Succession of Schaub

453 So. 2d 974, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 9014
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1984
DocketNo. CA-1510
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 453 So. 2d 974 (Succession of Schaub) 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 Schaub, 453 So. 2d 974, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 9014 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

BARRY, Judge.

In this succession proceeding a testamentary usufruct in favor of a surviving spouse infringes on the legitime. The trial judge properly ruled that under Civil Code Art. 1499 a forced heir must choose to suffer the impingement or abandon the disposable portion.

The decedent’s son, Stephen Chauvin, filed a petition for his legitime, alleging the impingement by a testamentary usufruct in favor of his stepfather over his mother’s separate property home. He elected under art. 1499 to receive his forced portion in full ownership, abandoning his share of the disposable portion. Chauvin amended his petition, asserting a provision in the will requiring immediate repayment of a mortgage note on the separate-property home from the residuary estate constituted an [976]*976illegal “charge or condition” on his legi-time.

The amended petition also claims entitlement to his legitime now in full ownership without having to abandon his share of the disposable portion. He asserts there are sufficient assets remaining in the succession to satisfy his legitime without disturbing the usufruct over the home, but the provision requiring liquidation of the mortgage will exhaust the remaining assets, depriving him of his legitime. Thus, Chau-vin argues, the provision requiring payment of the mortgage is an illegal “charge or condition” in violation of C.C. Art. 1710 and should be stricken. He also contends the trial court undervalued the legitime through miscalculation of the succession assets.

The case was decided on a motion for summary judgment and the pertinent facts are not in dispute. Mrs. Buckley, Chau-vin’s mother, died testate in New Orleans on February 21, 1981. She is survived by two children: petitioner Chauvin and a daughter, Frankie Chauvin Ramonden 1, who are issue of her first marriage. The decedent is also survived by her second husband, Stewart Buckley, whom she designated as executor of her estate. The succession includes both separate and community property.

According to the amended sworn descriptive list the decedent’s net V2 interest in the community totals $5,058.71. The bulk of decedent’s estate is separate property and includes her home on State Street in New Orleans, V2 interest in Bayou Lacombe real estate, equity in the Jarrett estate in Texas, and movables.

The original descriptive list itemizes the separate property:

ASSETS
$102,100.00 2636 State St.
22,500.00 Bayou Lacombe property
13,150.00 Jarrett Estate
4,225.00 movables
$141,975.00 total separate assets
DEBTS
$ 39,751.66 mortgage on 2636 State St.

The amended descriptive list increased the value of the separate movables to $9,532.25. The amended list also increased the value in the Jarrett estate and the Bayou Lacombe property by $2,132.08. These increases were not reflected in the trial court’s calculations of the legitime and disposable portion, and appellant assigns this alleged oversight as error.

By brief, however, Chauvin asserts his legitime was undervalued because “[n]either the increase in the Bayou Lacombe property value or the Jarrett estate is attributable to increase in value after death. They are both merely amendments of the date of death value.”

Chauvin does not explain why the increases did not occur following decedent’s death. The executor argues the small increase in the Jarrett estate represents interest from investments, etc., which accrued after the testatrix’s death and should not be included in calculating the legitime.2 Similarly, he suggests the increase in the Bayou Lacombe property may also represent post-death appreciation. Since the record does not resolve this question and the trial court expressly deferred a final accounting and homologation until after resolution of the legal issues, we remand this issue.

For the purpose of dealing with Chau-vin’s primary complaints we will use the higher valuations. The date-of-death value of the succession assets, less debts (including the home mortgage) is $116,852.16. With two forced heirs the legitime of each child is ¼ or $29,213.04.

Mrs. Buckley bequeathed to Mr. Buckley her half of their community property. She also gave her husband the usufruct for life of her State Street home with all its furnishings, excluding a few items which were subjects of particular legacies. The will then provided “subject to the foregoing special bequests and usufruct, I leave the [977]*977balance of my estate to my two children, Frankie and Stephen, share and share alike.”

The will further provides:

“I am the co-owner with my sister of a house and land on Bayou Lacombe in St. Tammany Parish. In the event of my death, I instruct the executor of my estate to sell my interest in that property and to apply the proceeds from such sale to the mortgage presently existing on my home at 2636 State Street. I am also a legatee of the Jarrett estate presently pending in Houston, Texas and I instruct my executor to apply any inheritance received after my death from this estate to any balance remaining on the mortgage of my home at 2636 State Street, it being my desire to have that mortgage liquidated in full before my heirs and usufructuary are put into possession of my estate.”

Chauvin claims the usufruct and provision requiring liquidation of the mortgage are “prohibited conditions on the rights of the legitimate heirs.” We agree with the trial court’s finding that the usu-fruct over the State Street home constitutes an impingement on the legitime. Under LSA-C.C. Art. 1710,

“[N]o charges or conditions can be imposed by the testator on the legitimate portion of the forced heirs.”
Art. 1499 provides:
If the disposition made by donation inter vivos or mortis causa, be of a usufruct, or of an annuity, the value of which exceeds the disposable portion, the forced heirs have the option, either to execute the disposition or to abandon to the donee the ownership of such portion of the estate as the donor had a right to dispose of.

Our courts have consistently held that, except when specifically authorized by statute,3 a testamentary usufruct which deprives a forced heir of his right to receive his legitime “free and clear” is illegal.4 Succession of Hyde, 292 So.2d 693 (La.1974); Succession of Ramp, 205 So.2d 86 (La.App. 4th Cir.1968). As the court declared in Succession of Hyde, at 696:

For all its mystic and constitutional fervor, forced heirship is nothing more than the right of descendants or ascendants to a fixed portion of a person’s estate. Articles 1493, 1494, 1495. But forced heir-ship is a right to a fixed portion of the estate in property (articles 1493, 1494), on which “no charges or conditions can be imposed by the testator.” Article 1710. As has been correctly noted, the import of these articles is that the legi-time must be in full ownership. Lazarus, supra at 194.

The proceeds of the Bayou Lacombe and Jarrett properties are insufficient to pay off the mortgage.

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Related

Succession of Schaub
457 So. 2d 1194 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
453 So. 2d 974, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 9014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-schaub-lactapp-1984.