Succession of Teagle

206 So. 2d 753, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5188
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1968
DocketNo. 10914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 So. 2d 753 (Succession of Teagle) 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 Teagle, 206 So. 2d 753, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5188 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

This litigation was instituted by Mrs. Thelma C. Teagle, widow of H. B. Teagle, [754]*754on behalf of her children for the purpose of securing a judicial decree ordering a reduction in the bequests made in the will of Hardy A. Teagle. The petitioner asserts that the will as written deprives the children of their legitime in their grandfather’s estate. In opposition to this position Mrs. Laverne Teagle Tope and Mrs. Vera Teagle Avery, daughters of the decedent, assert that H. A. Teagle, prior to his death, effected a donation in favor of the children of H. B. Teagle which conveyed' property more than sufficient to satisfy the legitime of the grandchildren as forced heirs. From a judgment resolving the issue in favor of the children of H. B. Tea-gle, Mrs. Tope and Mrs. Avery have appealed.

Hardy A. Teagle died January 17, 1965 domiciled in Caddo Parish, survived by his two daughters and five grandchildren, the children of H. B. Teagle. The decedent left a last will and testament in olographic form dated March 7, 1957 which reads:

“Shreveport March 27, 1957 I will and bequeath unto my two daughters Laverne Sarah Teagle Tope and Vera Dee Teagle Avery equal proportions all of the property I own at my death. The children of my deceased son H. B. Tea-gle have already received their part of my estate. I appoint my daughter Vera Dee Teagle Avery, executrix of my will —Full seizen and without bond.
H. A. Teagle.”
After the will was probated Mrs. Vera Teagle Avery qualified as Testamentary Tutrix. The estate of H. A. Teagle involved a tract of land situated in Natchi-toches Parish, Louisiana, and more particularly described as:
“Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SE/4 of NE/4), Section 22, and three acres in the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (SW/4 of NW/4) Section 23, all in Township 11, Range 6 West.”

The property was purchased February 24, 1925 at which time Hardy A. Teagle was married to and living with Epsey Lowery Teagle, grandmother and mother respectively of plaintiffs and defendants. In 1943 Hardy A. Teagle transferred by regular deed the property to his son H. B. Teagle for a recited consideration of $1.00.

H. B. Teagle died in 1954 survived by Thelma C. Teagle and his five children and his father and mother. Thelma C. Teagle for herself and children asserted a claim to the property and reaching an understanding with Hardy A. Teagle, she executed a deed of conveyance on February 7, 1957 recognizing Hardy A. Teagle as the owner of the south 28.67 acres of the 43 acre tract. In proper proceedings before the Tenth Judicial District Court for Natchitoches Parish, Thelma C. Teagle, as Tutrix for the minors, was authorized to execute the deed and convey the minors’’ interest in said property “for the purpose of effectuating and completing the transaction, compromise and partition of the said 43 acre tract * * In furtherance of the agreement H. A. Teagle executed an act of conveyance to Thelma C. Teagle and her children bearing date of September 22, 1956 containing the following clause:

“ * * * he does by these presents, GRANT, BARGAIN, SELL, CONVEY AND DELIVER, with full guarantee of title, and with complete transfer and subrogation of all rights and actions of warranty against all former proprietors of the property herein conveyed, together with all rights of prescription, whether acquisitive or liberative, to which said vendor may be entitled, unto MRS. THELMA C. TEAGLE, JUNE TEA-GLE SMITH, SHIRLEY TEAGLE OTTLEY, JOYCE MAXINNE TEA-GLE, NANCY JEAN TEAGLE AND PEGGY JO TEAGLE, * * * ”

Mrs. Epsey Lowery Teagle died August 21, 1961 survived by her husband and the plaintiffs and defendants herein. It was [755]*755then discovered that the deeds aforesaid transferring portions of the 43 acre tract contained an error in the description of the property therein described. Accordingly on September 18, 1964 H. A. Teagle and Mrs. Laverne Teagle Tope and Mrs. Vera Teagle Avery executed an instrument with reference to deed bearing date of September 22, 1956 in which it is recited they “ * * * do hereby sell, transfer, assign, quit-claim, release and relinquish * * * all of the right, title and interest of each in and to the following described property * * * »

Appellants do not contend the instrument affecting the 14.33 acres conveyed to Mrs. Thelma C. Teagle and her children were in fact simulations made without an intention to transfer title but their position is that such deeds or transactions evidenced a donation on the part of H. A. Teagle granting unto his grandchildren their share of his estate prior to his death. Therefore, they conclude that the estate of H. A. Tea-gle consists of his Vi interest in the South 28.67 acres as conveyed through the deed of September 22, 1956, and also his I Vi community interest in the North 14.33 acres which was conveyed to Thelma C. Teagle and her children, the total estate comprising some 21 Vi acres.

In response to the foregoing argument the appellees assert that the deeds of September 22, 1956 and September 18, 1964 which were executed respectively by H. A. Teagle and by H. A. Teagle and Mrs. Tope and Mrs. Avery, were onerous transactions, the terms of which are binding upon those who signed the instruments and that consequently Mrs. Tope and Mrs. Avery are estopped to contend that such deeds evidenced donations. The plaintiffs deny that the property conveyed to them should be included in the estate of H. A. Teagle, and that such estate consists only of the deceased’s community interest in the 28.67 acres of land conveyed by Thelma C. Tea-gle; and that further the interest of the grandchildren should be Vi of % of 28.67 acres, or 3.18 acres. Defendants assert that the grantees, Thelma C. Teagle and her five children named in the 1956 deed, received a V¿ interest each in the property so transferred. Appellees on the other hand contend that the instrument transferred the property in the proportion of Vi to Thelma C. Teagle and a Vio interest to each of her children.

As heretofore pointed out, appellants have not attacked the validity of the deed of September 22, 1956 which appears to be a deed of transaction or compromise but insist such act by H. A. Teagle constituted a donation. Acting upon timely objection the trial judge consistently ruled evidence tendered on behalf of appellants to prove a donation to be inadmissible as parol evidence prohibited by LSA-C.C. Arts. 2236, 2237, and 2276, which read:

“Art. 2236. The authentic act is full proof of the agreement contained in it, against the contracting parties and their heirs or assigns, unless it be declared and proved a forgery.”
“Art. 2237. The acknowledgment of payment, made in an authentic act, can not be contested, under pretense of the exception of non numerata pecunia which is hereby abolished.”
“Art. 2276. Neither shall parol evidence be admitted against or beyond what is contained in the acts, nor on what may have been said before, or at the time of making them, or since.”

In deference to the foregoing codal articles our Supreme Court has repeatedly held that a vendor under an act of sale cannot later attempt to show by parol evidence that the conveyance was actually a donation and not an onerous contract. Judge Tate in construing the codal articles just mentioned made the following comment:

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Bluebook (online)
206 So. 2d 753, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-teagle-lactapp-1968.