Succession of Meunier

52 La. Ann. 79
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
DocketNo. 13,036
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 79 (Succession of Meunier) 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 Meunier, 52 La. Ann. 79 (La. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Rlanohard, J.

-Francois Meunier died leaving a last will and testament, olographic in form, by which he bequeathed to the city of Carouge, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland (his native city), all the property in the city of New Orleans, owned by him, consisting of several pieces of real estate, shares of stock, money and bills due him, all of the aggregate value of about $25,000.

He directed this property to be sold and then followed a declaration to the effect that the city of Carouge “shall place the said sum at interest, and with the interest shall endow each year two poor girls [81]*81and shall give a pension to ten old persons of the two sexes without any distinction of religion”.

He named Jerome Meunier, Joseph Bayle and Emile Hoehn as testamentary executors.

The will was admitted to probate, the executors were confirmed as such and letters testamentary issued to them.

Subsequently, collateral heirs of the deceased, his first cousins, residing in Switzerland and France, presented a petition for the an-nullment of the will.

They represented that the deceased left no ascendants nor descendants, and that they, with others mentioned, were his closest of kin and sole heirs.

The will is attacked as being against public policy and in derogation of the laws of the State of Louisiana, where the properties it deals with are situated, and where the will is to have effect.

It is averred that the city of Carouge is a foreign municipal corporation incapable of receiving and taking charge of an estate here; that the dispositions of the will in its favor are not sanctioned by the laws of Louisiana nor by the treaty ratified between the United States and the Swiss ^Republic; that the laws of Switzerland did not, at the date of the execution • of the will, nor .that of the probate thereof, authorize the city of Carouge to accept the legacy burthened with the conditions stipulated; and that no comity in this respect exists between the State of Louisiana or the United States and Switzerland.

As further ground of avoiding the will, it is charged that the bequest to the city of Carouge creates a trust or fidei commissum obnoxious to the law of Louisiana; that by the terms of the will the said city is not vested with full ownership of the property or funds bequeathed, but, on the contrary, is required to invest the funds and to hold the same in trust perpetually for the purpose of endowing each year “two poor girls” and pensioning “ten old persons” whose existence is uncertain and whose names, residences and nationality are not given; and that this is'an attempt to will by testament through the intervention of a commissary or attorney in fact and constitutes a prohibited substitution.

The petitioners represent that, with the will declared void, the inheritance of the property of the deceased devolves upon them under the laws of Louisiana and the treaties in force between Switzerland and the United States.

[82]*82The judgment of the court a qua sustained the opposition to the will, decreed its nullity and recognized the claimants as heirs at law of the deceased.

An order for a suspensive appeal from this decree was taken by the executors and the representatives of the city of Carouge.

MotioN to Dismiss Appeal.

A motion is made here to dismiss the appeal on several grounds, ■one of which is that the record is incomplete. It suffices to say we do not find it so. .

Another ground is that the trial -court was without authority, to fix the amount of the suspensive appeal bond, and that no. appeal suspending the execution of the judgment, could be taken without the giving of a bond exceeding by one-half the sum of $15,887.50, which was the net amount of the estate left in the hands of the executors after the payment of the debts of the deceased and the expenses of administration. The bond given was for less than the sum mentioned, but was for the amount fixed by the court.

The judgment appealed from annulled the will- and the probate thereof. It further recognized the petitioners as heirs óf the deceased. and as such entitled to the dead man’s estate.

But it did not, in terms, send them into possession; there was no order directing the recognized heirs to be put- into possession. Neither did the judgment mention the amount of the net proceeds of the estate then in the hands of the executors. There'was no judgment against the executors' specifically for a sum as representing such proceeds. ' :

Under these circumstances it was a case where the District Judge was empowered to grant a suspensive appeal and fix the amount of the bond to be given as such.

Succession of Edwards, 34 La. Ann. 216; Coyle vs. Succession of Creevy, 34 La. Ann., 539; 30 La. Ann. 285; 29 La. Ann. 327.

A further objection is that the only party who signed the bond as surety is Edward Hoehn, who in his capacity of co-executor is appellant herein.

The contention is that Iioehn individually cannot be surety for Hoehn, executor, appellant.

Neither can he. State vs. Judge, Etc., 2 R. 449; Lafon vs. Lafon, 2 N. S. 571.

[83]*83It may be, too, though on this we express no opinion, that Hoehn in his individual capacity is not competent as surety for his co-executor, Jerome Meunier, on an appeal bond given by the two executors. It is not necessary to decide this question, for Hoehn, individually) was clearly competent as surety on the appeal bond for the other appellant, the city of Carouge.

Even, therefore, were the appeal held not good as to the executors, it must be maintained as to the real party in interest — the legatee under the will — and this, necessarily, would bring the casé before us on its merits.

But it is contended the city of Carouge has hot appealed. This contention is based on the fact that the motion and bond of appeal recite that “Louis Rittener, the duly qualified’ agent of the Commune of Carouge,” appeals. It is urged that this is not an appeal by the city of Carouge.

We find that citation in this proceeding tc annul the will was prayed for against “the City of Carouge, Switzerland, through her accredited agent, Louis Rittener”; that the answer of the city of Carouge to the demand reads: — “Into court comes Louis Rittener, the duly qualified agent and attorney in fact of the Commune of Oar-ouge,” etc.; and that the judgment upon the issues made up by this answer is against “the City of Carouge, Switzerland, herein represented by Louis Rittener, its duly qualified agent and attorney in fact”. Under these circumstances, while the way in which the appeal was taken and the bond drawn may be objectionable from the standpoint of technically correct' pleading, the appeal taken by the party filing the answer which joined the issue and who is recognized in appellees’ pleadings as the agent and attorney in fact of the city of Carouge, must be held to be the appeal ó £ the latter.

The motion to dismiss is denied.

ON the Merits.

Testamentary substitutions and fidei commissa .have been prohibited in this State from the earliest times.

This prohibition was established in the interest of public order and State policy, and held to embrace within its scope the trust estates of the common law.

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Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-meunier-la-1899.