Succession of McBurney

111 So. 86, 162 La. 758, 1926 La. LEXIS 2319
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 5, 1926
DocketNo. 27678.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 111 So. 86 (Succession of McBurney) 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 McBurney, 111 So. 86, 162 La. 758, 1926 La. LEXIS 2319 (La. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

Mrs. Aléxina Sinclair McBurney, a widow 76 years old, died at her residence in this city on August 21, 1924, leaving an estate consisting of real estate, bonds, stocks, and money, all of which was inventoried and appraised at $717,937.52.

The decedent left no forced heirs, the nearest of kin being five cousins all of whom resided in Canada.

On. December 2, 1921, Mrs. McBurney executed a last will in olographic form by which she disposed of all of her property and designated Mr. John Davidson, Dr. John C. Barr,- and Dr. E. F. Bacon as executors with seizin and without bond. The will was •probated, and the three executors named *761 were confirmed and qualified on September 8, 1924.

On account of a possible conflict between his duty as executor and his interest as legatee under the will and his claim under donations inter vivos, Dr. Bacon resigned the trust of executor.

The legality and regularity of the will as to form was made the subject of attack ■by the heirs in the original proceedings in the court below, but that attack has been .abandoned.

The will makes some 14 special legacies and a universal bequest of funds deposited in certain banks after certain designated legacies out of said moneys had been satisfied.

The only dispositions of the will contested in this court are: (1) The one: “Everything in my bank boxes, money, stocks, bonds, are to be for Dr. E. P. Bacon. The bank boxes are in the Hibernia and Whitney safety deposit department.” And: (2) The disposition with respect to the money on deposit in the ■savings department of the Bank of Montreal .and the savings department of the Imperial Bank of Toronto, Canada.

After the will had been probated, four of the cousins of Mrs. McBurney filed a petition attacking the legacies contained in the will in favor of the Charity Hospital, Marion Sinclair, one of the cousins, and Dr. Bacon, on the grounds: (1) That the disposition to endow a hospital for consumptives in connection with the Charity Hospital was null for uncertainty and lack of existing legatee capable of taking the same; (2) that the legacy to Dr. Bacon of the contents of the bank boxes -was null for the reason that Dr. Bacon was a doctor of medicine in attendance as such on Mrs. McBurney during her last illness; and (3) that the legacies directed to be paid out of the money of the deceased on deposit in the banks in Canada were null for the reason that before her death Mrs. McBurney had disposed of the said funds contrary to the intent of the legacies.

Thereafter the two executors brought suit against Dr. Bacon in which it was alleged that certain gifts inter vivos of money, bonds, and stocks, claimed by Dr. Bacon to have been made to him by the deceased, were not in truth gifts, but that the moneys and other things mentioned by the ¡executors were received by Dr. Bacon from Mrs. McBurney as her agent and are property of her succession. They further allege that if they were gifts they were null for the reason that Dr. Bacon attended the deceased professionally during her last illness and for the further reason that they were not made by notariat act.

The cash claimed to have been received by Dr. Bacon as agent totals the sum of $27,-761.62, and the bonds and stocks amount to $100,664.43.

The executors therefore prayed for judgment against Dr. Bacon for the amount of cash received as already stated and that he be ordered to turn over to the executors the said stocks and bonds. They asked for further judgment for $1,040, being the amount received by Dr. Bacon as the difference between 81 bonds of Canada maturing 1933 which were sold by Dr. Bacon and the same number of Canadian bonds of 1934 purchased by him.

All five of the legal heirs intervened in this proceeding by the executors and made substantially the same allegations.

Dr. Bacon in answer to the demand of the heirs and executors, admitted the receipt of the moneys and the possession by him of the stocks and bonds. He alleged that the cash had been given to him by Mrs. McBurney in the form of checks as a manual gift, and that all of the stocks and bonds referred to had also been given to him as manual gifts by Mrs. McBurney. He denied that he had professionally attended Mrs. McBurney during *763 the sickness of which she died, and alleged that the legacy in the will and manual gifts were valid and legal.

After a trial there was judgment against Dr. Bacon for $11,169.62, representing an amount drawn by him from the bank in Canada and the profit realized by him on the sale or exchange of the Canadian bonds. He was also ordered to turn over to the executors the $80,000 in Canadian bonds, issue of 1934, together with all interest collected therein, or, in default thereof, that he pay said executors the value of said bonds to wit, $83,-404.43.

It was held that the special legacies to be paid out of the money in the Canada banks had lapsed for the reason that Mrs. Mc-Burney had caused the said money to be withdrawn and practically all of it to be invested in the bgnds referred to.

Except as herein noted the demands of the heirs and executors were rejected.

Erom this judgment, the executors, Dr. Bacon and the Presbyterian Hospital, claiming to be universal -residuary legatee, have appealed.

The heirs have not appealed nor have they answered the appeal. '

In their brief, counsel for the heirs frankly admit that they were unable to establish the fact that Dr. Bacon attended Mrs. Mc-Burney professionally in her last illness, lienee the demand of the heirs for the nullity of the legacies to Dr. Bacon on that score may be accepted as abandoned.

Nor can the h,eirs have the judgment changed in their favor in any other respect for the reason already stated.

Their only interest now as appellees is in maintaining the judgment in so far as it went against Dr. Bacon. .

Otherwise, the contest is limited to the executors, the Presbyterian Hospital, and Dr. Bacon. •

We have carefully examined the evidence as to the alleged professional relations of Dr. Bacon to Mrs. McBurney during the illness of which she died, and are constrained to hold with the trial judge that the preponderance of the evidence is against the contention made by the executors and originally by the heirs that Dr. Bacon treated Mrs. McBurney professionally or was her attending physician during the last illness.

The attack on the legacy to Dr. Bacon and the manual gifts made to him on this score must therefore fall.

The same may be said with respect to the claim of the Presbyterian Hospital in so far as this ground of attack on the will is made by said institution.

Moreover, the Presbyterian Hospital was not made a universal legatee under the will, but only a residuary legatee of the funds in the banks of Canada after certain specified legacies from these funds were paid.

The claim as universal residuary legatee is based on the following provision of the will:

“About my money in Toronto, Canada.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 86, 162 La. 758, 1926 La. LEXIS 2319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-mcburney-la-1926.