Succession of Henderson

197 So. 267, 195 La. 665, 1940 La. LEXIS 1108
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1940
DocketNo. 35749.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 197 So. 267 (Succession of Henderson) 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 Henderson, 197 So. 267, 195 La. 665, 1940 La. LEXIS 1108 (La. 1940).

Opinion

*668 ROGERS, Justice.

Mrs. Mamie Jemison Henderson, widow of W. K. Henderson, Sr., died, testate, at .her domicile in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, on January 9, 1939, leaving three children, v'iz., W. K. Henderson, Jr., Mrs. May Henderson Leonard, and Mrs. Viva Henderson Dunkin. The will of Mrs. Henderson, which is in the olographic form, after providing for certain special legacies to her three children and other persons, contains the following recitals:

“I have heretofore made gifts to my daughters May Henderson Leonard and Viva Dunkin of equal amounts for which they shall not be required to account or collate and I have also made gifts to my son William Kennon Henderson, of amounts and value equal to those to my said daughters and for which he shall not be required to account and in addition to the said gifts to my said son, I have also made additional gifts to him aggregating more than one hundred and sixty thousand dollars (160,-000.00) which said additional gifts and sum given to my said son is more than his share of my estate.”

Attached to the will are three codicils, also in olographic form, the first codicil, which is dated March 13, 1934, reads as follows: “The Fifty Thousand Dollars I loaned my son Will Henderson was out of my half of estate.” The second codicil, which is dated April' 5, 1936, -reads as follows: “I have advanced to my son more than his part of estate so he cannot share in my estate.”

■ Together with its- codicils, the will was probated by order of court on January 16, 1939, and Mrs. May H. Leonard qualified as testamentary executrix. An inventory and appraisement under order of court was made on January 24, 1939, in which the value of the decedent’s estate was fixed at $226,387.04.

On January 28, 1939, W. K. Henderson, Jr., brought this suit against his sisters, Mrs. May H. Leonard, individually and as executrix, and Mrs. Viva H. Dunkin, individually, to set aside the will of their mother so far as it excluded him from participating in her estate, and to have himself recognized as the owner of a third interest therein; and, also to obtain an order of court requiring the defendants to account for and collate alleged advances in excess of $100,000 received by them from their mother.

The defendants, answering the suit, asserted the validity of their mother’s will and averred that plaintiff had received in gifts and advances more than his share of their mother’s succession; in the alternative, defendants asked that plaintiff be ordered to collate all the debts due and advances received by him, and, in the further alternative, defendants asked that if it should be found plaintiff was entitled to any interest in his mother’s estate, that the interest be limited to one-third of two-thirds of the estate, less the amount of debts due his mother and the value of the special legacies made to him in his mother’s will.

On the trial of the case, plaintiff took the position that he was not liable on notes which he had given his mother in connection with the purchase of certain shares *670 of stock of the V. K. Henderson Iron Works & Supply Company, and, further, that he was not liable on a note for $50,'-000 which he had given his mother in connection with advances made by her for the use of the W. K. Henderson Iron Works & Supply Company. Defendants filed pleas of prescription and estoppel to plaintiff’s claims, setting up that plaintiff had acquired all the capital stock of the Henderson Iron Works & Supply Company by virtue of his purchase; that he was estopped to dispute the sale and validity of the notes, and that his attack thereon was barred by the prescription of five and ten years as provided by Articles 2221, 3542 and 3544 of the Civil Code.

After holding the case under advisement for several months, the judge of the district court, for oral reasons assigned, rendered a judgment in favor of the defendants, rejecting plaintiff’s demands and dismissing his suit and claim at his cost. From this judgment, plaintiff has- appealed.

The record discloses that. plaintiff gave his mother ten note.s of $30,435.75 each, in part payment of the purchase price of 1503 shares of the capital stock of the W. K. Henderson Iron Works &'Supply Company; one note for $50,000 representing money used by ' the company; and two notes, one for .$13,945.14, and the other for $5,852.56, representing past due interest payments on the above notes. These are the notes .for which plaintiff denies any liability. Plaintiff does not dispute his liability on a note for $1,500 given' to his mother on December 27, 1938, which was only a few days prior to her death. On the question of the plaintiff’s liability-on'the notes given by the plaintiff to his mother in part payment of the purchase price of the shares of stock of the W. K. Henderson Iron Works & Supply Company, the record shows the following facts: The capital stock of the W. K. Henderson Iron Works & Supply Company consisted of 3,000 shares. W. K. Henderson, Sr., gave his wife 250 shares and to his three children, W. K. Henderson, Jr., the plaintiff, Mrs. May H. Leonard, and Mrs. Viva H. Dunkin, the defendants, 449 shares each, to W. P. (Leonard and W. S. Dunkin, his sons-in-law, 50 shares each, and to Mrs. W. K. Henderson, Jr., 50 shares. There was therefore retained by W. K. Henderson, St., and left in his estate 1,253 shares.

W. K. Henderson, Sr., died, testate, on August 20, 1918. His succession was opened under the number 24,279, in- the First District Court for the Parish of Caddo. The will of Mr. Henderson, which was dated April 6, 1918, after reciting that all the property belonged to the matrimonial community, made certain special legacies and then provided that “-everything else was to revert to his wife as long as she lives and then to be equally divided among my children.” He expressed the wish that his wife be elected president of the Iron Works with a salary of' at least $6,000 per year; that W. K. Henderson, Jr., should continue in his own business; that W. S. Dunkin and W. P. Leonard should continue to manage the Iron Works and that they consult with Mrs. Henderson' and W. K. Henderson, *672 Jr., on any deal of importance. The will was probated by Mrs. Henderson contradictorily with her three children on September 6, 1918. On the same day the court confirmed Mrs. Henderson as testamentary executrix and ordered an inventory of the succession be taken.

On the night of September 6, 1918 (the day the will was probated), a meeting was held at Mrs. Henderson’s residence. There were present at the meeting Mrs. Henderson, Mr. and-Mrs. Leonard, Mr. and Mrs. Dunkin, and plaintiff and his wife. At that meeting, plaintiff expressed a desire to purchase the stock of the W. K. Henderson Iron Works & Supply Company. After some discussion, plaintiff offered to buy all the stock on the basis of $270 a share. His offer was accepted. The next morning the transaction was closed at the Commercial National Bank in Shreveport, Louisiana. Plaintiff obtained from his mother 1,503 shares of stock (250 shares donated by her husband and 1,253 shares left in his estate). The total purchase price of this stock was $405,810.

One-fourth of the. purchase price, or $101,452.50, was paid in cash and the balance was represented by plaintiff’s ten notes for $30,435.75 each, or a total of $304,357.50.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 267, 195 La. 665, 1940 La. LEXIS 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-henderson-la-1940.