Succession of Heckert

160 So. 2d 375
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1964
Docket1200
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 So. 2d 375 (Succession of Heckert) 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 Heckert, 160 So. 2d 375 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

160 So.2d 375 (1964)

Succession of John Earl HECKERT.

No. 1200.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 3, 1964.

*376 Titche & McDermott, New Orleans, for plaintiffs and appellees.

Hugh M. Wilkinson, New Orleans, for defendant and appellant.

Before McBRIDE, YARRUT and HALL, JJ.

McBRIDE, Judge.

John Earl Heckert and Anna I. Buch were married in 1912 and two children were born of the marriage, viz., John E. Heckert, Jr. and Mrs. Isabelle L. Heckert Hardie. The two children were of the full age of majority when their mother died intestate on July 24, 1938; her succession was opened in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, Docket No. 227-393; as per judgment therein rendered and signed August 8, 1938, Heckert was recognized as decedent's surviving husband in community and as such was sent into possession as owner of an undivided one-half interest in 710 shares of the capital stock of S. H. Kress and Company belonging to the community as represented by eight certain certificates issued therefor standing in his name, said certificates being described by number in the judgment; the two children were recognized as the sole heirs of their mother and sent into possession of the other undivided one-half of said shares, subject to the usufruct of their father thereon. Notwithstanding the change of ownership decreed by the judgment of possession, *377 the stock certificates remained as originally issued in Heckert's name and possession and he collected the dividends.

Besides the 710 shares inventoried in the wife's succession, there were 300 other shares of the Kress stock which belonged to the community represented by three certificates for 100 shares each standing in Heckert's name. These shares, for some unknown reason, were not mentioned in the succession proceedings. However, Heckert likewise had possession of the uninventoried certificates and collected the dividends. Of course, the two children acquired an undivided one-half naked ownership in said 300 shares immediately upon the death of their mother under the doctrine of le mort saisit le vif. LSA-C.C. arts. 940, 941.

John Earl Heckert married his second wife, Eunice Knobloch, on August 4, 1939, in New York; it was then that his usufruct on the property derived by his children from the first wife's succession terminated by the operation of law. See LSA-C.C. art. 916. Heckert made no attempt to deliver to his children their portion of the 1010 shares of Kress stock on which his usufruct had existed, and the children made no demand on him therefor, but were content to permit him to retain possession of the certificates and to collect dividends.

Heckert departed this life on March 3, 1961, leaving a last will and testament which has been duly probated herein by which he bequeathed to his second wife, Mrs. Eunice Knobloch Heckert, the disposable portion of his estate and to his two children he left their legitime. Out of the 1010 shares of Kress stock of which Heckert had possession upon his first wife's death, only three certificates were found among his effects, these standing in his name as originally issued and being each for 100 shares. Two of said certificates (7154 and 7155) were among those inventoried in the first wife's succession and one certificate (7158) was one of those which had been omitted therefrom.

The record discloses that Heckert had "donated" to his second wife at various times after their marriage 300 shares of the Kress stock which emanated from the first community, and that from time to time he had sold or otherwise disposed of 410 shares.

In the bank box of decedent and his second wife were found six certificates representing 400 shares, all issued to Mrs. Eunice Knobloch Heckert. Said shares were the subject matter of gifts to her by Heckert and for convenience a tabulation thereof is as follows:

                   CERTIFICATE
DATE OF GIFT         NUMBER          SHARES
July 29, 1940         H-1529           100
December 17, 1942     H-9983           100
July 17, 1944         F-19232           50
    "                 F-19233           50
    "                 F-19234           50
    "                 F-19235           50

The "gift" of July 29, 1940 (Cert. H-1529) resulted from Heckert's surrender to the issuing corporation and cancellation of a certificate for 100 shares issued in his name which had been acquired during the second community. The last five mentioned certificates had been issued upon Heckert's surrender to the corporation and cancellation of three 100-share certificates which belonged to the first community and in which the two children had an undivided one-half interest.

Decedent's children (more than 21 years after the termination of the usufruct) have brought a suit against Mrs. Eunice Knobloch Heckert, in her individual capacity and also as decedent's testamentary executrix, attacking the donations inter vivos and mortis causa insofar as their interests derived from their mother in the donated shares of stock are concerned; they also plead that no gratuitous transfer of any of the stock could be made to the prejudice of their rights as forced heirs of their deceased father; alternatively, they allege that if the donations be decreed to be valid, then the value thereof must be ascertained *378 and brought back into the mass of his succession in order to determine their legitime. They pray that they be decreed to be the owners of and entitled to have delivered to them 605 shares of the capital stock of S. H. Kress and Company or the value thereof. In summary decedent's two children are claiming:

(1) Stock which they were
    placed into possession
    of in their mother's
    succession -------------- 355 shares
(2) Their one-half interest
    in the 300 shares omitted
    from their mother's
    succession -------------- 150 shares
(3) For the return of excessive
    donations --------------- 100 shares
                              ___
    Total ------------------- 605 shares.

Defendant, taking the position that what the two children by their suit are claiming is an accounting of the usufruct of their father on the property inherited from their mother, interposed the exception of ten years' liberative prescription provided by LSA-C.C. art. 3544 which reads as follows:

"In general, all personal actions, except those before enumerated, are prescribed by ten years."

Upon said exception being overruled, defendant filed a voluminous answer, the contents of which need not be recounted. After a trial on the merits, there was judgment (the nature of which will be hereafter set out) in favor of plaintiffs and against Mrs. Eunice Knobloch Heckert, individually, as well as testamentary executrix, and she has perfected this appeal.

Appellant in this court, as the sole ground for reversal of the judgment, relies on her exception of ten years' liberative prescription which she reurges.

We do not construe the suit to be one for an accounting. Plaintiffs are merely demanding their share of the capital stock of S. H. Kress and Company which they acquired as the sole heirs of their deceased mother and also for their legitime in their father's interest in the 300 shares remaining in his succession and also for a reduction of excessive donations inter vivos to the second wife so that their legitime may be reserved.

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160 So. 2d 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-heckert-lactapp-1964.