Succession of King

50 So. 735, 124 La. 805, 1909 La. LEXIS 547
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 10, 1909
DocketNo. 17,396
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 So. 735 (Succession of King) 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 King, 50 So. 735, 124 La. 805, 1909 La. LEXIS 547 (La. 1909).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Decedent died in the parish of East Baton Rouge in April, 1905, leaving what was regarded as an intestate and vacant estate, of which appellant, claiming to be the largest creditor, was appointed curator, after a contest in which the state of Louisiana, Thomas E. McHugh, -and M. F. Amrheim participated. In December, 1905, he filed a provisional account, showing assets to the value of $8,312.12 and debts (including his own claim for $944) to the amount of $2,792.92. The attorney for absent heirs opposed the claim of the curator, and in January, 1906, the account was homologated, so far -as not opposed. Nothing further appears to have been done until September, 1907, when Mary O. Boehm, alleging that she is the widow, by first marriage of Frederic R. Lauth, and by second marriage of Edward King, alias Adam King, alias Allen M. King, áppeared and claimed the [807]*807estate, as widow in the community and heir of the decedent, and thereupon the state intervened, and, opposing- the claim so set up, asked that it be rejected. The attorney for absent heirs and the curator did likewise, and upon the issues so made there was judgment in favor of the widow, from which the curator alone has appealed.

The claimant, giving her testimony in April, 1908, tells substantially the following story: She would be 38 years old on May 10, 1908. She was married to F. R. Lauth in 1874, lived with him seven years, when she obtained a divorce, and was keeping a boarding house in St. Louis when, in December, 1883, she married a man calling himself Edward King, but who received letters addressed to Adam King, and who was sometimes called Jack King. Ho stayed with her a few days, then went away, and, returning in January, stayed five days, then went away again, and was gone two months, then came and went, sometimes making her a visit of an hour or two, until August 16, 1S84, when he disappeared, and she never saw him after-wards. She says that at times (prior to his disappearance) he wrote to her, signing his letters merely, “Yours, King.” She produces none of the letters. After his departure, she inspected his baggage, and found a notebook, two handkerchiefs, and a suit of “convict” clothes, and she destroyed the “baggage”; but whether she destroyed the notebook and the handkerchiefs she. does not say. The notebook, which might possibly have aided her in this case, was not, however, produced, nor did she produce any scrap of the handwriting of her husband, which might have been compared with that of the man who died at Zachary. Being asked, “What kind of a looking man was King?” she replied:

“He was not a very tall man; say he was a little over five feet. He was short and muscularly built, well built. His weight was about Í65 pounds or 170 pounds, somewhere about that.”

She says that she heard, though she does not say when, that' King was dead, “that several were killed in the mines, and that he was among them;” but she does not remember where “the mines” were, and she “did not hunt him up or try to find anything at all.” After King disappeared, she went to Philadelphia, and remained there three years, then returned to St. Louis, where, about six yeará prior to the time at which she was testifying, she married Mr. Void, and, when testifying, was living either in New Orleans or Baton Rouge. She is asked:

“How long have you been living in New Orleans?”

And she answers:

“When I came here, first time, it was three years ago, when I came to Baton Rouge. I came here in November, and in May I heard of the death, and I have been here ever since the death of King!”

She is asked:

“What brought you here?”
“I came here with Mr. Void, who is in business here.”

She says that the man (King) whom she married told her that he had no relatives. She produces a marriage certificate, showing that Jeremiah Ryan, a justice of the peace in St. Louis, on December 20, 1884 (one year later than the date stated in her testimony), united in marriage—

“Edward King, of Alton, state of Illinois, and * * * Mary O. Boehm, * * * of St. Louis, who is over the age of IS years.”

James Spurlock, George Ward, and Mrs. W. B. Shouldis were examined, under commission, in New Orleans, as witnesses for the claimant, so that our Brother of the district court had not the advantage of hearing them testify and of observing them while so doing.

The testimony of Spurlock reads as follows:

[809]*809“Interrogatory No. 1: What is the extent of your acquaintance with the late A. M. King, who died in the town of Zachary, La., some few years ago?
“Answer: I met Mr. King at a boarding house at which I w-as stopping, which boarding house was kept by the lady whom I now know as Mrs. Void, who resides in this city and claims to be the widow of Mr. King, and she is the widow of Mr. King, and there ain’t no doubt about it. I afterwards met Mr. King in Zachary, La. I went to Zachary to do some work a few years ago, for a man named Tucker, who lives between 1% and 2 miles from town. While I was in Zachary, I went into a store, and while I was there I saw Mr. King, and he looked at me, and I looked at him, and he said, T have met you before.’ I said, ‘Yes; but I don’t know where.’ King says, T guess it was in St. Louis, but we won’t say anything about that.’ And that was the last time St. Louis was mentioned, as he didn’t seem to like for me to talk about it. Whenever I came to town I generally stopped at his place, because I felt like I knew him and didn’t know anybody else, being a stranger there.
“interrogatory No. 2: If you say that you are acquainted with the said Mr. King, please state when and where you first became acquainted with him, giving all the details.
“Answer: I have just told you that I met him at a boarding house kept by the lady whom I now know as Mrs. Void, who then claimed to be Mrs. King, and afterwards met him at Zachary, as I have just said.
“Interrogatory No. 3: Are you acquainted with the lady who is claiming, in these proceedings, to be the wife of the late A. M. King? If so, please state when and where you first became acquainted with her.
“Answer: Yes; I first met her in St. Louis. She was then keeping a boarding house; I after-wards met her in New Orleans, at a rooming house. * * * I wanted to get two rooms, together, in the house, so a lady said to me and the landlady that she would move back to another room, in the rear of the house, so that I could have two rooms, together, for my wife and children. The next day, when I saw this lady, she remarked, T have met you before,’ and I said, ‘Yes; but I can’t place you.’ She asked me if I was in St. Louis at any past time, and I then told her that I was, and that was just where I met her, at the boarding house kept by her who was known to me then as Mrs. King. She told me that King was dead, and I told her I had met him in Zachary. She told me that she had a notice of his death, and I asked her Why she was living here and King was living in Zachary, and why she did not know anything about him. We talked about Mr. King for some time.
“Interrogatory No. 4: Please state whether or not you knew the Mr. A. M. King, of Zachary, by any other initials.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 735, 124 La. 805, 1909 La. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-king-la-1909.