Succession of Reeves

704 So. 2d 252, 1997 WL 671596
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 1997
Docket97-20
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 704 So. 2d 252 (Succession of Reeves) 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.

Bluebook
Succession of Reeves, 704 So. 2d 252, 1997 WL 671596 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

704 So.2d 252 (1997)

SUCCESSION OF Robert Roger REEVES, Jr.

No. 97-20.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

October 29, 1997.
Rehearing Denied February 6, 1998.

*253 Lawrence Sandoz, Jr., Opelousas, for Jarrett Garney Reeves.

Sidney Milton Blitzer, Jr., Richard F. Zimmerman, Jr., Baton Rouge, for Robert Roger Reeves, Jr.

Harry James Lossin, Sr., Joneville, for Dorothy Ann Reeves Faillace.

Before DOUCET, C.J., and YELVERTON, SAUNDERS, WOODARD and AMY, JJ.

SAUNDERS, Judge.

Robert Roger Reeves, Jr., died in 1992, leaving a statutory will in which he left certain bequests to his second wife, Jarrett Ganey Reeves, with whom he had been married more than eleven years. This appeal arises from the allegation that the bequests to Jarrett Reeves resulted from her undue influence over Reeves before his death. The trial court found that Jarrett Reeves had indeed exerted undue influence and nullified all bequests to her. The trial court further dismissed Ms. Reeves as executrix of the Roger Reeves estate. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

Before the couple's 1980 divorce, decedent Robert Roger Reeves, Jr., an attorney and prominent member of the community of Harrisonburg, Louisiana, had ten children by his first wife, Dorothy Dale: Dorothy Ann *254 Reeves Faillace (Ann), Joan Reeves Lossin, Robert Roger Reeves (Bob), Mary Rebecca Reeves (Becky), John Cotton Reeves, Michael Reddick Reeves, Joseph McCleary Reeves, Sophie Sarita Reeves Holland (Sarita), Noah Blackstone Reeves, and Alma Roger Reeves Moss.

Not long after his divorce, Reeves met and began dating Jarrett Ganey Young, an acquaintance of decedent's daughter, Ann, who had recently separated from her husband. Roger and Jarrett were married on July 18, 1981, when Roger was sixty years of age, and Jarrett was thirty-eight.

After being married for approximately nine years, Roger Reeves was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1990 from which he died on December 10, 1992, at age seventy-two. His statutory will dated September 16, 1992, left approximately one-half of his estate to Jarrett, including a lifetime usufruct over the children's ownership interest in Elmly Plantation. The remaining one-half of his estate was left to nine of his ten children. The will further named Jarrett as executrix and Lawrence Sandoz as the attorney for the succession.

One of the Reeves' children, Bob, was excluded from his father's will, leading him to file the instant suit to annul his father's will on March 15, 1993, alleging alternatively that the will was not properly executed and was a product of Jarrett Reeves' undue influence.[1] A five day trial concerning the alleged undue influence was held in July 1995. Based on the evidence, the trial judge found that Jarrett Reeves had indeed exerted undue influence and rendered judgment nullifying the bequests to his widow. Jarrett appeals this determination of the trial court.

Jarrett Reeves' appeal assigns the following errors:

1. The trial judge erred and committed manifest error in admitting the testimony, over timely objection, of a psychiatrist who had never seen the testator that undue influence existed at the execution of the testament which invalidated the bequest to wife since his opinion was not a psychiatric diagnosis.
2. The trial judge was clearly wrong in relying on the testimony of a psychiatrist who had never examined testator, who based his opinion on subjective information received from two daughters that the personality of their father changed during eleven years of second marriage, which invalidated bequest to wife based on undue influence.
3. The trial judge was clearly wrong and committed manifest error in ignoring the consistent pattern of five wills and a codicil prepared and executed by Testator over a period of eleven years that established a plan to divide assets between wife and children.
4. The trial judge committed manifest error in ignoring the testimony of long-time business associates of Testator, who testified concerning the relationship between Testator and wife, including no change in the personality of Testator as opposed to relying on post-mortem psychological autopsy of psychiatrist who never saw Testator.
5. The trial judge was clearly wrong in concluding that the evidence of the psychiatrist and two daughters of Testator established "clear and convincing" evidence of undue influence as required by Article 1483 of the Civil Code.
6. The trial judge committed manifest error in declaring the bequests to wife invalid due to undue influence when the record contains no evidence from doctors who attended testator that he suffered from mental problems that rendered him susceptible to undue influence.

Jarrett Reeves' maintains that the trial court erred in finding that undue influence was proven by clear and convincing evidence. In particular, Jarrett Reeves points to testimony indicating that, at the time of the execution of the will, Roger Reeves appeared to be acting of his own volition and was able to properly execute a will. Appellant argues that in rendering an adverse judgment, the *255 trial court incorrectly discounted the testimony of friends and business associates who had known the decedent both before and after his marriage to her, all of whom offered testimony in support of the testator's capacity.

In response to these charges, appellees remind us of the great deference to be accorded the trial court's findings of fact, which they suggest were adequately supported by the testimony of some of the children that their father had become increasingly isolated from them in latter years, and by a psychiatric autopsy performed by their retained expert, whose profile of decedent led him to conclude that decedent had indeed become vulnerable.

LAW

Present

Wills in Louisiana today may be voided on the authority of Louisiana Civil Code Articles 1478 or 1479.

Article 1478 provides for the nullification of wills upon grounds of fraud or duress.

A donation inter vivos or mortis causa shall be declared null upon proof that it is the product of fraud or duress.

La.Civ.Code art. 1479, on the other hand, provides for the annulment of a donation mortis causa on the more subtle grounds of undue influence.

A donation inter vivos or mortis causa shall be declared null upon proof that it is the product of influence by the donee or another person that so impaired the volition of the donor as to substitute the volition of the donee or other person for the volition of the donor.

(Emphasis ours).

There is precious little Louisiana jurisprudence on the topic of undue influence, as prior to the 1991 enactment Article 1479, such donations could not be annulled on this basis. Moreover, applying Article 1479 in pari materia with Article 1478 restated above is not without difficulty. Nonetheless, some insight may be drawn from the official Comment to La.Civ.Code art. 1479 and the experience of common law jurisdictions, who have long recognized the principle.

(b) This Article, like the preceding Article, presumes a donor who has capacity.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Succession of Ted Wayne Cox, Sr.
Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2024
Succession of Cook
189 So. 3d 409 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2015)
Bethley v. Keller Const.
836 So. 2d 397 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2002)
Succession of Cooper
830 So. 2d 1087 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2002)
Smith v. Smith Ex Rel. Clarke
747 A.2d 85 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
704 So. 2d 252, 1997 WL 671596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-reeves-lactapp-1997.