Succession of Lacay

186 So. 2d 377, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5198
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1966
DocketNos. 2200, 2227
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 186 So. 2d 377 (Succession of Lacay) 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 Lacay, 186 So. 2d 377, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5198 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BARNETTE, Judge.

Two appeals were taken in this succession-proceeding, one each from two separate judgments, and were consolidated in this court. The first, No. 2200 on the docket of this court, is from a judgment of May 5, 1965, maintaining and confirming a writ of sequestration issued March 26 for seizure-of the succession effects by the Sheriff and ordering them to be delivered into the possession of L. J. Scanlon, Public Administrator. Scanlon, appellee, answered this appeal seeking damages for frivolous appeal. Other provisions of that judgment need not be mentioned at this point. The second appeal, No. 2227, is from a judgment of January 6, 1966, removing the Public Administrator from the administration of the succession, appointing in his stead Emerson L. Morel, and homologating the tableau of distribution and final account filed by Scan-lon. Scanlon took no appeal, nor has he-answered the appeal by Morel except to the limited extent of praying for allowance of a cost item for printing certain briefs. Morel appeals from that judgment insofar as it approved and homologated the tableau of distribution filed by Scanlon in regard to certain items of cost and particularly the fees claimed by Scanlon as Public Administrator and his attorney.

The issues involved in the first appeal, No. 2200, are now conceded by both appellant and appellee to be moot insofar as the judgment of sequestration is concerned, since the judgment of January 6 ordered, inter alia, all the assets and effects of the succession to be turned over to appellant Morel. There is no appeal from that portion of the judgment of January 6, and it is now final.

The real issue now, as it has been throughout this bitterly contested matter, [379]*379is a contest between Morel, claiming a prior right to the administration by virtue of his nomination by the only legal heir of the decedent, and Scanlon, the Public Administrator of Orleans Parish,1 who insisted to the bitter end that he had a right to its administration. The controversy stems from the prospect of collecting the administrator’s and attorney’s fees from this modest estate of $14,000. Attorneys for the rival claimants have punctuated the proceeding with numerous clashes which have made the record unnecessarily long and involved.

This is the second time this case has been before us on appeal, not to mention two applications for writs. The first appeal, Succession of Meier, 172 So.2d 714, was decided by us, March 8, 1965. We now readopt the statement of the case as set out by us in that opinion.2

This court held in its opinion of March 8, 1965, that the Public Administrator had been prematurely and improvidently appointed. We did not annul his appointment nor order his removal, but remanded the case for further proceedings with instructions and decreed “ * * * in the interim, the status quo of the Public Administrator’s appointment to remain in effect until the judgment on remand * * 172 So.2d at 717. At that stage of the proceeding, the evidence did not conclusively establish the heirship of decedent’s niece in France, although we were impressed with the prima facie proof submitted, an opinion which has now been entirely confirmed. Her nomination of Morel to be administrator could not be given effect until her heirship and right to nominate was conclusively established. In the meantime the succession had to be administered and the assets preserved, and our decree of March 8, 1965, sought to accomplish that purpose pending final judgment on the contest between Scanlon and Morel.

After remand Scanlon sought to obtain possession of certain effects in the hands of Morel and his attorney. Their refusal to deliver them gave rise to the writ of sequestration, later maintained by the district court’s judgment of May 5, 1965. That issue is now moot, as explained above, as well as certain exceptions and pleas in opposition to the sequestration. That judgment also properly rejected reconventional demand of Morel and Thomas Barr III, his attorney, for damages, and to that extent should be affirmed.

The public administrator’s appointment and duties of office are provided in LSA-R.S. 9:1581-9:1589. The pertinent part of section 1583 provides:

“They shall be appointed administrators of all intestate succession [sic] in their respective parishes when there is no surviving husband or wife or heir present or represented in the state.”

Two days after the death of Mrs. Meier, Morel filed a petition praying for appointment as administrator of the succession. He alleged that the only surviving legal heir was a niece in the Republic of France who had authorized him to represent her, to obtain counsel, and to open the succession. A petition for notice as provided by LSA-C.C.P. arts. 3091-3093 was not filed by Morel. Consequently, the application of the Public Administrator for appointment filed two days later was not served on Morel or his attorney, and apparently they made no timely opposition to the application of the Public Administrator. The Public Administrator, after publishing notice as required by law, was appointed without notice to Morel or his counsel on March 25, 1964.

[380]*380There is no doubt that the Public Administrator knew of the prior application of Morel and the allegations in his petition that the succession was not vacant, that a niece in France was claiming to be the heir of decedent, and that she had authorized Morel to represent her in this State. His petition was filed under the same docket number; his request for appointment of a particular notary public to take an inventory was declined; and that portion of his requested order which pertained to the inventory was physically stricken from the order by the judge who signed it because, no doubt, of his order two days earlier appointing Thomas Barr III, notary public, to take the inventory on petition of Morel. Unquestionably the Public Administrator had knowledge of the prior application by Morel.

Notwithstanding his knowledge of Morel’s prior petition and the allegations therein, the Public Administrator represented to the court that the succession was vacant and that there was no “heir present or represented in the state” qualified to claim or assume the administration. The allegations of Morel have since been conclusively proved, and the representations made by the Public Administrator have been shown to be entirely without foundation. The Public Administrator sought appointment fully realizing that there was a prior claim and fully aware that he might be removed before completing administration.

A vacant succession is defined by LSA-C.C. art. 1095 as follows:

“A succession is called vacant when no one claims it, or when all the heirs are unknown, or when all the known heirs to it have renounced it.”

It now becomes apparent to us, as it no doubt did to the trial judge, in view of the long belated proof of heirship, that this succession is not and was not vacant. There was at all times after the death of decedent an heir represented in this State, and the Public Administrator had no right to be appointed administrator of this succession. Be that as it may, the fact remains that he was appointed, and our decree of March 8, 1965, left his appointment in effect until judgment on remand. The judgment on remand was not rendered until January 6, 1966.3 The court then removed the Public Administrator and appointed Morel, the original petitioner, in his stead.

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Related

Succession of Lacay
204 So. 2d 793 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 2d 377, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-lacay-lactapp-1966.