Succession of Staggers
This text of 254 So. 2d 289 (Succession of Staggers) 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 Annie STAGGERS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Roberts & Sanders, A. Russell Roberts, Metairie, for Mrs. Alice Staggers Schmidt, plaintiff-appellant.
Denechaud & Denechaud, Thomas A. Rayer and Otto B. Schoenfeld, New Orleans, *290 for Mrs. Ruth Staggers Kelieher, testamentary executrix, et al., defendants-appellees.
Before REDMANN, LEMMON and STOULIG, JJ.
STOULIG, Judge.
The plaintiff, Mrs. Alice Staggers Schmidt, has made a twofold attack upon what purports to be the testament of her late sister, Annie Staggers: an opposition to probate itself and a formal petition to annul the will. The grounds upon which the opposition to probate rests have been incorporated into the action to annul, and the matter adjudicated as a related whole. The trial court dismissed all opposition to the testament and the plaintiff has appealed.
On July 12, 1956, the will of Annie Staggers was executed in statutory form (LSA-R.S. 9:2442) before Frank Tournier, a notary public commissioned and qualified in and for the Parish of Orleans. It is undisputed that on this same date the testator was an in-patient at Ochsner Foundation Hospital in Jefferson Parish. Several issues are raised by the opposition to probate and the action of nullity consisting of a plea of judicial admission; the failure to comply with the statutory requirements for probate; and the validity of the instrument for the want of execution before a notary public duly commissioned for the parish in which it was signed.
Since the action of nullity was instituted within three months of the date of probate, under LSA-C.C.P. art. 2932 the proponents of the testament have the burden of sustaining its validity. Article 2932 provides:
"The plaintiff in an action to annul a probated testament has the burden of proving the invalidity thereof, unless the action was instituted within three months of the date the testament was probated. In the latter event, the defendants have the burden of proving the authenticity of the testament, and its compliance with all of the formal requirements of the law."
Also in an opposition to a probate of a will, under LSA-C.C.P. art. 2903 the burden of proof of the authenticity of the testament and its compliance with all of the requisites of law rests with its proponent. Thus, from the foregoing provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, the proponent bears the burden of sustaining the validity of the will against each of these attacks.
In connection with the plea of judicial admission, the appellant urges that in Article VI of the petition to annul she alleges:
"No will was found in the said box, and the Notary Public's proces verbal, when filed, will reflect that fact and petitioner alleges that the decedent left no will whatever, and died intestate."
And in their answer the defendant admits this allegation. Plaintiff submits this constitutes a judicial admission which is binding upon the proponents of the testament.
We see no merit in this argument. Defendants maintain that the admission does no more than agree that no will was found in the decedent's bank box. Considering the multiple disconnected averments of this allegation, it is readily understandable how the defendants could have inadvertently overlooked its full significance. The argument of the defendants becomes more persuasive and that of the plaintiff less tenable when considered in relation to the fact that the petition to probate the testament of the decedent was filed on June 17, 1969, and the opposition to probate by this plaintiff on June 20, 1969, both of which were prior to the filing of the petition to annul on June 23, 1969, in which is set forth the allegation forming the basis of the plea of judicial admission. There has never been any question that the will of January 12, 1956, does exist, and the plaintiff, like this court, must abide by that *291 truth. In our view, an erroneous declaration in pleadings cannot of itself serve to destroy a validly confected testament or deny the right of probate. Nor do the responsive pleadings of the defendants under these circumstances constitute a judicial admission.
The second objection to the probate of the testament is more technical. Plaintiff argues that Mr. Tournier, in his testimony, failed to identify the signature as being that of the decedent. LSA-C.C.P. art. 2887, the governing statute, reads as follows:
"A testament confected in accordance with R.S. 9:2442 must be proved by the testimony of the notary and one of the subscribing witnesses, or of two of these witnesses, that it was signed by the testator. If only the notary, or only one of these witnesses is living in the state and can be located, his testimony that the testament was signed by the testator will be sufficient.
"If the notary and all of the subscribing witnesses are dead, absent from the state, or cannot be located, the testament may be proved by the testimony of two credible witnesses who recognize the signature of the testator, or of the notary, or the signatures of two of the subscribing witnesses."
It should be noted that the testament was proven and ordered probated prior to the enactment of Act 475 of 1970, which amended LSA-C.C.P. art. 2887. The amendment does not alter or change the aforecited sections. The implication of the argument is that the notary and/or subscribing witnesses must recognize and identify the signature on the testament as being that of the testator. This contention cannot be maintained. Article 2887 specifically provides that subscribing witnesses need only declare that the testator signed the will in their presence. A recognition of signature is a different matter and is required only when the testament is proved by witnesses other than subscribing parties to the instrument.
The crucial issue of dispute in this matter concerns itself with the manner in which the will was confected, as opposed to either the capacity of the testatrix or the disposition of her property. Simply stated, it is whether the will was executed by the testatrix in the Parish of Orleans in the presence of the notary and two subscribing witnesses, as required by LSA-R. S. 9:2442, or if, as contended by the opponent, it was signed by the decedent in Ochsner Foundation Hospital, located in the Parish of Jefferson, in the presence of the notary public commissioned for Orleans Parish (who returned to his office before affixing his jurat and having it attested to by the subscribing witnesses).
The plaintiff has introduced hospital records and the testimony of hospital nurses, all offered to prove it unlikely that Annie Staggers could or would have left the hospital and traveled to New Orleans in order to execute the testament. As a proposition in abstract logic this may be so.
The weight of the direct evidence however (the evidence offered to prove what actually happened) is to the contrary. Mr. Tournier testified unequivocally that the will was executed in his office in Orleans Parish in his presence and in the presence of the two witnesses required by law. One of the witnesses, Erma Metrejean (Mrs. Douglas Youngblood), was reached through interrogatories and she substantiates Tournier's evidence.
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254 So. 2d 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-staggers-lactapp-1971.