entitled as putative widow in community then that she is entitled to one-half as a “creditor” of the estate, asserting that the fund resulted from the joint efforts of herself and the said Glover in commercial ventures in which they were for many years engaged and into which ventures certain separate funds belonging to her are alleged to have been invested.

We first consider the claim of the opponent that, as a putative widow in community, she is entitled to one-half -of the fund left in bank in the name of Glover. In determining whether in a particular situation a person has acted in good faith it is always of assistance to first investigate the evidence which throws light upon the question of the veracity of the person whose good faith is sought to be impugned. Here we find that in most important details statements made by the opponent have been conclusively shown to be totally false. In the first place, she denied that prior to the performance of the ceremony of marriage between herself and Glover she had lived with him in concubinage. The evidence shows conclusively that for some time in Blue-fields, prior to the time at which they came to the United States, they had lived together in open concubinage to the knowledge of all of their acquaintances there; so that in this particular she is shown to have deliberately testified falsely.

We next examine the evidence with reference to her having contributed to the so-called partnership the proceeds of the sale of certain separate property which she formerly owned in Biloxi, Miss., and we find that, although she claims she contributed in 1909 $1,000, which she had received from the sale of that property, as a matter of fact, the deed itself shows that, the property was not sold until 1921, or 12 years later. Here again her misstatement could not have been due to unintentional error.

Furthermore, in contending that she eon-tributed to the so-called partnership more liberally than did Glover, she testified that when Glover came to the United States he had with him very little money. In fact, as she puts it, “I don’t think he had over $500. I will be honest with you I don’t think he had over that.” The evidence leaves no room for doubt that prior to the time he left Bluefields Glover had been engaged in a lucrative business and had done well and when he came to the United States he had transferred to his credit in this country $5,000 in American money and nearly 800 pounds in English money. The latter, as is well known, would have represented nearly $4,000 in American money, so that at the time at which opponent states Glover was possessed of less than $500 he, in fact, owned and had with him nearly $9,000.

We refer to this evidence merely as tending to show that the opponent is unworthy of belief, and that therefore her statement that she acted in good faith when she married Glover need not be taken at its face value.

But as a matter of law the testimony of opponent herself destroys her claim for recognition as a putative widow in community. She admits that when she was married to Glover in Biloxi, Miss., she well knew that he had already been married and that his first wife was still living. She states that Glover told her that he had been divorced from his first wife, but she admits that she made no further inquiry, “because.I taken his word for it.”

She had herself been to Bluefields and had lived there for months and had many acquaintances find friends in that city. She did not marry Glover until nearly a year after he had first told her of his fictitious divorce and, during that time, she could easily have communicated with friends in Bluefields and could have learned the truth about Glover’s marital status. Her failure to do this and her reliance upon the unverified statement of Glover destroys her contention that she married him in the bona fide belief that there was no impediment and bars her claim to share his estate as a putative widow in community.

The codal article (Civ. Code, art. 117), upon which her claim in this regard was based, requires that the marriage shall have “been contracted in good-faith.”

In Succession of Thomas, 144 La. 25, 80 So. 186, 188, is found a case in which it is claimed that a marriage, though null, had boon entered into in good faith. The Supreme Court with reference to the so-called putative wife, said: “She knew Mr. Thomas’ brother, relatives, and friends, and she could have easily *498 found out Ms status in society, if she had chosen to do so.”

In a; syllabus written by the court in that case, it is said that: “Good faith will not be presumed on the part of a mature woman who enters into a marriage with a man whom she knows to be already married, when she has no evidence of a divorce beyond the assertion of the man whom she says she hasi married.”

As the Supreme Court pointed out in Succession of Taylor, 39 La. Ann. 823, 2 So.

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153 So. 496, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-glover-lactapp-1934.