Succession of Lasseigne

181 So. 879, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 296
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1938
DocketNo. 1853.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 181 So. 879 (Succession of Lasseigne) 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 Lasseigne, 181 So. 879, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 296 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

A. C. Lasseigne died on the 9th day of January, 1935, leaving an instrument purporting to be an olographic will in the following form, to wit:

“Houma Louisiana
“12.10.1934
“This is my last will and Testament. I revoke all other wills. I will and bequeath to Mr and Mrs A. D. Martin all of the property real and personal which I may die possessed of. I name them executors of my last will and testament, with seizen and without security. “A. C. Lasseigne.”

On the application of the named legatees, this instrument was admitted to probate on the 29th day of July, 1935, and letters were issued to Mr. and Mrs. Martin as executors of the will. An inventory was made of the property ‘belonging to the succession in the Parish of Terre-bonne, which inventory shows a valuation of this property of $626.65.

On March 16, 1937, Nettie Hotard, wife of'Walter Champagne, and six other Ho-tard heirs filed a'1 petition in the succession proceedings in which they claim to be the legal heirs of the deceased and ask that the purported will be decreed invalid because of an insufficient and uncertain date, and that they be recognized as the sole and only heirs of the deceased, and as such, that they be sent into possession of the succession property. After the filing of an answer by Mr. and Mrs. Martin, an agreed statement of facts was entered into by the attorneys, admitting that these opponents are the legal heirs of the deceased. By this agreement, the sole issue presented is the validity vel non of the probated instrument as an olographic will. The trial judge sustained the validity of the will and- dismissed the petition of the legal heirs, and they have appealed.

Mr. and Mrs. Martin, the executors and legatees under the will, filed a motion in this court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that, as the value of the succession exceeds $500, under Article 1049 of the Code of Practice, the appeal should be carried directly to the Supreme Court. This article of the Code of Practice is now inoperative insofar as it directs that appeals in probate matters shall be carried directly to the Supreme Court when the amount in dispute exceeds five hundred dollars, as Article 7, Section 10, of the present Constitution confers appellate jurisdiction on the Supreme Court in civil and probate matters only in those cases where the amount in dispute or the fund to be distributed, irrespective of the amount therein claimed, exceeds two thousand dollars,. exclusive of interest, and the Courts of Appeal are given appellate jurisdiction in such matters where the amount in dispute or fund to be distributed does not exceed two thousand dollars in value. Constitution, Article 7, Section 29. The motion to dismiss is therefore overruled.

*881 To be valid, an olographic will must be entirely written, dated and signed by the hand of the testator. Civil Code, Art. 1588. Not only must the will be dated in the handwriting of the testator, but the date must be certain, and in order that there may be ño doubt as to the date on which the will is confected, the day, month and year must be given. Moreover, the sufficiency of the date must be determined from the will, and any evidence aliunde the will itself cannot be admitted to prove a correct date, or to interpret the date given in the will. Heffner et al. v. Heffner, Ex’r, 48 La.Ann. 1088, 20 So. 281.

The sole attack on the will in this case is based on the ground that the figures used for the day and the month are uncertain; that the figures “12.10” may mean December 10th, dr they may mean 12th of October; that is, if the testator used these figures in giving the month first and the day second, as is the custom in many places and among many people, then the date- of the will is December 10th, 1934; but, if he used these figures to give the day first and the month second, as is the custom among some people, especially the French, then the date of the will is the 12th of October, 1934.

The opponents of the will rely exclusively on the decision of the Supreme Court in the Succession of Beird, 145 La. 756, 82 So. 881, 6 A.L.R. 1452, where an olographic will dated “9/8/18” was held invalid for uncertainty in its date. The court there said:

“While it is true the custom prevails and is in daily use of dating letters by the use of figures alone to represent the day, month, and year, at the same time there is almost as much variance in the order in which the month and day is written as there is in the use of words and figures. Some write the month first and the day of the month next, while others write the day first and the month second, and in a case like the present, where both the figures intended to represent the day and the month are less than thirteen, under this well-recognized variance, it is impossible to tell whether the deceased intended to write September 8th, or the 9th of August. If we are to take cognizance of the custom of using figures or abbreviations in writing dates, we are equally bound to take cognizance of the well-recognized variance in the methods of using that custom.”

In the Beird Case the Supreme Court also held that the year in which the will was written could not be determined with certainty as the figures “18” did not show the century — whether 1818 or 1918. ■ However in a subsequent decision, Succession of Kron, 172 La. 666, 135 So. 19, the court modified its ruling insofar as the designation of the century and decade is concerned. As a person is presumed to be dead after the lapse of one hundred years from the date of his birth, it follows that the designation of the century and decade by the figures/27 where the testator died during or after the twenty-seventh year of the nineteenth century, it would have been legally impossible for him to have written his will in 1827. But the same reason that makes the century and decade legally certain in such a case does not apply in the case of figures used to designate the day and the month where these figures are below 13. Nor do we understand that the Supreme Court in the Succession of Kron intended to modify or change in any way its ruling in the Beird Case insofar as the use of figures to designate the day and month is-concerned, but, on the contrary, it approved and re-affirmed its former ruling on this point as will be seen from the following extract taken from the Succession of Kron in discussing the Beird Case on this, point (page 20):

“It being ‘impossible to tell whether the deceased intended to write September 8th or the 9th of August,’ the court could not do otherzvise than declare the zvill invalid for want of a certain date.” (Italicized words ours.)

It is thus fair to assume from the above quoted language of the court that if the date of the day and the month in the will in the Kron Case had been designated only by figures, the court would have followed the Beird Case and annulled the will, but as the day and month in the Kron will were designated as “January 11th” the court held this to be sufficiently certain. So we find the court putting its stamp of approval on the ruling in the Beird Case on the point here involved as late as 1931, just a little more than three years before the will in this case was written.

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181 So. 879, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-lasseigne-lactapp-1938.