Succession of Tiffany Angelle Arthur

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 2020
Docket20-CA-75
StatusUnknown

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Bluebook
Succession of Tiffany Angelle Arthur, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

SUCCESSION OF TIFFANY ANGELLE NO. 20-CA-75 ARTHUR FIFTH CIRCUIT

COURT OF APPEAL

STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 785-620, DIVISION "E" HONORABLE FRANK A. BRINDISI, JUDGE PRESIDING

May 27, 2020

JUDE G. GRAVOIS JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Hans J. Liljeberg, and John J. Molaison, Jr.

AFFIRMED JGG HJL JJM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, SHAWN SUBERVILLE TERREBONNE (ORIGINALLY PETITIONED AS "SHAWN TERREBONNE SUBERVIELLE") Robert M. Braiwick, Jr. GRAVOIS, J.

Appellant, Shawn Terrebonne Subervielle, administratrix of the Succession

of Tiffany Angelle Arthur, appeals the trial court’s August 23, 2019 judgment

which denied her Rule to Show Cause Why Succession Assets Should Not Be

Accounted For and Released to Administratrix. The judgment on appeal in this

case involves interpretation of specific provisions of a testamentary trust. No

evidence was introduced at the contradictory hearing on the Rule to Show Cause.

Finding that the record does not contain evidentiary support in favor of the claims

made in the Rule to Show Cause, we affirm the trial court’s judgment which

denied the Rule to Show Cause.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On July 13, 2018, Shawn Terrebonne Subervielle filed a “Petition to

Appointment [sic] Administratrix” of the Succession of Tiffany Angelle Arthur,

No. 785-620 of the 24th Judicial District Court, Parish of Jefferson, State of

Louisiana, alleging therein that on August 27, 2018,1 Tiffany Angelle Arthur died

in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, that it was necessary that Ms. Arthur’s estate be

administered, that Ms. Arthur was survived by two minor twin sons, Brody

Michael Arthur and Brice Matthew Arthur, who were born on April 9, 2009, and

that Ms. Subervielle had been granted custody of Brody and Brice by the Juvenile

Court. In her petition, Ms. Subervielle further alleged that she desired to be

appointed administratrix of the succession proceeding upon her complying with the

legal requirements therefor. After considering the petition and other pleadings

filed by Ms. Subervielle, the trial court proceeded on July 13, 2018 to appoint her

as administratrix of the succession proceeding.

1 Although the petition states that Ms. Arthur died on August 27, 2018, the Affidavit of Jurisdiction, Death and Heirship found in the record clarifies that Ms. Arthur actually died on August 27, 2017.

20-CA-75 1 On September 10, 2018, Ms. Subervielle filed the subject Rule to Show

Cause Why Succession Assets Should Not Be Accounted For and Released to

Administratrix, alleging therein that pursuant to the last will and testament of Ms.

Arthur’s mother, Vera Frances Barrient, filed for probate with the Clerk of Court

of the 24th Judicial District Court, Ms. Barrient’s estate was bequeathed to the Vera

Frances Barrient Trust (“the Trust”) of which Ms. Arthur was a fifty percent

income and principal beneficiary. In the Rule to Show Cause, Ms. Subervielle

further alleged that the Trust provided that the Trust shall terminate as to the

interest of each principal beneficiary upon such beneficiary’s death, and

accordingly, because Ms. Arthur was then deceased, her succession owned and

was entitled to possession of a fifty percent interest in the Trust that should be

released to Ms. Subervielle as administratrix of Ms. Arthur’s succession. Made

defendant in the Rule to Show Cause was Linda Barrient McCraney, as trustee of

the Trust.

Ms. McCraney filed an opposition to the Rule to Show Cause, alleging that

although the Trust provided that it shall terminate as to the interest of each

principal beneficiary upon such beneficiary’s death, the Trust also provided, in

accordance with the Louisiana Trust Code, that Brice and Brody’s interest in the

Trust will terminate in whole or in part at any time on or after Brody and Brice

have reached their 21st birthday. Accordingly, she argued that since Brody and

Brice were still minors, the court should deny the Rule to Show Cause.

A hearing on the Rule to Show Cause was conducted on August 23, 2019.

No evidence was introduced by either party at the hearing. After hearing argument

of counsel, the trial court denied the Rule to Show Cause, finding that under the

terms of the Trust, Ms. McCraney, whom the Trust had appointed as custodian for

the minor children under the Louisiana Uniform Gift to Minors Act, was the proper

person to receive the claimed distribution from the Trust, and not Ms. Subervielle,

20-CA-75 2 though no distribution was ordered therein. A judgment to this effect was signed

by the trial court that same day. After Ms. Subervielle’s Motion for New Trial on

the Rule to Show Cause was denied after a hearing, Ms. Subervielle timely filed a

Motion for Appeal of the trial court’s August 23, 2019 judgment which denied the

Rule to Show Cause. The trial court granted Ms. Subervielle a devolutive appeal

on January 7, 2020. This appeal followed.

On appeal, Ms. Subervielle argues that the trial court erred in finding that

Ms. McCraney, as trustee of the Trust, rather than Ms. Subervielle, as

administratrix of the succession, was the proper person to receive the claimed

distribution from the Trust. Ms. McCraney did not file an appellee brief with this

Court.

ANALYSIS

In its August 23, 2019 judgment, the trial court denied the Rule to Show

Cause Why Succession Assets Should not be Released to Administratrix. The

judgment then goes on to state:

Shawn Terrebonne Subervielle argues that the assets in possession of Linda Barrient McCraney, Trustee of the Vera Frances Barrient Trust, which belong to the Succession of Tiffany Angelle Arthur, should be turned over to Shawn Terrebonne Subervielle as the administratrix of the Succession. The Court finds that Article III, Part B of the Trust governs. That provision states that if any person under the age of eighteen is or becomes entitled to receive in outright ownership any interest in the property as an outright legacy, the distribution from the Trust is to be paid to a custodian under the Louisiana Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. The Trust names Linda McCraney as the custodian, and therefore, the Court finds that Shawn Terrebonne Subervielle is not the proper person to receive a distribution from the Trust.

The issue raised in the Rule to Show Cause was interpretation of specific

provisions of the Trust. A rule to show cause is a contradictory motion, and as

such, it is incumbent upon the moving party to produce evidence which supports

the relief sought. La. C.C.P. art. 963. As indicated above, at the hearing on the

Rule to Show Cause, no testimony was adduced and no exhibits were introduced.

20-CA-75 3 Only portions of what purport to be certain provisions of the Trust were excerpted

in both the Rule to Show Cause and the Opposition thereto. We find, however,

that such excerpts, having not been properly introduced into evidence, provide an

insufficient evidentiary basis upon which to grant the relief sought in the Rule to

Show Cause.2 We find that it was incumbent upon Ms. Subervielle, as mover in

the Rule, to at least introduce into evidence at the contradictory hearing on the

Rule a certified copy of Mrs. Barrient’s last will and testament which purportedly

established the Trust. Because the record does not contain evidentiary support in

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