Succession of Robert

2 Rob. 427
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 Rob. 427 (Succession of Robert) 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 Robert, 2 Rob. 427 (La. 1842).

Opinion

Simon, J.

This controversy arises out and is the sequel of the ’ case decided by this court between the same parties, and reported in 17 La. 10. The parties went back to the Court of Probates, to proceed on the rule which we thought necessary to notice in our former decision, and which had been taken by the dative testamentary executor, during the progress of the previous litigation before the Commercial Court. The first step that was taken before the court a qua, after the rendition of our decree, was the issuing of a commission to prove the hand-writing of the testatrix in France. Three witnesses were examined, from whose testimony no doubt can be entertained as to the genuineness of the testament; wherefore it was ordered by the inferior court, that the rule taken by the testamentary executor should be made absolute, and that the proceeds of the several notes originally in dispute between the parties, should be paid over to him, to be by him ad ministered as property belonging to the estate of Maria Josepha Robert, reserving to Genevieve Robert the right of claiming whatever amount she might be entitled to under the will.

A few days after this decree was rendered, the executor filed an account or tableau, in which, after deducting the privileged costs and expenses, he disposes of the balance of the funds in his hands in favor of the universal legatee. The testatrix’ natural mother, being entirely excluded, filed an opposition to this tableau on the ground that, supposing the will to be valid and-executory, she is nevertheless, entitled to inherit one-half of her daughter’s estate. This opposition was sustained by the judge a quo, who ordered the tableau to be so amended as to place the opponent thereon as entitled to one-half of the residuum of the estate, and Gustave Al-[433]*433lier to the other half; and from this judgment, the dative testamentary executor, and the universal legatee have both appealed.

The appellee has prayed, in her answer to the petition of appeal, that the judgment ordering the execution and registry of the will may be reversed, and the succession of her deceased daughter decreed to belong to her as legal heir.

This case presents three distinct and important questions of law for our consideration, to wit: First, was the olographic testament in question sufficiently proven before the Court of Probates, although the original will was not produced and recorded ?

Second, Where was the legal domicil of the testatrix, who was a minor, above sixteen years of' age, at the time the will was executed ?

Third, By what law is her capacity to dispose to be governed, and under what law is the extent of her disposition to be determined and ascertained ?

I. The genuineness of the will cannot be contested, as it is established by the clear and positive testimony of three witnesses, well acquainted with the hand-writing of the testatrix; and the notary in whose office it was deposited by order of a French tribunal, testifies that the law of France does not permit him to part with the original. This provision of the French law is, in this respect, similar to our own. Civ. Code, art. 1650. Code of Prac. art. 941. So that there is clearly an absolute impossibility of procuring the original of the will under consideration, and of producing it for the purpose of being deposited in the probate judge’s office according to law. But is this uncontrollable circumstance to have the effect of defeating the olographic will of the deceased ? We think not. We said in our first decision, 17 La. 18, that “ the judge of probates ought not to order the olographic will of Maria Josepha Robert to be carried into effect, without its being first proved before him according to law, unless satisfactory evidence is produced to show that it has been duly proved in France.'’’ This opinion was based on art. 1682 of the Civ. Code, in which it is positively enacted that our courts cannot refuse to order the execution of a foreign will, if it be established that it has been duly proved before a competent judge of the place where it was received. Surely, it would be vain to contend that the proof here [434]*434produced would have been insufficient in France, if required there, to establish the genuineness of the will; and why, if sufficient there, should not such proof be considered as conclusive in this state ? Less weight or effect ought not to be given to the testimony obtained under the supervision of our own courts, than to evidence taken in a foreign country, to satisfy a foreign court; for, if under the law of France, it had been required to prove the genuineness of the will in question, its execution would have been ordered here on the mere production of a duly certified copy of the record of the proceedings had, and of the evidence received before the competent French tribunal, without the necessity of producing the original will. The policy of the art. 1682 is very obvious. Our law, on this international subject, seems to have intended to give the same effect to foreign wills in this State, as they would have in the country in which they were received or executed, provided they have been duly proven there ; yet, it is agreed that where no proof has been adduced in a foreign country, because the law of that country did not require it, we should not be satisfied with the same degree of evidence that would have been sufficient to satisfy the foreign tribunal, and even our own courts under the first branch of art. 1682, and that we should exact a compliance with an impossibility. We cannot assent to this proposition. The main object of our law on this subject, is to guard and protect our citizens against any fraud that might be committed to their prejudice, if it did not require the proof of the genuineness of 'foreign wills ; but when this has been satisfactorily established, such object is undoubtedly obtained, and it would be superfluous to require more.

It has been insisted, however, that arts. 1648 and 1649 of our Code show that the original will ought to be produced, in order to be identified with the testimony of the witnesses who have recognized it, and that, in its absence, the evidence would be incomplete. This position would perhaps be correct, if the witnesses were in personal attendance before the Court of Probates ; but these articles are not negative laws ; they do not say that no other kind of proof shall be admitted; and we doubt very much wheth er, under their application, if an olographic testament executed here, had, by some accident, been destroyed before being legally proved, [435]*435a true copy of it, identified with the original by the testimony of two credible witnesses who had seen both, and who would be able to swear to the genuineness of the original in the manner pointed out by law, should not be considered as a sufficient compliance with the provisions of our Codes. Surely, we are not prepared to say that, in such a case, the legal rights acquired under the will would also be defeated, and that the parly would be left without remedy. This is indeed an analogous and even a stronger case ; and as, in our opinion, our law makers cannot have intended to require an impossibility, we must conclude that, under such circumstances, the proof furnished by the appellants, is a sufficient compliance with the requisites of the Codes, and that the inferior judge did not err in ordering the execution of the will under consideration.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Rob. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-robert-la-1842.