Succession of Jack Patton Mabray, Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 2025
Docket56,102-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Succession of Jack Patton Mabray, Jr. (Succession of Jack Patton Mabray, Jr.) 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 Jack Patton Mabray, Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Judgment rendered February 26, 2025. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 56,102-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

SUCCESSION OF JACK PATTON MABRAY, JR.

Appealed from the Sixth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Tensas, Louisiana Trial Court No. 24,603A

Honorable Angela Lynn Claxton, Judge

HESSE & BUTTERWORTH, LLC Counsel for Appellant, By: Michael O’Brien Hesse Janet Maxwell Mabray Zach Butterworth

PREIS GORDON, APLC By: Phillip Wesley Preis

BREITHAUPT, DOBOS Counsel for Appellees, & WOLLESON, LLC Wilson Tremble Mabray, By: Robert Alan Breithaupt Independent Executor, James R. Close and the Succession of Jack Patton Mabray, Jr.

BISHOP, PAXTON, CRIGLER & MOBERLEY By: John Durham Crigler, Jr.

Before PITMAN, STONE, and ROBINSON, JJ. ROBINSON, J.

Appellant, Janet Maxwell Mabray (“Jan”) filed a petition to amend

the judgment of possession entered in the succession of her deceased

husband, Jack Patton Mabray, Jr. (“Pat”). In her petition, she prayed to

remove the reference to a 50 percent ownership interest in certain real

property located in Colorado (the “Colorado property”). The petition

alleged that the couple had acquired the property as joint tenants during their

marriage by contributing one-half each of their separate funds in accordance

with the separate property regime established by valid premarital contract.

Wilson Mabray (“Wilson”), Pat’s son from his previous marriage and

the named Independent Administrator, filed an answer to Jan’s petition to

amend the judgment of possession and a reconventional demand seeking the

recognition of the succession’s 50 percent ownership of the Colorado

property. Jan then filed a motion to declare the judgment of possession an

absolute nullity as to the Colorado property. Wilson filed a peremptory

exception of no right of action as to both the petition to amend and motion to

annul. The trial court granted Wilson’s exception after a hearing on March

19, 2024, finding Jan had no standing in the succession. A judgment was

rendered on April 1, 2024, from which Jan appeals.

For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Jan and Pat were married on August 29, 2009. The couple established

a separate property regime by premarital agreement entered into on August 26, 2009. They were domiciled in Tensas Parish but purchased the Colorado

property by Warranty Deed dated August 4, 2015, which stated, in part, that

the property was sold to Pat and Jan “not in tenancy in common but in joint

tenancy.” They built a house on the property, contributing their respective

separate funds for one-half each of the purchase price and building costs.

Pat died intestate on March 14, 2022. Wilson was named Independent

Administrator of Pat’s estate on April 22, 2022. Wilson is Pat’s sole heir

pursuant to intestacy laws. Jan is not an heir, legatee, surviving spouse in

community, or usufructuary. The detailed descriptive list filed by Wilson

included an “undivided one-half ownership” interest in the Colorado

property as an asset of the succession. A judgment of possession was

rendered on November 9, 2022, listing the 50 percent interest in the

Colorado property as an asset.

Jan filed a petition to amend the judgment of possession on November

22, 2022, alleging that she became the 100 percent owner of the Colorado

property by right of survivorship created pursuant to the joint tenancy

ownership of the property and requesting that the judgment of possession be

amended to delete any reference to the ownership of the Colorado property.

Jan also requested that a temporary restraining order be entered, enjoining

and restraining Wilson, as Independent Administrator, from granting any

encumbrance or transferring ownership of the Colorado property. The

parties later stipulated to the entering of the temporary restraining order.

Jan filed a motion for summary judgment on August 31, 2023,

seeking a determination that she was the 100 percent owner of the Colorado

property and the removal of the succession’s claim of ownership of the

2 property from the detailed descriptive list and judgment of possession. She

included affidavits from two different attorneys regarding choice of law

issues. Wilson opposed Jan’s motion based on various procedural grounds,

particularly that no answer had been filed prior to the filing of the motion for

summary judgment, as well as the existence of disputed material facts

relevant to Colorado law regarding rights of survivorship with joint tenancy

ownership. Jan alleged in her reply that Louisiana courts lacked jurisdiction

to adjudicate ownership and resolve title disputes regarding property situated

in Colorado. Wilson filed motions to strike the two affidavits as

impermissible expert opinions on Louisiana law, as well as Jan’s response to

the opposition, claiming that Jan impermissibly asserted the defense of lack

of subject matter jurisdiction for the first time in her reply to Wilson’s

opposition. A hearing was conducted on November 30, 2023, and the trial

court sustained Wilson’s motions to strike and denied Jan’s motion for

summary judgment. An order was entered December 18, 2023.

On the same date as the motion for summary judgment hearing,

Wilson filed an answer to Jan’s petition to amend judgment of possession

and a reconventional demand asking that the succession be recognized as 50

percent owner of the property. Jan filed an answer to the reconventional

demand, along with an exception of lack of jurisdiction, on December 21,

2023. Jan also filed a motion to declare the judgment of possession an

absolute nullity as to the Colorado property on January 5, 2024. Wilson then

filed an exception and answer to the motion to declare the judgment of

possession an absolute nullity as to Colorado property and additional

exception to petition to amend judgment of possession, claiming the

3 peremptory exception of no right of action. At a hearing on March 19, 2024,

the trial court granted Wilson’s exception of no right of action as to both

Jan’s petition to amend and motion to annul, completely dismissing the

claims against the succession. A judgment was rendered on April 1, 2024,

from which Jan appeals.

DISCUSSION

The April 1, 2024, judgment from which this appeal is based grants

Wilson’s exceptions of no right of action as to Jan’s January 5, 2024, motion

to declare judgment of possession an absolute nullity as to Colorado

property, and her previous August 31, 2023, petition to amend judgment of

possession, thereby dismissing all claims. The judgment is limited in scope

to the issue of standing. The trial court noted its review of the case law

presented and found that it was supportive of a distinction between a

succession and the assets of succession. It, therefore, concluded that,

although Jan may have an interest in an asset of Pat’s succession, she had no

standing in the succession itself.

An appellate court reviews a trial court’s ruling granting an exception

of no right of action de novo. Badeaux v. Sw. Computer Bureau, Inc., 05-

0612 (La. 3/17/06), 929 So. 2d 1211; Young v.

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