Succession of Jackson

30 La. Ann. 463
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
DocketNo. 6971
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 La. Ann. 463 (Succession of Jackson) 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 Jackson, 30 La. Ann. 463 (La. 1878).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marr, J.

May E. Wood, James Jackson, and Kate A. Bailey, children and heirs of Dempsey P. Jackson, opposed the provisional account of the administratrix, their mother. The parish court maintained their opposition with respect to the amount claimed for fees of the attorney for the succession, which was reduced $300; and the account was homologated as rendered in all other respects. The heirs appealed; and the administratrix asks in her answer that the judgment be so amended as to allow the full amount charged in the account.

Before proceeding with the ease we think it proper to say that a paper styled the protest of the heirs was filed in the parish court, and is copied in the transcript, which the parish judge should not have allowed to be filed. It could not have been written by or under the advice of a lawyer; nor would any respectable lawyer have sanctioned it. The counsel for the heirs asked us not to notice it; and he repudiated it as soon as he was employed in the ease. It is couched in such terms and manifests such temper and spirit as should not be tolerated in a judicial proceeding, and should not be permitted to pass unrebuked. The parish judge should have reprimanded any member of the bar who would have ventured to offer and file such a paper; and he should have strioken this paper from the files of his court.

The opposition to the other items of the account rest upon- the allegation that they are in excess of the amounts actually paid by the administratrix, as evidenced by the vouchers. The vouchers are not copied in the transcript; and we can not question the sufficiency of testimony not submitted to us which was submitted to the parish judge. We must presume that the judgment was in accordance with the vouchers which were exhibited; and that it is correct, so far as the items in question are concerned.

[464]*464Dempsey P. Jackson lived in Adams county, Mississippi, where he died in 1874. He had owned a plantation in Tensas, which, some time before his death he conveyed to his wife in payment of her paraphernal claims, amounting to $13,664. The immediate cause of his making this conveyance was the pressure of certain large debts, on which suits were threatened. The conveyance was made under the advice and with the assistance of Messrs. Reeves and Parrar, who were then partners. Mr. Parrar testifies that he considered the conveyance to be valid; but he has no doubt that Jackson made it in view of the threatened suits. Jackson informed Mr. Parrar, some time after the conveyance was made, that he had settled these claims.

The title to the entire property wras in Mrs. Jackson at the time of her husband’s death; and the conveyance was recorded in Tensas parish. There was no retrocession; nor is there any proof of the existence of any counter letter or other similar writing.

Jackson was largely indebted at the time of his death; and, among others, he owed H. S. Buckn,er, of New Orleans, some $7000. There was reason to apprehend that suit would be brought to set aside the conveyance to Mrs. Jackson, and to subject the property to the claims of Jackson’s creditors. It was, therefore, deemed advisable to have the property administered as belonging to the succession of Jackson; and the whole was inventoried as if .the title had been in him at the time of his death. The appraisers state in the inventory that it was represented to them that the property belonged to the community.

Mrs. Jackson qualified as administratrix; and it was through the influence of Mr. Reeves that a responsible citizen of Tensas parish became her surety on the bond required of her. She and her children, the heirs of her husband, joined in. a mortgage to Buckner; and it was by the agency of Mr. Reeves that this arrangement was consummated, by which the apprehended suit was avoided.

Precisely how or upon what theory the property was brought back into the succession we are not informed; and Mr. Parrar, who assisted in making the conveyance to Mrs. Jackson, frankly confesses that he does not know how that was accomplished. As between Jackson and his wife, during his life, the conveyance was conclusive against him, in the absence of a counter letter, or some equivalent writing; and after his death his heirs were equally concluded.

Perhaps, after the death of Jackson, Mr. Reeves had an opportunity to examine papers left by Jackson, and to obtain information of which he was ignorant at the time the conveyance to Mrs. Jackson was made, which satisfied him that a suit by the creditors of Jackson to subject tM property could not be successfully resisted; and to avoid the scandal of a litigation, based upon the fraud of the deceased and his widow, whom [465]*465■the heirs describe as “ our aged and infirm mother,” it was wise in Mr. Reeves to advise, and-wise in Mrs. Jackson to consent, that the conveyance to her should be ignored, and that the property should be administered as belonging to the succession, without respect to a title which neither Mr. Reeves nor Mrs. Jackson was willing to rely upon as against Jackson’s creditors.

The ago, experience, and reputation of Mr. Reeves preclude the theory that he advised Mrs. Jackson to abandon to the succession and to the creditors of her husband property which she held by a just and legal title. As we do not know what trouble, labor, and skill were necessary to enable Mr. Reeves to advise Mrs. Jackson properly, in view of his duty and obligation to protect her interests as well as the interests of the succession, we have no standard by which we can estimate the pecuniary value of this part of his services. His position was one of delicacy and of responsibility; and if he erred it was to the prejudice of Mrs. Jackson, not to the injury of the succession or of the heirs. The succession was benefited to the extent of the value of the property thus restored to it; and the heirs will be benefited to the extent of the residue which will fall to them after the payment of the debts. Surely th'e heirs have no right to complain that this large property was brought back into the succession by the voluntary act of their mother under the advice of her counsel. <

In the last year of Jackson’s life, he had, by contract in writing, leased the plantation in question to colored laborers. After the death of her husband Mrs. Jackson considered the contract as abandoned; and she made a verbal contract with the laborers, the effect of which was to give her a larger share of the crop than she would have had under the lease granted by her husband. Some eight or ten suits were brought by persons claiming liens on the crop for supplies furnished the laborers under the lease granted by Jackson. There was much complication in the affair; but the whole was compromised and settled through the agency of Mr. Reeves; and the succession had the benefit of the crop in accordance with the verbal contract with Mrs. Jackson.

There was a suit brought by the administratrix against Dreyfus for four bales of cotton, which was decided against her; and there was a suit brought by Muldoon against the administratrix which resulted in a judgment in his favor for some $300. Mr. Reeves represented the administratrix in both these cases.

It was proven that Mr. Reeves assisted in the taking of the inventory; and that he made a compromise with Watson, a creditor, by which $500 were saved to the succession. It seems that Mrs. Jackson cultivated the plantation in 1875, and that she met with heavy losses. By the advice and with the assistance of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
30 La. Ann. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-jackson-la-1878.