Succession of Rolling

127 So. 2d 292, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1799
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1961
DocketNo. 44
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 So. 2d 292 (Succession of Rolling) 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 Rolling, 127 So. 2d 292, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1799 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Dr. Laurance R. Rolling, Julian Emanuel Rolling, Earl W. Rolling1, Alfred B. Rolling2, all as forced heirs, instituted this suit in the Succession of Julia Bonnabel Rolling against the defendant, Miss Bonnie W. Rolling, their sister, individually and as executrix, endeavoring to have judicially declared as simulated, certain sales of real property conveyed to the defendant and also charging her with misappropriation of various funds; in the alternative, they insisted that the defendant be ordered to collate the value of the property and to restore to the succession the misappropriated funds.

Defendant then filed a petition against each plaintiff, demanding collation of donations of real and personal property made by the decedent’ during her lifetime.

All of the plaintiffs answered the foregoing petitions and denied receipt of the donations, with the exception of Earl W. Rolling, who conceded that he had not paid his mother anything for his property.

The plaintiffs, all sons of the decedent, renounced collation as to each other.

Defendant in response to plaintiffs’ original petition pleaded various exceptions which were overruled.

Defendant then answered generally denying plaintiffs’ allegations and asserted that she was the true and lawful owner of the properties and that she had not misappropriated any funds belonging to the succession.

The lower court rendered a judgment ordering the defendant, Miss Bonnie W. Rolling, to collate $237.33 to each of the six heirs of Earl W. Rolling and Alfred B. Rolling, and $362 to Dr. Laurance R. Rolling, and Julian Emanuel Rolling to collate $24 in favor of the defendant. From that judgment Dr. Laurance R. Rolling, Julian Emanuel Rolling and the heirs of Alfred B. Rolling have prosecuted this appeal. The defendant neither appealed nor answered the appeal.

The trial judge thoroughly analyzed both the facts and the law applicable to this case in his written reasons for judgment which, in our opinion, encompass the issues so fully, that we adopt them as our own.

“This matter comes before this court on a petition by Dr. Laurance R. Rolling, (Julian) Emanuel Rolling, Earl W. Rolling, [294]*294and Alfred B. Rolling. (Earl W. Rolling having died prior to the trial and his heirs, Earl A. Rolling, Raymond L. Rolling, and Mrs. Ruth Rolling Massa, were made parties in his stead; and Alfred B. Rolling, having died prior to the trial and his heirs, Bonnabel Rolling, Charles Rolling and Le-ora Rolling, were made parties in his stead.) This petition asks that Miss Bonnie W. Rolling collate in kind or money for the following property:

“1. A working interest in an oil lease, alleged value of $2,000.00.
"2. Property located at 1129 Metairie Road, alleged value of $25,000.00.
“3. Avenue ‘A’ property (vacant), alleged value of $3,250.00.
“4. Various Covington properties, forming one piece of real estate, alleged value of $425.00.
“5. Improvements constructed on Cov-ington property, alleged value of $4,000.00.
“6. Cherokee Street property, alleged value of $5,900.00.
“7. $18,000.00 alleged to have been taken from a safe deposit box.

“The allegations in essence are that Mrs. Julia Bonnabel Rolling, decedent, and mother of all parties hereto, either gave to, or bought for, Miss Bonnie W. Rolling, all of the above property.

“Also before the court are the petitions for collation by Miss Bonnie W. Rolling against:

“1. Alfred B. Rolling for $2,300.00 advanced to him by his mother.
“2. Earl W. Rolling for Bonnabel Place Property, valued at $3,000.00.
“3. Dr. Laurance R. Rolling, for Stella Street property, valued at $4,000.00.
“4. (Julian) Emanuel Rolling for Codi-fer Boulevard property, valued at $3,680.-00.

“Most of the testimony taken at the trial concerned the property referred to as 1129 Metairie Road, Metairie, Louisiana, or simply as ‘Metairie Road Property’.

“This Metairie Road property fronts some 120 feet on Metairie Road by a depth of 300 feet. The property was sold by notarial act to Miss Bonnie W. Rolling on January 14, 1941, for a recited consideration of $3,500.00 and the usufruct to the seller, her mother, for a period of her lifetime. The attack here is leveled at the sale on the ground that the sale is a simulation and hence of no effect; that under Article 24803 of the LSA-Civil Code. the seller remained in possession under a usufruct and hence the presumption is that the sale is simulated and that under Article 24444 of the LSA-Civil Code the price was not paid or that the price is less than one-fourth of the value of the property as of the date of the sale, and hence that the sale is void.

“The court finds that the stated price of $3,500 was paid. This consideration was paid on January 21, 1941, by check which is in evidence. The source of this money is clear, there having been evidence introduced showing that there was $3,000.-00 withdrawn from a savings account of Miss Bonnie W. Rolling the same day, and evidence to the effect that Miss Bonnie W. Rolling borrowed $500.00 on the same day from the First National Bank of Gretna, and that she took the resulting $3,500.00 and placed this in a checking account; that [295]*295she then wrote a check to her mother in the amount of $3,500.00 and her mother took the check and deposited it to the account of herself, and that the mother withdrew sums therefrom in small amounts over a period of years. The fact that the payment was made one week after the date of the notarial act is of no consequence, as held in Exposito v. Lapeyrouse, [La.App.] 195 So. 814. The fact that $3,500.00 was paid defeats the assertion that the sale was simulated, for a simulated sale is where no price is paid and if any price, no matter how inadequate, is paid, there is no simulation. See Eureka Homestead Soc. v. Baccich, 190 La. 494, 182 So. 653, and Freeman v. Woods, [La.App.] 1 So.2d 134.

“The court feels that the * * * presumption of Article 2480 of the Revised Civil Code is rebutted by the fact that $3,-500.00 was paid and also by the additional fact that Miss Bonnie W. Rolling was as much in possession as her mother by living with her mother.

“Two real estate experts were produced by the four brothers in an attempt to prove a valuation on the Metairie Road property of $25,000.00 as of January 14, 1941. These experts stated that the value of the property in their opinion was $25,000.00. These experts testified that there were similar sales around that time which would bear out the valuations, but did not introduce any sale which was comparable to the Metairie Road property. The real estate expert for Miss Bonnie W. Rolling gave a valuation of $10,500.00 and also produced for introduction into the record a number of sales evidenced by certified photostatic copies thereof, some of which are remote and some of which are in close proximity to the Metairie Road property.

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127 So. 2d 292, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-rolling-lactapp-1961.