Succession of Thompson

71 So. 2d 544, 224 La. 995, 1954 La. LEXIS 1171
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1954
DocketNo. 41245
StatusPublished

This text of 71 So. 2d 544 (Succession of Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Thompson, 71 So. 2d 544, 224 La. 995, 1954 La. LEXIS 1171 (La. 1954).

Opinions

FRUGE, Justice (ad hoc).

Corenthia Youngblood Thompson, born out of wedlock, died intestate. The claimants to her estate are Emaline Lewi's Banks, her mother, and Willie Thompson, her surviving husband. The district court rendered judgment in favor of the surviving husband and the mother has perfected this appeal.

Emaline Lewis Banks is claiming the estate under Article 922 of the Louisiana Statutes Annotated-Civil Code which provides as follows:

“Art. 922. The estate of a natural child deceased without posterity, be[998]*998longs to the father or mother who has acknowledged him, or in equal portions to the father and mother, when 1 he has been acknowledged by both of them.”

Emaline Lewis Banks had acknowledged Corenthia Youngblood as her child in conformity with Article 203 of the Louisiana Statutes Annotated-Civil Code. This acknowledgment had the effect of changing the status of Corenthia Young-blood from an illegitimate child to that of a natural child. State v. De Lavallade, 1949, 215 La. 123, 39 So.2d 845. It also had the effect of giving Emaline Lewis Banks a right to the estate of the natural child deceased without posterity by virtue of Article 922 of the Louisiana Statute Annotated-Civil Code, supra.

Willie Thompson, however, claims the estate under Article 924 of the Louisiana Statutes Annotated-Civil Code, which provides as follows:

"Art. 924. If a married man has left no lawful descendants nor ascendants, nor any collateral relations, but a surviving wife not separated from bed and board from him, the wife shall inherit from him to the exclusion of any natural child or children duly acknowledged.
“If, on the contrary, it is the wife who died without leaving any lawful descendants, ascendants, or collateral relations, her surviving husband not separated from bed and board from her, shall not inherit from her, except in case she should leave no natural child or children by her duly acknowledged.”

His contention is that as the deceased left no natural child or children by her duly acknowledged, he takes the estate to the exclusion of her natural mother.

While this Court has not heretofore decided a contest between a natural mother and a surviving husband for the estate of a natural child deceased without posterity, it has decided the contest between a natural brother or sister and a surviving spouse for the estate of a natural child deceased without posterity. Article 923 which provides the right of the natural brothers and sisters to inherit in the estate of a natural child whose mother and father predeceased him is a companion article to Article 922. If this right given to the natural brothers and sisters by Article 923 is qualified by the right given to the surviving spouse by Article 924, then by analogy, the right given to the natural mother by Article 922 would also be qualified by the right given to the surviving spouse by Article 924.

The first case before this Court in which the question of whether the surviving spouse was to be preferred as a successor over the natural brother of the deceased was that of Victor v. Tagiasco’s Ex’r, 6 La. 642, decided in 1834. The Court of Probate had decided the question in favor [1000]*1000of the surviving husband. On appeal, this Court declared:

“The Court of Probates has thought that the article being clear and free from ambiguity, and the plaintiff having brought himself clear within it, his pretensions could not be resisted: that the article 918 could only be reconciled with the preceding by being considered as an .exception thereto; and that it could be more easily reconciled with it, than with the article 923.
“On the part of the appellant we have been referred to the works of several French authors on the construction and interpretation of several articles of the Napoleon Code which are similar to those of the La.Code, relied on in this case, and which are considered to bear very great analogy to the latter. S. Tissandier 385 No. 1945. Favard de L’Anglade des successions 154. Rogrion on article 766 de Code Napoleon. 4 Toullier 280 No. 269 3 Duranton livre 3, titre 1.
“It has appeared to us that the Court of Probates did not err. In our legislation the surviving wife is preferred to all * * * the natural relations of the husband, and he to all her natural relations except those in the descending line. La.Code 918 and 913. It is true some provision is made for natural brothers and sisters and their descendants, lb. 917; to which an exception is made for the surviving wife or husband. Ib. 918. If in order to place either of these in the situation the legislator has clearly assigned them natural brothers and sisters, or their descendants are in certain cases postponed to the former; Courts of Justice merely comply with the will of the legislator in giving to the surviving spouse his legitimate rank.”

This principle was reaffirmed in Succession of Ducloslange, 1847, 2 La.Ann. 98, Duplessis v. Young, 1856, 11 La.Ann. 120, and In re Nereaux’s Estate, 1904, 112 La. 572, 36 So. 594.

If the will of the legislator was clear we would have no difficulty in complying with it, in giving to the surviving spouse his “legitimate” rank. But the question of preference is not clear to us. While it is true that either Article 922 or Article 924 must yield to the other, neither our Code nor our jurisprudence contains sufficient reason for us to decide which must yield.

In turning to the articles of the Code Napoleon of 1804 and to the works of several French commentators on the construction and interpretation of several articles similar to our own, we find that the French have qualified their Article 924, C.N.1804, Art. 767, by their Article 922, C.N. 1804, Art. 765, and have given the natural mother and father a right of inheritance equal to the position which the lawful mother and father enjoy ift the succession of a legitimate child. And this, the French say, is as it should be, for wheii the natural [1002]*1002mother or father has acknowledged their child they have fulfilled the duties of nature, and deserve to enjoy all the rights of parenthood. Tissandier, Traite méthodique et complet (1863), T. 8, p. 285, Sec. 1944. As concerns the right of the surviving spouse, the French say that no matter how close may have been the bond which united the surviving spouse to the deceased, he or she belongs to a foreign family, has rights of succession in that family, and should not have rights in another except where there does not exist any relative. Rogron, Les Codes Frangais Expliqués, (3e éd.1847), T. 1, p. 135, n° 767.

We are inclined to agree with the French in the interpretation of these articles. Articles 917, 924, and 929 set forth the classes of irregular successors and their order of preference. Articles 922 and 923 are more in the nature of special legislation in relation to the successions of natural children who die without posterity.

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71 So. 2d 544, 224 La. 995, 1954 La. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-thompson-la-1954.