Succession of Molaison

34 So. 2d 897, 213 La. 378, 1948 La. LEXIS 850
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 12, 1948
DocketNo. 38573.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 897 (Succession of Molaison) 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 Molaison, 34 So. 2d 897, 213 La. 378, 1948 La. LEXIS 850 (La. 1948).

Opinion

PONDER, Justice.

The plaintiff demands to be recognized as the adopted child and forced heir of Mathilde Molaison, deceased; the annulment of a certain instrument purporting to renounce her interest in the succession; and to be declared the owner of .an undivided one-third interest in the estate of the deceased. Her demands were rejectd by the lower court and she has appealed.

The instrument sought to be annulled reads as follows:

“State of Louisiana

“Parish of Vermilion

“On this 9th day of March, 1943, before me the undersigned Notary Public and two competent witnesses, came and appeared: Varina Ella Smith, a. resident of the Parish of Acadia, Louisiana, who declared that it was her wish and desire to renounce the succession of Mathilde Molaison Greene, of Abbeville, Louisiana, who departed this life March 7th, 1943, to whose succession she is called by virtue of having been adopted by the said Mathilde Molaison Greene as a child or daughter many years ago, and that she does hereby renounce the succession of said Mathilde Molaison Greene and abandon her rights as an heir at law.

*381 “Appearer further declared that this renunciation is made as a matter of conscience on her part, she having long considered many things touching her adoption and her rearing as a child by others than Mathilde Molaison Greene, and considering also the help and assistance given her in the past by J. N. Greene her husband, and considering what she knows to have been their wishes in the matter of her succession; these wishes being that she, appearer, would at the death of Mathilde Molaison Greene, accept Five Thousand Dollars, from the legatees under the last will of Mathilde Molaison Greene, and renounce her right to any more.

“Having received Five Thousand Dollars from Alzina LeBlanc Scheidt, named Executrix and Residuary Legatee in the last will of Mathilde Molaison Greene and for the reasons stated above, she makes this renunciation, and sign the same with a clear conscience and free will.

“Signed on this the 9th day of March, 1943, at Abbeville, Louisiana, in the presence of Chas. C. LeBlanc and Wesley Steen, competent witnesses.

“(Sig.) Varina Ella Smith

“Witnesses:

“(Sig.) Chas. C. LeBlanc

“(•Sig.) J. Wesley Steen

“(Sig.) Paul Langlinais,

“Dy. Clerk of Court and Ex-Officio Notary Public, Vermilion Parish, La.”

The following is written on the back of the above instrument:

“The renunciation on the reverse side of this sheet is hereby accepted by Alzina LeBlanc Scheidt, on behalf of herself and the other legatees named in the last will of Mathilde Molaison Greene.

“(Sig.) Alzina LeBlanc Scheidt

“(Sig.) J. Wesley Steen

“Dy. Clerk of Court ana Notary Public, Vermilion Parish, La.”

Mathilde Molaison died, testate and without issue, on March 7, 1943. In her will she bequeathed her home and its contents to her niece, Mrs. Alzina LeBlanc Scheidt. She bequeathed legacies to certain parties and the residue or remainder of her estate, which constituted the bulk of her estate, to her aforementioned niece.

The plaintiff, Varina Ella Smith, now the wife of Jules Greene, was fifty-two years of age at-the time this case was tried in the lower court. Her mother died when the plaintiff was an infant, four months of age, and her father married Mathilde Molaison some two years thereafter when the plaintiff was some two or three years of age. After Mathilde Molaison had married Issac Smith, she adopted the plaintiff as her child on October 26, 1896, by an authentic act passed before a notary public and two witnesses, which was duly recorded in the *383 conveyance records of Acadia Parish. Issac Smith died a short time thereafter when the plaintiff was only six years of age. The plaintiff has never resided with her stepmother, except on occasional visits. She resided with her paternal grandmother after the death of her mother until she reached the age of seven years, at which time she was placed in a convent or boarding school. She remained in this convent and another convent until she reached sixteen years of age. She received the equivalent of a high school education at the convent and thereafter attended Southwestern Institute at Lafayette for a part of one semester. She had no permanent home thereafter until some ten or twelve years ago, at which time she established a home in Rayne, Louisiana. During the interim between the time she left Southwestern Institute and the time she established a home at Rayne, she lived with various relatives and boarded with others part of the time. She was living at the time that Mathilde Molaison died in a small house built out of rough lumber of the dimensions of twelve by twenty-four feet in a poor section in Rayne, inhabitated by people of the white and colored races. For the last twelve years her income at no time exceeded $6 or $7 per month, which was derived from her earnings, until she was placed on the relief rolls of the welfare department. She is presently suffering from an advanced stage of diabetis and a highly inflamed knee, the result of previous accidents, which makes it very difficult for her to walk or get about.

Mathilde Molaison was first married to Issac A. Smith, the plaintiff’s father. Issac A. Smith died when the plaintiff was about six years of age. Thereafter and prior to the year, 1912, the exact date is not shown by the record, Mathilde Molaison married J. N. Greene, a resident of Abbe-ville, Louisiana. It appears that J. N. Greene acquired quite a large estate, which was left to his wife, Mathilde Molaison, at his death in the fall of 1937. J. N. Greene had for many years been a professional and business associate with Judge W. P. Edwards and they owned considerable property and stock in indivisión at the time of Greene’s death. They were engaged in various pursuits together. These pursuits were continued by Mathilde Molaison with Judge Edwards and at the time of her death she owned considerable property, both real and personal, in indivisión with him. This same property is presently owned by the succession in indivisión with him. The evidence shows that intimate relationship existed between Judge Edwards, J. N. Greene, Mathilde Molaison and the residuary legatee, Alzina LeBlanc Scheidt. The relationship between the Edwards’ family and the members of the residuary legatee’s family with the plaintiff was casual. They have never associated with the plaintiff and had met her only on a few occasions in the early years of the plaintiff’s life.

Mathilde Molaison died in the early hours of the morning of March 7th, in the City of New Orleans, and her body was shipped *385 to Abbeville for interment, arriving at the deceased’s home in Abbeville in the late afternoon of that day. Mrs. Scheidt, who had attended the deceased in her last illness, arrived at Abbeville earlier in the afternoon and went to Judge Edwards’ home where she and her husband read the will. Shortly thereafter, she phoned to Rayne and had a policeman to go to the home of the plaintiff. He carried the plaintiff to a phone in the neighborhood where the plaintiff was informed by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 897, 213 La. 378, 1948 La. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-molaison-la-1948.