Succession of Maggie McClendon Ard

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 2019
Docket2019CA0293
StatusUnknown

This text of Succession of Maggie McClendon Ard (Succession of Maggie McClendon Ard) 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 Maggie McClendon Ard, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 0293

SUCCESSION OF MAGGIE MCCLENDON ARD

DATE OF JUDGMENT' ' N0V 1 5 2019 k. ON APPEAL FROM THE i TWENTY-FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT NUMBER 23, 420, DIVISION F, PARISH OF ST. HELENA STATE OF LOUISIANA

HONORABLE ELIZABETH P. WOLFE, JUDGE

Robert J. Carter Counsel for Appellant Greensburg, Louisiana Martha Ard Hamler, as Succession Administrator Jessica C. Ledet Amite, Louisiana

Brad P. Scott Counsel for Petitioner -Appellee Ashley U. Schmidt Leroy Ard O. Genevieve Leslie New Orleans, Louisiana

BEFORE: MCDONALD, THERIOT, AND CHUTZ, JJ.

Disposition: VACATED AND REMANDED. CHUTZ, J.

Appellant, Martha Ard Hamler ( Ms. Hamler), in her capacity as the

administrator of the Succession of Maggie McClendon Ard, appeals a judgment of

possession sending numerous persons into possession of succession property. For

the following reasons, we vacate and remand.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The decedent, Maggie McClendon Ard, died intestate on December 25, 1970.

No action was taken in her succession for over forty- five years. In July 2017, the

decedent' s daughter, Ms. Hamler, filed a petition for appointment as administrator

of the decedent' s succession. Ms. Hamler was appointed administrator of the

Succession on July 21, 2017. She claimed an administration was needed in order to

partition the succession property, which consisted of an undivided interest in certain

immovable property. It appears Ms. Hamler' s action was precipitated by her

brother, Leroy Ard (Mr. Ard), placing a mobile home in front of the house where

Ms. Hamler lived on land they regarded as succession property.

According to the amended affidavit of death and heirship filed by Ms. Hamler,

the decedent had six children: Martha Ard Hamler, Florence Pearline Ard, Leroy Ard, Joseph Ard, John Eli Ard, and Myrtis Earnestine Ard Burton. At the time Ms.

Hamler was appointed as administrator, she and Mr. Ard were the decedent' s only

surviving children. The amended affidavit of death and heirship also listed the

children and grandchildren of Ms. Hamler' s deceased siblings, several of whom

were also deceased.

As administrator, Ms. Hamler filed a detailed descriptive list, which listed

twenty acres of land in St. Helena Parish as the only asset of the Succession. Ms.

Hamler valued the property at $ 50, 000. 00. The twenty acres constituted the

decedent' s undivided interest in a larger ninety -acre tract, which apparently was part

of the succession of Jake McClendon. Ms. Hamler claimed Jake McClendon' s heirs

2 agreed in principle concerning where the decedent' s twenty acres were located

within the ninety -acre tract. However, a partition of the 90 -acre tract was never

completed.

In December 2017, Mr. Ard filed a petition for possession) In the petition,

Mr. Ard made allegations regarding the identity of decedent' s heirs, but he did not

file an affidavit of death and heirship. He asserted there was no need for further

administration of the succession, which he claimed was debt -free, and requested he

and the other heirs be put into possession of their shares of the succession property.

Following a hearing at which Ms. Hamler opposed putting any heirs into

possession, the trial court ruled in favor of Mr. Ard. The trial court signed a

judgment on April 23, 2018, sending Mr. Ard and several other purported heirs into

possession of the succession property. Ms. Hamler filed a motion for new trial

alleging the judgment of possession was contrary to the law and evidence. The trial

court denied the motion for new trial on October 1, 2018.

Ms. Hamler now appeals the judgment of possession rendered by the trial a court, raising five assignments of error. She argues the trial court committed

Mr. Ard also requested injunctive relief and a temporary restraining order. The trial court concluded the request for injunctive relief was moot in light of its ruling on Mr. Ard' s request to be placed into possession of the succession property. Mr. Ard did not appeal that ruling. Accordingly, there is no issue regarding Mr. Ard' s request for injunctive relief before this court.

2 In her motion for appeal, Ms. Hamler referred to the dates of the denial and signing ofher motion for new trial rather than to the April 23, 2018 date on which the judgment ofpossession was signed. A judgment denying a motion for new trial is an interlocutory order and is normally not appealable. However, Louisiana jurisprudence has consistently held that appeals should not be dismissed for a mere technicality. Williams v. Hospital Service District No. I of Tangipahoa Parish, 18- 13 86 ( La. 12/ 17/ 18), 258 So. 3d 584, 584 ( per curiam). When a motion for appeal refers by date to the judgment denying a motion for new trial, but the circumstances indicate the appellant intended to appeal from the final judgment on the merits, the appeal should be maintained as taken from the judgment on the merits. Williams, 258 So. 3d at 585; Byrd v. Pulmonary Care Specialists, Inc., 16- 0485 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 12/ 22/ 16), 209 So. 3d 192, 195. In this case, it is clear from the assignments of error, four out of five of which specifically assert the trial court committed reversible error " in granting the judgment of possession," that Ms. Hamler sought to appeal from the judgment of possession signed by the trial court on April 23, 2018. Ms. Hamler' s error in listing the date of the wrong judgment in her motion for appeal is

insufficient grounds to dismiss this appeal, particularly since appeals are favored and will be dismissed only when the grounds are free from doubt. Byrd, 209 So. 3d at 195. Thus, we find the merits of the April 23, 2018 judgment of possession are properly before us. -

3 reversible error in granting the April 23, 2018 judgment of possession because: a

majority of the heirs did not petition for possession as required by La. C. C.P. art.

3362; there was no evidence the heirs unconditionally accepted the debts of the

succession; no assets were retained to pay succession debts as required by La. C. C.P.

art. 3362; and the trial court recognized heirs of the decedent' s descendants without

judgments or affidavits being introduced to establish their rights as heirs.

Additionally, Ms. Hamler contends the trial court erred in denying her motion to

continue since Mr. Ard failed to attach a memorandum to his petition as required by Louisiana District Courts Rule 9. 9( b).

DISCUSSION

Irrespective of Ms. Hamler' s assignments of error, our examination of the

judgment of possession revealed a fatal defect requiring that the judgment be vacated. The judgment of possession provides:

LEROY ARD, MARTHA ARD HAMLER, JOSEPH ARD, SR., now deceased, FLORENCE PEARLINE ARD, now deceased, JOHN ELI ARD, SR., now deceased, ROSE HITCHENS, ERNEST BURTON, IRMA BURTON JACKSON, now deceased, and OTIS BURTON, now deceased, be recognized as the heirs of the DECEDENT, MAGGIE MCCLENDON ARD, and that LEROY ARD, MARTHA ARD HAMLER, JOSEPH ARD, SR., now deceased, FLORENCE PEARLINE ARD, now deceased, and JOHN ELI ARD, SR., now

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Related

Rainey v. Entergy Gulf States, Inc.
885 So. 2d 1193 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)
In Re Succession of Moore
737 So. 2d 749 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1998)
Pope v. Roberts
144 So. 3d 1059 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2014)
Byrd v. Pulmonary Care Specialists, Inc.
209 So. 3d 192 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)
Brown v. Terrebonne Parish Sheriff's Office
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Williams v. Hosp. Serv. Dist. No.1 of Tangipahoa Parish
258 So. 3d 584 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2018)

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Succession of Maggie McClendon Ard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-maggie-mcclendon-ard-lactapp-2019.