Succession of Weil

17 So. 2d 255, 205 La. 214, 1944 La. LEXIS 665
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1944
DocketNo. 37056.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 255 (Succession of Weil) 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 Weil, 17 So. 2d 255, 205 La. 214, 1944 La. LEXIS 665 (La. 1944).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Touro Infirmary, the residuary legatee of decedent, Emanuel Leopold Weil, has appealed suspensively from a judgment awarding to Leopold Stahl -a fee of $15,-000 for legal services rendered as attorney for the executor in Weil’s succession proceedings. In an answer to the appeal, Stahl asks for an increase of the judgment to $20,000, the amount for which he was placed on the final account by the executor ; and he also prays for 5% per annum interest thereon from September 10, 1942, the date of the filing of the account.

Weil, who was a resident of New Orleans, a widower, and a person survived by neither ascendants nor descendants, died on April 21, 1942, leaving a last will and testament, together with a codicil, in olographic form. His estate, having an appraised value of $371,317.99 and being entirely solvent, consisted of 93 personal and mortgage notes (constituting approximately one-half of the assets), 22 pieces of real estate, various stocks and bonds, $8,195.58 in cash, some life insurance policies, and *217 certain residence and office furniture and effects.

In his will the testator provided for certain particular legacies of money, totaling $38,000, and for a disposition of the furniture and effects in his apartment. Also he declared:

“I appoint my grand nephew, Moise S. Steeg, Jr., Attorney of this City, as Executor of this my last will and testament without bond and with seizin — -further as an extra portion give to him all my law books, furniture and effects in my office when I pass on.
“Request that my life long friend and co-laborer, Joseph Lautenschlaeger, be appointed by the Court to take the Inventory of my estate; in event he is not living when this will is probated, then said task to go to Leopold Stahl, Attorney and Notary who studied in my office.”

And further the testator directed:

“Balance of my estate is to be given to Touro Infirmary of this City, the funds to be used in the erection of a Memorial Pavilion for use of convalescent patients; said pavilion or building to bear in perpetuity the full names of my wife and self (Clarice Romer Weil and Emanuel Leopold Weil, Convalescent Pavilion.)”

At the time of Weil’s death, the designated executor, Moise S. Steeg, Jr., was in the armed forces of the United States, being stationed at Keesler Field, Mississippi, approximately 90 miles from New Orleans. He attended the funeral, a leave of three days from his military duties having been obtained; and on the following day, April 23, 1942, he, joined by Leopold Stahl whom he had selected as his legal counsel, presented the will and codicil to the Civil District Court of Orleans Parish for probate.

The court ordered the will registered and executed, confirmed Steeg as executor, and appointed Lester Lautenschlaeger, a son of Joseph Lautenschlaeger, to take the inventory in Orleans Parish; the father, named in the will to perform that act, was then ill.

On April 24, 1942, Steeg executed a general power of attorney in which he named and constituted Stahl (previously selected as his attorney at law) as his agent and attorney in fact “to carry on, negotiate, and otherwise administer any and all business pertaining to the Succession of Emanuel Leopold Weil * *

Then Steeg returned to his military station; however, on at least one day in each week during the next eight weeks, while stationed at Keesler Field, he visited New Orleans for the purpose of conferring with Stahl and others regarding the succession. Later, on being sent to Miami Beach, Florida, his communications with Stahl were by means of telephone, telegrams and letters.

Following the execution of the power of attorney, Stahl proceeded with the administration of the estate, functioning both as attorney at law and as agent and attorney in fact for the testamentary executor, Steeg. Some. of the acts performed by him, while occupying that dual role, were legal in character; others were purely administrative.

*219 The court services rendered by Stahl, in addition to his having the will and codicil probated and petitioning for the taking and homologating of inventories in three parishes, consisted almost entirely in his obtaining orders relating to matters over which there were no contests. Among these were orders granting authority to continue the maintenance and operation of decedent’s office for the purpose of collecting rent; to obtain entry in the bank box of decedent; to pay city and state taxes; to sell some stocks, bonds and notes at private sale; to pay a certain uncontested debt; to deliver furniture in accordance with the provisions of the will; to relinquish to the rightful owners some notes and securities possessed by decedent; to pay the inheritance tax on special legacies; to enter into leases for the rental of real estate; to make and pay for repairs on residences and office; to open a bank account in the name of the succession; and to file the first and final account.

The only litigation in the succession, other than that now before us, was with reference to a claim of Dr. Samuel Stern-berg for medical services performed. That physician, having been placed on the final account for $250, filed an opposition claiming $2,034. The court, following a hearing that lasted approximately two and one-half hours, allowed the sum of $2,000. There was no appeal from the ruling.

As to most of the numerous acts performed by Stahl out of court, disagreement exists between counsel for the respective litigants on the question of whether they constituted legal services for the succession or were services rendered as attorney in fact for the executor. Included in those acts were the collection by him of some 90 mortgage notes (receiving interest, partial, and full payments numbering about 264), after having written form letters to the debtors informing them of Weil’s death and requesting settlements; his entering of those payments on decedent’s books; his preparing of leases for the renting of fifteen dwellings, this consisting in each instance of inserting in the blank spaces of the usual printed lease form the name of the lessor and lessee, the location of the premises and the purpose for which they were rented, the term of the lease, and the monthly rental; his holding of many consultations, and conferences, especially some with the executor and with officials of Touro Infirmary; his filing of proofs of death, and! collecting benefits under insurance policies; his paying of particular legacies and receiving receipts therefor; his settling of inheritance tax claims; his transferring of bank accounts; his attending the inventory’s taking in Orleans Parish; his making of a detailed check of the real estate of decedent; his delivery of notes to. certain persons who owned them; his conferring with tax authorities regarding 1941 federal estate tax returns and state income tax returns of decedent; his settling of a repair bill; and his payment of city, state and federal taxes.

Touro Infirmary, while opposing the fee claimed by Stahl of $20,000, as well as. that of $15,000 allowed by the district court, has expressed a willingness to allow a fee of $9,332.95; this figure is cal *221

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17 So. 2d 255, 205 La. 214, 1944 La. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-weil-la-1944.