Succession of Price

13 So. 2d 240, 202 La. 842, 1943 La. LEXIS 933
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 8, 1943
DocketNo. 36731.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 13 So. 2d 240 (Succession of Price) 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 Price, 13 So. 2d 240, 202 La. 842, 1943 La. LEXIS 933 (La. 1943).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Presented for interpretation by this controversy are certain clauses in the olographic last will and testament, dated March 2, 1937, of Mrs. Anna Margaret Gay Price, *846 who left at her death a highly solvent estate valued at approximately one and one-half million dollars and consisting of assets located in the States of Louisiana, Missouri, Illinois and Tennessee.

No rights of forced heirs are involved, decedent’s only heirs at law being numerous collateral relations.

In due course, Richard C. Plater and his wife, Mrs. Anna Gay Butler Plater, the duly qualified testamentary executors, filed a second provisional account and tableau of distribution. To it oppositions were tendered by some of the legatees named in the will and by the attorneys appointed to represent the absent heirs.

The oppositions were regularly tried; and there was judgment dismissing them and approving the said account and tableau of distribution and ordering it homologated. This appeal by opponents followed.

The record of the proceedings contains a four-page printed copy of decedent’s will. This copy, for the purpose of convenience, will be hereinafter referred to in our discussion of the controversy.

After declaring “this to be my last will and testament, revoking all others heretofore made by me”, decedent directed that: “All my debts, if any, shall be paid.” Following this are instructions as to her burial. Then on the remaining portion of page one, and on pages two and three of the printed copy of the will are to be found provisions relating to particular and special legacies. Among those bequeathed a cash legacy of $1,000 each, if they survived the testator, are seven nieces and nephews, twenty-nine great nieces and nephews, and seventeen great-great nieces and nephews, all of whom are named.

Commencing at the top of page four of the printed copy, the will is completed with the following dispositions and provisions:

“All the rest of my estate of whatever description and wheresoever situated I give and bequeath, One Half to my niece and namesake Anna Gay Butler Plater, or if she is not living, this one half of my estate is to be divided equally among her children, Richard C. Plater, Jr., and Louise Plater Hale.
“One fourth of my estate I give and bequeath to my great niece and namesake Margaret Price Weaver, if she survive me.
"After all these bequests heretofore bequeathed in ■this will are carried out and all indebtedness paid then I wish the balance of my estate to be divided equally between all my nieces and nephews, great nieces and nephews, great great nieces and nephews, except my personal clothing, household furniture, jewelry and such possessions, which I have provided for in a list in my home, which I make as a part of my will and testament. I wish all my possessions amicably divided without anything being put on sale, as I have a horror of publicity.
“I name and appoint as executors of my will, Richard C. Plater and Anna Gay Butler Plater, to serve without Bond, and do not wish an inventory to be made as it is an unnecessary expense.
“I have written this entire will with my own hand, and sign my name to it on this *848 second day of March, nineteen Hundred and thirty seven (March 2d 1937).”

The above language of the will to which we have given emphasis is the basis for the existing dispute between the executors and opponents, each of the two groups having placed a different interpretation on it. That of the executors is reflected in their provisional account and plan of distribution herein being opposed.

The views of the respective litigants are clearly expressed in the following extract from the well considered written opinion of the trial judge:

“Both parties are in agreement that, in order to ascertain the ‘ “balance” ’ which is to be “divided equally between all my nieces and nephews” ’, all bequests and legacies found on the first ‘ “three pages” ’ of the will should be paid and discharged, including the debts of the decedent, the costs of burial, etc. But at this point, they part company. Their relative positions being this:
“The executors then propose, out of the residue thus indicated, to allocate one-half to Mrs. Plater and one-fourth to Mrs. Price (Margaret Weaver) ; and, then, out of the remaining one-fourth, to pay the debts of the estate, that is, the costs, fees and charges arising during or as a consequence of the administration of the estate, as distinguished from the debts of decedent existing at her demise.
“Opposing this proposal, the opponents contend that before allocating anything to Mrs. Plater and Mrs. Price, there should also he paid and deducted, the debts, fees and charges arising during or as a conse.quence of the administration of the estate, that is, the debts of the estate, as distinguished from the debts of the decedent existing at her death.”

According to a stipulation of counsel, the mentioned “debts, fees and charges arising during or as a consequence of the administration” include “Federal estate taxes, income taxes for the periods after the death of decedent accruing to the United States, the State of Louisiana and other States, all ad valorem taxes legally levied against the estate in respect of its property, real or personal, inheritance taxes legally levied against the estate in Tennessee and other States, all fees of attorneys, notaries, administrators and executors properly chargeable to the estate in Louisiana, Tennessee and other States, all costs of court chargeable to the estate, and all miscellaneous expenses legally incurred by the estate through its testamentary executors, administrators, agents, representatives and attorneys.”

It is further stipulated by counsel that the administration debts, costs and charges will practically exhaust that part of the estate referred to in the disputed third paragraph of the fourth page of the printed will.

Therefore, it is clear that unless the estate expenses and charges are paid before satisfaction of the mentioned bequests of one-half and one-fourth to Mrs. Plater and to Margaret Price Weaver (Mrs. Price), respectively, opponents will receive nothing under the “balance of the estate” disposition.

*850 The true rule in the interpretation of testaments is that “the intention of the testator must principally be endeavored to be ascertained, without departing, however, from the proper signification of the terms of the testament.” Civil Code, Article 1712; Succession of McBurney, 165 La. 357, 115 So. 618; Delaureal v. Roguet’s Succession, 177 La. 815, 149 So. 464. And, to ascertain that intention, the language of the will is generally to be understood in its ordinary popular meaning and without attending so much to the niceties of rules of grammar. Penny v. Christmas, 7 Rob. 481; Plasley v. Hasley, 25 La.Ann. 602.

These fundamental principles of law are recognized by the litigants.

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Bluebook (online)
13 So. 2d 240, 202 La. 842, 1943 La. LEXIS 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-price-la-1943.