Succession of Theriot

532 So. 2d 260, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 2015, 1988 WL 103159
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1988
DocketNo. 87-674
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 532 So. 2d 260 (Succession of Theriot) 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 Theriot, 532 So. 2d 260, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 2015, 1988 WL 103159 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

Catherine Maria Trahan and Gene Alvie Trahan commenced these proceedings to traverse the inventory of the estate of the late Elma Boudoin Theriot. The inventory of the Theriot Estate, prepared on September 15, 1986, by J. Berton Daigle, Notary Public, included, among other items, the following:

(1) Certificate of Deposit No. 410-0340-8 on deposit in Cameron State Bank standing in the name of Elma Theriot or Charamaine Leona Trahan with a balance on 5/6/86 of $13,635.89.
VALUED AND APPRAISED AT.$ 13,635.89
(2) Certificate of Deposit No. 41-0341-6 on deposit in Cameron State Bank standing in the name of Elma Theriot or Shawn Leon Trahan with a balance on 5/6/86 of $13,635.89.
VALUED AND APPRAISED AT.$ 13,635.89
(3) Certificate of Deposit No. 41-0342-4 on deposit in Cameron State Bank standing in the name of Elma Theriot or Catherine Trahan with a balance on 5/6/86 of $13,635.89.
VALUED AND APPRAISED AT.$ 13,635.89
(4) Certificate of Deposit No. 41-0659-8 on deposit in Cameron State Bank standing in the name of Elma B. Theriot or Catherine Trahan with a balance on 5/6/86 of $100,000.00.
VALUED AND APPRAISED AT.$100,000.00

The Trahans suggested to the Court in their motion to traverse that the above described Certificates of Deposit should not have been included in the decedent’s estate and they prayed for judgment declaring them the lawful owners.

The issues were narrowed subsequent to the Trahans’ motion and the only items of inventory before the Court at the hearing were the Certificates of Deposit issued in the names of Elma Theriot or Catherine Trahan and respectively numbered 41-0342-4 and 41-0659-8. The Trial Judge phrased the issues at the hearing as: (1) Did Elma Theriot intend to transfer the Certificates of Deposit to Catherine Tra-han? and (2) If she did intend the transfer, was it effective to convey ownership?

The Trial Court rendered judgment in favor of Catherine Trahan, individually, and against Larry Pete Boudoin and Douglas M. Haynie, the co-administrators of the Succession of Elma Boudoin Theriot. The Trial Judge concluded that by naming Catherine Trahan as an alternate payee on the certificates, Theriot intended to make a remunerative donation. The Trial Judge, subsequent to a review of the Civil Code articles addressing donations, La.Civ.Code arts. 1467, Et seq., held that Theriot’s donation was valid as a remunerative donation because remunerative donations do not require formal acts. Gene Trahan, although also a plaintiff, was not named in the judgment apparently because the Certificates at issue only named Catherine Trahan as an alternate payee.

Boudoin and Haynie, the co-administrators, sought this review and have assigned two errors. The administrators contend that the Trial Court erred in the following respects:

(1) The Trial Court erred in permitting the testimony of Catherine Trahan, without more, to establish a debt of [262]*262the decedent contrary to the dictates of La.R.S. 13:3722 (1950) (amended 1960) which specifies that a debt of a decedent be proven by the testimony of at least one credible witness, other than the alleged claimant, and other corroborating circumstances; and
(2) The Trial Court erred when it concluded that once Trahan had established that valuable services had been rendered pursuant to an agreement with Theriot the burden of proving that the value of the “donations” exceeded the value of the services by one-half, thereby mandating the necessity of a formal act of donation, shifted to the co-administrators, the parties challenging the alleged remunerative donations.

Catherine Trahan and her family, although neither related to Elma Theriot by blood nor marriage, were very close to the decedent and her husband. Trahan’s husband, Gene, was the godson of Enes G. Theriot, who had predeceased Elma, and Gene’s mother and Enes had been raised as brother and sister. Subsequent to the death of Gene’s mother, when Gene was a young child, the Theriots periodically cared for Gene establishing the bonds of kinship which endured until the Theriots passing.

Gene Trahan worked as a drilling consultant which required that he and his family live in numerous locations throughout the world. The Trahans, in 1978, lived in Singapore, Catherine’s native country, while Gene worked in the Philippines. While residing in Singapore, the Trahans received word that the Theriots wanted to speak with them. When Gene telephoned the Theriots he learned that Enes had experienced a stroke, that he was partially paralyzed and that the Theriots wanted his family to move in with them so they might care for them in their senior years. Catherine and Gene left Singapore in September of 1978 and moved in with the Theriots in the Theriots' home in Cameron Parish, Louisiana.

The testimony of the Trahans and their witnesses established that upon the Tra-hans’ return to the United States they, along with their only son at the time, resided with the Theriots in the Theriots’ modest but comfortable two-bedroom home. The Trahans contemplated purchasing their own home subsequent to their return to Louisiana primarily because they had two more children, but decided against any such purchase at the request of the Theri-ots. Catherine Trahan, the evidence indicates, assisted the decedent with the household chores, worked in the family vegetable garden and helped care for Enes until his death in May of 1980. Gene Trahan periodically worked as a drilling consultant, but devoted the majority of his time to managing the Theriots’ forty to fifty head of cattle and the Theriots’ forty acres of land. Although the record does not suggest that Enes and Elma did no work on the farm, it does reflect that because of their age and their health the Theriots depended greatly upon the Trahans.

During the Trahans’ years with the Ther-iots, the record suggests that they lived as one extended family. The Theriots did not charge the Trahans rent and they also assumed responsibility for all of the utility bills with the single exception of the telephone which Gene used occasionally for business. The record also reveals, however, that neither Catherine nor Gene received any compensation for their services. The food the two families ate was, for the most part, grown or raised on the farm. The Trahans’ relationship with the Theriots ended with the passing of Elma in May of 1986, approximately eight years after the Trahans moved from Singapore and six years after Enes’ death.

The initial issue on appeal addresses the propriety of permitting Catherine Trahan to establish her case solely upon her testimony without any other corroborating witnesses or evidence. The appellants question the actions of the Trial Judge suggesting that the Court erred in failing to apply La.R.S. 13:3721 (1950) (amended 1960) and R.S. 13:3722, supra, Louisiana’s “Dead Man’s Statute”. R.S. 13:3721 provides:

Parol evidence shall not be received to prove any debt or liability of a deceased person against his succession representa[263]*263tive, heirs, or legatees when no suit to enforce it has been brought against the deceased prior to his death, unless within one year of the death of the deceased:

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Bluebook (online)
532 So. 2d 260, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 2015, 1988 WL 103159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-theriot-lactapp-1988.