Succession of Justus

44 La. Ann. 721
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1892
DocketNo. 11,038
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 44 La. Ann. 721 (Succession of Justus) 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 Justus, 44 La. Ann. 721 (La. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bermudez, C. J.

In this matter the heirs of F. R. Justus sue to recover the marital fourth which, they aver, their father was entitled to take from the succession of the deceased, who was his wife.

Mrs. Justus died rich, on the 27th of September, 1891, and Mr. Justus was left by her in necessitous circumstances. He died seven days after his wife, without having claimed that fourth.

Mrs. Justus left a will by which she bequeathed him a pension in the shape of a legacy of $75 per month and some movable property.

The contention is that the marital fourth provided for by Art. R. O. O. 2382 accrued as an inheritance from the succession of the wife to- the husband, which, at the moment of her death, vested in him as in an heir, and passed by his demise to his children, as heirs to his estate, although he did not claim that portion during his lifetime, which was not a condition sine qua'non.

This is a fallacy, resting on the assumption that the husband was an heir. Hence, the confusion of ideas on the subject and the cause of error committed.

The article in question is not found under the title of Successions, but under that of Marriage Contracts, in the code.

The spirit which inspired the legislation originally, in Rome, in France, and in Spain, and which dictated its insertion in the body of laws which govern Louisiana, was that, where husband or wife dies rich, without issue, leaving the survivor in a state of penury, the latter shall have the right to take from the succession of the deceased one'-fourth of its residue, in full property, after payment of the debts, in order that he or she may not, after a life of ease and comfort, be suddenly thrown into abject poverty. The law does not say that the survivor shall inherit one-fourth; but that he or she will have the right to take, that is, if he or she choose, out of the succession, that portion of the estate, when liquidated.

Read by the light of the spirit which animated the law.giver, that language clearly means that the survivor has the right to take out of the succession that portion of it concurrently with the heirs. The taking necessarily implies an antecedent act, an assertion of the [723]*723right or privilege, and, in case of opposition, a revendication of if through the intervention of the courts.

The code says that there are three binds of successions, the testamentary, the legal and the irregular, and three kinds of heirs which correspond with the three species of successions, the testamentary or instituted heirs, the legal heirs or heirs of the blood, and the irregular heirs. R. C. O. 875 to 879.

Our code contains general rules under three different corresponding titles for the settlement of such successions accruing to such heirs. R. O. O. 886, 915, and others.

Besides, a succession is the transmission of the rights and obligations of the deceased to the heir. R. O. 0., 871-72-73.

Per contra, an heir is the person who is called to the inheritance of a deceased pereon, acquiring the rights and incurring the obligations of such party. R. O. O. 884.

An heir is defined to be: “ Oelui qui reeueille, á titre suceessif, tous les droits actifs et passifs qu’avait un défunt au moment de sa mort.

Successor in universum jus et personam defuncti. Diet. Droit Civil, Verbo Héritier, Vol. IV, p. 67.

Clearly, neither the rights which Mrs. Justus possessed, nor the obligations which burdened her, vested in Mr. Justus, who, under no eventuality, could, by asking the fourth, have become responsible for any of her debts or liabilities.

The claim to the marital fourth is one against, and not one by, the succession, which is. not here a plaintiff, but a defendant.

Surely Mr. Justus was not a testamentary heir; he was a simple legatee, and the legacy had never been accepted and claimed. He was not a legal heir, or legitimate heir, or heir of the blood; he was an utter stranger to his wife, and even had he been related, she had a right to dispose as she pleased of her estate, and she did it. He could not complain.

He was not an irregular heir, because he was not mentioned as an heir under the title of irregular successions.

Of course, a husband may inherit from his wife as aii irregular heir; but it must be under circumstances which are not such as are presented here — that is, where the wife dies intestate, leaving no lawful descendants, or acknowledged natural issue or lawful ascendants, or like collateral relations.

[724]*724In the case of Gee vs. Thompson, 11 An. 659, in which the right to the marital fourth was involved, and in which it had been asserted that the wife was an heir, the then court, after full deliberation, dis- ' criminating' "between the rights of heirs proper and of surviving spouses, claiming the marital fourth, said: ‘ ‘ In regard to successions it interests the public order that the instant a person dies it should be known what persons should succeed to his "effects. Hence, those provisions of law were "established under the head of successions, declaring who shall inherit, and casting the inheritance upon the heir so designated, even unknown to himself. The person upon whom the inheritance is by law conferred, and who is called the heir, is so different from the surviving husband and wife claiming the marital fourth that such demand, like a demand for a legacy, must be made upon the heir. The heir, on the contrary, is not obliged to apply to a court of justice in order to take possession as proprietor.” It adds that the articles 918 and 2359 of the then code (1825) were intended to apply to different classes of cases: “The one to provide an heir to an entire succession, the other to relieve the surviving husband or wife when in want.”

Indeed, saying that the husband or wife is an "heir- in this "case would be to add another to the three classes of heirs enumerated by the code. This can not be done.

The right conferred by the article is in the nature of a charity or bounty, iñ favor of the surviving consort left in penurious circumstances, which, to vest in him or her, must at least have been claimed when it could be done.

It is a personal and optional right, which remains inchoate until accepted, and which lapses and dies away, and does not pass to the heirs of the survivor at his death, when not' previously accepted by him or her. "

The text reads: "Quarta datur in honorem preterite matrimonii. The fourth is given in honor of the past marriage, that the survivor be retained in the previous accustomed rank and condition. It is a gift.

It is not a donation by the deceased; but one by the sovereign acting in the place of the unwilling/hindered, forgetful or ignorant defunct spouse. It may be likened to a donation inter vivos, which, to be binding, must be'accepted in precise terms by the donee himself or his agent, and which if not so accepted can be accepted neither [725]*725by his creditors nor his. heirs, and remains without, effect. R. O. O.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 La. Ann. 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-justus-la-1892.