Succession of Pelloat

54 So. 132, 127 La. 873, 1911 La. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1911
DocketNos. 18,478, 18,547
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 54 So. 132 (Succession of Pelloat) 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 Pelloat, 54 So. 132, 127 La. 873, 1911 La. LEXIS 476 (La. 1911).

Opinion

MONROE, J.

Jacques Pelloat, an unmarried man, of the peasant class, came to this country from the south of France in 1866, and settled in the parish of St. Tammany, where he engaged in business and prospered, and where he was'joined some time later, by his brother, Peter, and his sister, Mrs. Peyre; • another sister, Mrs. Christia-Blanchine, remaining at home. Mrs. Peyre appears to have kept house for him, and, many years ago, he formed the acquaintance of Lillie Gaile, then a girl, who grew up, married, became a widow, and lived in New Orleans, where she worked for her living, earning from $6 to $8 a week, boarding with her sister, in a house where her mother also lived, and paying $12 a month for her board and lodging. The acquaintance between her and Pelloat appears to have ripened into a warmer feeling, and in the summer of 1909 they decided to be married; but he impressed it upon her that the marriage should be kept secret, giving her to understand that he was afraid of his relatives, and, rather indefinitely, that it was necessary on account of his business. He engaged the services of a priest [876]*876and told him that he wanted the marriage kept absolutely secret; that he wanted the publication of the bans dispensed with; that he intended to go to France to see about the placing of some money that he had sent there; and that, when he came back, he would make the marriage public. He also told him, referring to his relatives here, that he had been neglected, and that they all wanted his money. The result was that the priest, who had known him for some years, attended to the obtaining of the marriage license; also obtained permission, from the church authorities, to dispense with the bans; arranged to have the ceremony performed in a (church) parish other than that in which either of the parties resided; and on October 7, 1909, at about 8 o’clock in the evening, the marriage was celebrated, according to law and to the canons of the Roman Catholic Church, in St. Anthony’s Church, on North Rampart street; and the groom paid the reverend father $3 for his services, paying also a fee of $10 to the priest within whose jurisdiction the marriage, under the rules of the church, should have been celebrated. After the marriage the couple repaired to the house where the bride had been boarding, and remained there all night, apparently, in adjoining rooms, but, really, in the same room; the fact of his remaining exciting no comment, for the reason that he had lodged there before on his visits to the city. The next morning he returned to Covington, leaving his wife where she was, under the name that she had been bearing, and, so far as the inmates of the house knew, unmarried. Thereafter he visited her three or four times a month, and they corresponded with each other. He furnished her with money with which to pay her board and buy her clothing, and she stopped working. They discussed the question of the building of a residence in the city and selected a site, and he spoke of beginning the work, and, also, of giving her $10,000 worth of jewelry on the anniversary of his birthday, which was to have come in April. They also talked of the trip to France. They called upon the priest who had celebrated the marriage, and, the wife requiring some medical attention, they called, together, on a physician, to whom Pelloat introduced her as his wife, and whose services he engaged in her behalf. Pelloat also seems to have mentioned the marriage, with an injunction of secrecy, to a negro whom he had known for many years, and whose wife did some dress making for Mrs. Pelloat. Otherwise, the secret was pretty well kept, though a slight suspicion appears to have been aroused, even from the beginning, since, on the day after the marriage, Peter Pelloat’s married daughter, living in New Orleans, wrote to her cousin, the daughter of Mrs. Peyre, at Covington, that she had heard that her uncle and Lillie Gaile were going to be married. The letter was addressed in her uncle’s care, and he appears to have taken possession of it, as it never reached the person to whom it was addressed until after his death, when it was found in the pocket of his coat. Early •in March, 1910, Pelloat was taken sick, in Covington, and though, for a week or ten days, the matter was not considered serious, at the end of about two weeks, he died. His wife did not know of it until after his death; but, 'as soon as she was informed of his death, she announced the marriage, and on the next morning went to Covington and made further announcement upon the subject among his relatives. He died, intestate, leaving an estate valued at more than $150,-000, and leaving his wife about $500, being the balance left of the money, less, probably, than $1,000, with which he had furnished her during his life. The succession was opened by Peter Pelloat, and there was some skirmishing in the court concerning 'the appointment of an administrator and other [878]*878matters; but, finally, the conflict was narrowed down to a claim by the brother and sisters, on the one hand, to be put in possession of the estate of the decedent, as his sole heirs, and a claim by the widow, on the other hand, to be allowed to take from the estate the marital portion — that is to say, “the fourth of the succession in full property.” The heirs, in their pleadings, deny that plaintiff (as we shall, for convenience, call the widow) was married to decedent, or that she is in necessitous circumstances, and then, in general terms, deny that she is entitled to the marital fourth. But as the marriage, the necessitous circumstance, of the widow, and the wealth of the decedent are established beyond any question, the general denial that she is entitled to the marital fourth has been explained in the argument to mean that the marriage was not- of the kind to which the law relating to the marital fourth is intended to apply; the contention being that the marital fourth is intended to keep one of the spouses who has been accustomed, during the marriage, to the enjoyment of wealth, from being suddenly reduced to penury, and that it is not intended-for a wife who has been accustomed to nothing but penury, or who has not lived constantly with her husband, and borne his name, and shared his fate, or for a wife who has been wanting in interest, feeling, or attachment for her husband.

The law applicable to the facts of the ease is found in the following provision of the Civil 'Code, to wit:

“Art. 2382. When the wife has not brought any dowry, or. when what she has brought as a dowry is inconsiderable with respect to the condition of the husband, if either the husband or the wife die rich, leaving the wife in necessitous circumstances, the latter has the right to take out of the succession of the deceased what is called the marital fourth; that is, the fourth of the succession if there be no children. * * *»

And the ease presented by the plaintiff before the court meets all tbe conditions required, since she was the wife of the decedent, and brought no dowry, and the decedent died, rich and childless, leaving her in necessitous circumstances.

The theory of the defense is predicated upon expressions, 'found here and there, in opinions dealing with particular cases and the application of which should be, as they were intended to be, confined to the cases in which they were used.

Thus: Counsel for the heirs quotes from the opinion in Succession of Fortier, 3 La. Ann. 105, to the effect that:

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 132, 127 La. 873, 1911 La. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-pelloat-la-1911.