Succession of Kernan

105 La. 592
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
DocketNo. 13,544
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 105 La. 592 (Succession of Kernan) 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 Kernan, 105 La. 592 (La. 1901).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, C. J.

Statement op the Case.

Nicholls, O. I. B. A. Kernan, the settlement of whose succession has given rise to the present litigation, left a will by which he made a number of special legacies, the largest being to Archbishop Jannsens and his successors in office. There was a provision in .the will revoking [594]*594the legacy of any legatee who should contest any part of the will. Under the impression that the deceased had died intestate, the succession was placed under administration, Bernard J. Kernan being appointed administrator and B. Bruenn attorney for absent heirs. A will was subsequently found and probated, and William II. Harding appointed dative testamentary executor, no executor having been named in the will.

While Kernan was administrator he filed a provisional account which showed a large amount of cash in his hands. In this account he set out a number of claims against the estate, among others one by himself for $2389.64 commissions as executor on the whole amount of the inventory; he prayed for the advertisement' of this account, and that after due proceedings it be homologated and he be authorized to pay the claims.

The account was homologated, but no order to pay the debts was made. During his administration a supplemental inventory was made. After Harding was appointed testamentary executor, Kernan, the administrator, was, at his instance, ordered to file a final account, which he did. In this, he charged himself with the cash which he had originally received, less the amount of the claims which he had presented therein, and which he had asked authority to pay; among others, his claim for commissions. He claimed in this account $51.75 commission as administrator on $2069.23, the amount'of the supplemental inventory, and $170.85, five per cent, on collections of $3417.11. By this account, as filed, he showed himself indebted to the succession in the sum of $65.10.

A number of oppositions were filed to the account, the claim of the administrator being particularly opposed. It was claimed that “he had already received in full his legal commission on the amount 'of the inventory as provided by law, and that said commission should be returned to the estate by the administrator on the ground that he had maladministered the estate; had caused it severe losses, and that he was not, in law or equity, entitled to any commission whatever.” It was further claimed that the administrator was indebted to the succession in a sum far exceeding six thousand dollars. Opponents prayed for judgment in accordance with the averments.

It appears that the administrator was very careless in his accounts. The attorneys of the opponents therefore called on him for his vouchers, and acting together with an expert whom they employed, they [595]*595revised the same and obtained evidence showing that the account was very erroneous. Mr.- Bruenn was specially active in this work. The administrator pleaded as res judicata the judgment homologating the provisional account.

The result was a judgment of the District Court on January 19, 1900, against the administrator “in the full sum of twenty-one hundred and forty-three dollars and fifty-nine cents, with legal interest from May 9, 1898, until paid, and maintaining to that extent the several oppositions filed by the legal heirs,” and “decreeing and ordering the administrator to account for and return said amount to the estate.”

The judgment further decreed that only the legal commission of two and a half per cent, on the aggregate amount of original and supplemental inventory of this estate be permitted to be charged against the estate herein; the pro rata division of the same between said Bernard J. Kernan, administrator, and William J. Harding, dative testamentary executor herein, to be determined by the court, if necessary, on the filing of the final account by said dative testamentary executor, and to that extent further maintaining the several oppositions herein filed by the legal heirs of Bernard J. Kernan.

Harding, the testamentary, executor, appealed from the judgment.

While the succession was under administration a number of the legal heirs, represented through their attorneys, Messrs. Rarkerson and Bruenn, brought suit against the administrator to have the legacy left to Archbishop Jannsens and his successors in office set aside. The suit was decided ultimately by the Supreme Court contradictorily with the executor, setting this legacy aside.

In February, 1900, Harding, testamentary executor, filed a final account, praying that it be approved and homologated and the funds distributed in accordance therewith. It simply shows the amounts received and disbursed by the executor and certain claims which he desired to pay, if authorized so to do. It does not attempt to fix the rights of the heirs inter se or propose any particular distribution as among them. Their rights inter se are left to be hereafter settled. (Succession Bothick, 52 Ann. 18Y8.)

On this account he placed L. J. Doize as a creditor for seventy-five dollars for services alleged to have been rendered to the succession for the purpose of enabling the executor to prepare his account; also Kolb & Leclerc as creditors for twenty-six dollars for printing the brief filed by the executor in the Supreme Court in defense of the suit brought [596]*596to annul the legacy made in the will of the deceased to Archbishop Jannsens and his successors in office.

He placed himself upon the account as a creditor for sums disbursed by him to the American Surety Company in consideration of its becoming surety upon the bond furnished by himself as dative testamentary executor.

He also placed himself upon the account as a creditor for the sum of two thousand one hundred and seventy-eight dollars and. twelve cents ($2178.12) for commissions due him as testamentary executor, at 21/á% on the amount of the inventory of the succession.

A number of oppositions were filed to the items just above referred to.

The item for commissions was opposed on the ground that “as appeared by the record the succession had already paid in full a commission based upon the same percentage and a prior inventory to Bernard J. Kernan, former administrator, and under the law and the final decree of the court, rendered on January 9, 1900, it could not be held liable for two commissions.”

Messrs. Parkerson and Bruenn’s claim to be placed on the tableau as succession privileged creditors for services rendered as attorneys in setting aside the special legacy in favor of Archbishop Jannsens and his successors, and Mr. Bruenn’s claim for additional services as an attorney in the matter of the succession, not being admitted by the executor, they opposed the account, claiming their right to be so placed, and praying to be so recognized and paid.

The opposition was sustained and the executor was ordered to amend his account aecordingsly. The claims of Doizé, Kolb & Leclerc and that of the executor for reimbursement for the amounts paid by him, were rejected and ordered to be stricken from the account.

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105 La. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-kernan-la-1901.