Succession of Ramp
This text of 205 So. 2d 86 (Succession of Ramp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Succession of John J. RAMP, Sr.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*87 Maurice L. Burk, New Orleans, for the succession-defendant-appellee.
James David McNeill, New Orleans, for Mrs. Ramp, Individually and as Executrix.
William F. Wessel, New Orleans, for appellants.
Lemle & Kelleher, H. Martin Hunley, Jr., New Orleans, amici curiae.
Before McBRIDE, REGAN, and BARNETTE, JJ.
REGAN, Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the lower court which ordered four of the five heirs of the decedent, John J. Ramp, Sr., to accept their forced portion of the succession of their father subject to a usufruct in favor of his third wife, Mrs. Mildred M. Ramp. The judgment appealed from further refused to remove Mrs. Ramp as executrix of the succession, decided that a certain boat was community property and therefore it should be included in the *88 assets of the succession, ratified retroactively the unauthorized sale of the boat for the amount of $2,500.00, and amended the executrix's final account to include the sum of $397.29, which was on deposit in a local bank when Ramp's death occurred, and amended the final account to include the executrix's usual fee.
The record discloses that the decedent, John J. Ramp, Sr., was married three times. Of his first marriage, one child was born, namely Myrtle Ramp Breland. In the course of his second marriage, four children were born, John Ramp, Jr., Salvadore Ramp, Margaret Ramp Rossi, and Delphine Ramp Puderer. No children were born of the decedent's third marriage to the executrix herein, Mildred Machin Ramp.
In a will dated October 2, 1965, the decedent made the following testamentary disposition, which forms part of the subject matter of the dispute which is now posed for our consideration.
"I will and bequeath the usufruct of all which I may die possessed, both real and personal, including both community and separate property, to my wife Mildred Machin Ramp, during her life. I will and bequeath the disposable portion of my estate jointly and in equal shares to Salvadore Ramp, Bella Toups and Willis Breland, Jr., subject to the usufruct in favor of my wife. I will and bequeath the forced portion of my estate to all of my children, share and share alike, subject to the usufruct in favor of my wife."
The testator appointed his third wife, Mildred Ramp, as his executrix.
Subsequent to the opening of the succession, the four heirs of the decedent born of his second marriage filed a suit to annul the will predicated upon their father's mental incapacity and upon the assertion that he and his third wife lived together without having been legally married.
Following lengthy negotiations between the attorneys for the succession and the attorneys for the heirs, a settlement agreement was entered into by all parties concerned except Mrs. Breland. Under the terms thereof, the four heirs who had endeavored to annul the will were to receive $1,000.00 in cash from the succession, and one of the heirs, Salvadore A. Ramp, was to receive a remission of attorney's fees and interest on a judgment obtained against him by the succession in the First City Court of New Orleans. In return, the four heirs of the second marriage bound themselves to dismiss their nullity suit with prejudice, agreed to accept the succession of their father in conformity with the conditions set forth in his last will, and finally, they agreed not to contest the decedent's will for any reason.
This settlement was submitted to the district judge on joint petition of the parties thereto to approve and homologate, and it was certified by their affidavit. It subsequently was advertised in accordance with law, and later it was homologated by a judgment of the lower court.
Near the end of the administration of the succession, the executrix filed a rule against the heirs to show cause why they should not be put into possession thereof in accordance with the terms of the will. The heirs, in the meantime, had employed new attorneys, and they now opposed the executrix's rule for the reason that the will impinged upon their forced portion, contrary to Civil Code Articles 1493 and 1499, in view of the fact that their forced portion was burdened with a usufruct in favor of the decedent's third wife. A similar rule was filed by Myrtle Ramp Breland, who sought to have the usufruct of her share of the forced portion declared a nullity. In addition thereto, the heirs filed a motion ordering the executrix to show cause why she should not be removed from her office for the reason that she sold a movable asset of the estate without prior court approval and that she concealed and *89 failed to include in the descriptive list a bank account which constituted a community asset.
From a judgment against them, which we have delineated hereinabove, the heirs have prosecuted this appeal.
The law is well settled and all parties hereto agree, that in the absence of a valid agreement to the contrary, an heir is entitled to receive his forced portion free of any usufruct whatsoever, with the exception of the usufruct of the surviving spouse provided for in Article 916 of the Civil Code. It is clear in this instance, however, that Article 916 is not applicable, and it is conceded by all of the litigants that the heirs of the decedent by his second marriage would be entitled to their forced portion free and clear of the executrix's usufruct, if they had not signed and homologated the agreement referred to hereinabove.
The heirs of the second marriage insist that the contract which they signed and homologated is nevertheless subject to recision on the ground of lesion beyond one-fourth of the true value of the property. As authority for this contention, they point to the articles contained in Section 7 of Chapter 12 of Title I Book III of the Louisiana Civil Code dealing with the recision of partitions of successions. The relevant articles read:
C.C. Art. 1397. "Partitions made, even with persons of full age, may be rescinded, like other covenants, for radical vices, such as violence, fraud or error."
C.C. Art. 1398. "They may even be rescinded, on account of lesion; and, as equality is the base of partitions, it suffices to cause the recission, that such lesion be of more than one-fourth part of the true value of the property."
C.C. Art. 1402. "The action of the recission mentioned in the foregoing articles takes place in the cases prescribed by law, not only against all acts bearing the title of partition, but even against all those which tend to the division of property between coheirs, whether such acts be called sales, exchanges, compromises, or by any other name." (Emphasis added.)
Both in brief and in oral argument before this court, all of the litigants concede that the value of the usufruct far exceeds one-fourth of the actual value of the property. Consequently, counsel for the executrix and for the succession rely, as did the trial judge in his reasons for judgment, upon Article 3078 of the Louisiana Civil Code which provides that.
"Transactions have, between the interested parties, a force equal to the authority of things adjudged. They can not be attacked on account of any error in law or any lesion. But an error in calculation may always be corrected."
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205 So. 2d 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-ramp-lactapp-1968.