Succession of Lewis

148 So. 29, 177 La. 212, 1933 La. LEXIS 1679
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 27, 1933
DocketNo. 32267.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 So. 29 (Succession of Lewis) 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 Lewis, 148 So. 29, 177 La. 212, 1933 La. LEXIS 1679 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Agnes E. Lewis, a daughter of John B. Lewis, deceased, presented to Hon. James D. Simon, judge of the district court of Iberia parish, an instrument purporting to be the last will and testanient of the said John B. Lewis, made in olographic form, in order that the same might be proved and admitted to probate. She alleged that the purported will could not be proved by witnesses residing in the parish of Iberia, where the deceased died and left his estate, and that the only witnesses by whom proof could be made reside in the city of New Orleans. She further alleged that the witnesses by whom the proof could be made refused to go to the parish of Iberia to testify and that it was necessary that a commission issue to take the testimony of said witnesses. The court refused to issue the order to take the testimony by commission, and Miss Lewis applied to this court for writs, which were granted. In response to our order to show cause, the district judge has set out his reasons for refusing to grant the order. As we approve the ruling made by the court and his reasons therefor, we copy in full the return made by him.

“The only question here presented involves the procedure to be observed in probating an olographic testament.

“The petition presented to me for probating the purported last will and testament of John B. Lewis, deceased, sought the issuance of a commission directed to a competent notary public of Orleans parish, to take the testimony of two named persons residing in the parish of Orleans. In connection therewith the applicant further sought an order from me, directing that the original document purporting to be the last will and testament of the deceased be attached to and made a part of the commission to be presented to the witnesses by the notary public in connection with the interrogatories, which interrogatories were to be prepared by me to ascertain the authenticity of the testament.

“The relief sought by the applicant was denied, based upon my interpretation of our codal provisions, and thereupon writs from this honorable court were then issued.

“I have made a cursory examination of our jurisprudence and find that the question here involved has never been presented to this honorable court. I may logically conclude, therefore, that our codal provisions dealing with the procedure to be observed in probating testaments are so clear and specific in their language that the occasion for the relief here sought never arose.

“Art. 935 of our Oode of Practice provides :

“ ‘The party praying for the opening and proof of the will, shall cause to be summoned the number of witnesses possessing the qual *215 ities required for such proof, and if the presumptive heirs of the deceased or any of them reside in the place, he shall give them notice in writing, that they may attend, if they think proper, at the opening and proof of the will.’

“Article 938, Code of Practice, provides:

“ ‘At the time appointed for the opening and proving the will the judge shall proceed in this duty in the manner prescribed by law.’

“Article 1655, R. C. C., provides:.

“ ‘The olographic testament shall be opened, if it be sealed and it must be acknowledged and proved by the declaration of two credible persons, who must attest that they recognize the testament as being entirely written, dated and signed in the testator’s handwriting.
“ ‘The judge shall interrogate the witnesses under oath touching their knowledge of the testator’s handwriting and signature and shall satisfy himself that they are familiar therewith making mention of the whole in his proces verbal thereof.’

“Article 939, Code of Practice, provides:

“ ‘For the purpose of such proof, the judge shall receive the deposition, in writing of each of the witnesses produced, which depositions shall be signed by them with their names or ordinary marks, and the whole shall remain annexed to the record.’

“Article 940, Code of Practice, provides:

, “ ‘After this proof the judge shall read the will in an audible and distinct voice, to the end that its provisions may be heard by the witnesses and all other persons present, and if it appear to be in regular form the execution of it shall be ordered, and it shall be recorded.’
“These wholesome rules of procedure to be observed by trial judges have, from our earliest jurisprudence, been held to be sacramental, save and except where the genuineness of the handwriting is at issue, and in that instance, our courts permit secondary evidence, such as the comparison of writings. But, other than that, the procedure as prescribed is mandatory on the judge, and his only discretion rests in the quality of the proof required to satisfy himself as to the validity of the will.
“That is so for the time-honored reason that testaments are in themselves sacred, and, in the proof and execution thereof by the order of court, the procedure as defined by our Codes, has been adopted and accepted in observance of this sacredness.
“Article 935, C. P., provides that the party praying for the opening and proof of the will shall cause the qualified witnesses to be summoned for the purpose of presenting the proof required.
“The applicant in this instance does not seek the summoning of witnesses before the judge, but on the contrary demands that, in avoidance of this plain command, the witnesses appear before a notary public at then-own will in Orleans parish.
“The words ‘summoning of witnesses’ to make proof can mean just what the words signify in their ordinary adaptation.
“The remaining provisions of this article require that notice in writing shall be given to the presumptive heirs of the deceased, *217 that they may attend, if they think proper, at the opening and proof of the will. It has been held, however, that only the heirs who reside in the parish where the probate proceeding is instituted are covered by this provision, and further that the failure of •notice will not in itself warrant the annulment of the judgment. Broussard v. Hebert, 149 La. 309, 89 So. 14.
“But the language of these provisions as to notice in itself clearly contemplates the proof of the will by'witnesses summoned into court, and whose testimony is given in court before the examinating judge, in the presence of all persons of interest, should they desire to be present, and likewise to afford to all .persons of interest as presumptive heirs the opportunity of observing the procedure to the end that the validity of the will may be legally proved and justice rendered between all persons concerned.
“To transfer the examination of witnesses to a foreign parish would undoubtedly in effect be denying the presumptive heirs who reside in the parish wherein the testator was domiciled their legal right to be present at the submission of proof of the testament.
“Under article 1655, R. O.

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148 So. 29, 177 La. 212, 1933 La. LEXIS 1679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-lewis-la-1933.