Succession of Yeates

35 So. 2d 210, 213 La. 541, 1948 La. LEXIS 867
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 22, 1948
DocketNo. 38264.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 210 (Succession of Yeates) 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 Yeates, 35 So. 2d 210, 213 La. 541, 1948 La. LEXIS 867 (La. 1948).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice;

The five sisters of E. Clifton Yeates— Mrs. Effie McClellan, Mrs. Ella Rowe, Mrs. Beatrice Martin, Mrs. Nellie Barry, and Mrs. Emma Todhunter — are appealing from a judgment rejecting their demand that a deed executed by their late mother, Mrs. S. A. (Alice) Yeates, on June 25, 1941, conveying to him certain improved property in Cotton Valley, Louisiana, be set aside, while the last two named sisters are also appealing from a judgment ordering the probate, over their opposition, of their late mother’s will, dated January 31, 1942. The two proceedings having been consolidated for the purpose of trial in the lower court, they were submitted on the same evidence.

In the first suit, filed on April 12, 1944, some five months after the death of Mrs. Yeates, the sisters, alleging that their mother had died intestate and that they desired to accept her succession with benefit of inventory, sought to bring into the mass of her estate the property covered by the above mentioned deed by attacking it on the ground (1) that at the time of its execution their mother was of an unsound mind, (2) that the recited cash consideration of $750 was never in fact paid, and (3), in the alternative, that the deed was á donation in disguise in the form of a sale, and, as such, null and void under the provisions of Article 1533 of the Revised Civil Code since Mrs. Yeates reserved the usufruct thereof to herself during her life.

Subsequently, on May 4, 1944, two days after the will in controversy here was presented for probate, two of the sisters, Mrs. *545 Nellie Barry and Mrs. Emma Todhunter, opposed the same on the ground (1) that it was not drawn in legal form, (2) that at the time of its confection the testratrix was physically and mentally incompetent, and (3) that the will was executed under duress and undue influence on the part of their brother, E. Clifton Yeates.

Since the principal ground upon which both of these actions are based is that the decedent was mentally incompetent to execute either of these instruments, it is necessary that a brief history of the decedent’s early life and a complete account of the pertinent events surrounding and leading up to the execution of these instruments be given.

• According to the record, Mrs. Alice Yeates, upon the death of her husband in 1922, was faced with the problem of supporting and raising her seven living children. (One of the sons, William C. Yeates, does not appear in either of these proceedings.) She met this problem with the forthright honesty and energy that were to characterize the remainder of her life. She first operated a boarding house, and, later, a hotel. She was also a merchant and the operator of a saloon. As the result of her efforts and thrift, she was able to accumulate a fair amount of prop-' erty, consisting of both cash and real estate. In her declining years her energies were directed toward the renting and upkeep of her various properties. However, although Mrs. Yeates went through the usual deterioration expected in a woman of her years, she remained vigorous and energetic until on February 19, 1941, while collecting rents, she became stricken with what was at first thought to be a “stroke” but was later diagnosed to be a “cerebral accident,” as it was termed by one of the physicians who treated her. On February 23, 1941, she was taken to the Highland Sanitarium in Shreveport for treatment and she remained there for 15 days. After she returned to her home she was under the care of her local physician.

On April 23, 1941, at a time when she was completely bedridden and attended constantly by a practical nurse, Mrs. Yeates purportedly appeared before a notary public in his office and conveyed to her son, E. Clifton Yeates, for the recited consideration of $1,000 in cash “and as a further consideration his the said E. C. Yeates’ service in superintending my business for several year-s valued at an additional sum of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars,” a lot fronting on the Louisiana & Arkansas railroad in Cotton Valley, together with the improvements thereon. Around the middle of May, Mrs. Yeates again became extremely ill and was taken to the Highland Sanitarium for further treatment. It was then found that she was suffering from a slight hempilogia (paralysis) involving the right side of her body and proving to be somewhat of an impediment to her speech; arthritis of the cervical (neck) vertebrae, which apparently caused extreme pain in *547 her left arm and shoulder; and a psychotic (mental) condition that was found to be the result of intoxication brought about by the bromides she had taken for the aleviation of pain rather than from a mental disorder due to senile changes, for she improved as the bromide level was corrected. At that time Mrs. Yeates was 74 years old.

While Mrs. Yeates was in the Highland Sanitarium on this occasion, Mrs. McClellan, one of the daughters, becoming suspicious of her brother, whom she says she found in her mother’s home shortly before her removal to the sanitarium securing the mother’s signature on blank checks under the pretext that he was testing her eyesight to see if it was good enough for her to write on a straight line, began an investigation of her mother’s affairs. She found that on April 28, 1941 (five days after Mrs. Yeates purportedly sold the property in Cotton Valley to her son), by means of a check signed by her mother and made out to cash, her brother secured $310 from the bank, although he did not endorse the check. On April 30 he secured $275 in a like manner; on May 2 the sum of $215, and on May 8 the sum of $200, or a total of $1,000. In order to place the bank on its guard against similar checks and to protect their interests in the event their mother, then gravely ill in Highland Sanitarium, died, Mrs. McClellan* testified she and another sister, Mrs. Ella Rowe, instituted interdiction proceedings against their mother, alleging her inability to care for her person and to administer her affairs. Although these papers were never served on Mrs. Yeates because of the effect it was thought they would have on her condition, the sisters did confront their brother with their suspicions with respect to the purported purchase by him of the Cotton Valley property and what they thought to be a refund of the $1,000 consideration allegedly paid for such conveyance as indicated by the four checks cashed by him at the bank, and Yeates, on June 14, shortly after his mother’s return from the sanitarium, reconveyed this property to her for a recited consideration of $1,000. Ten days later, on June 25, 1941, Mrs. Yeates again transferred this property to her son, although this time the purported consideration was $750 and she reserved the usufruct of the property for the remainder of her life.

Having been told by her son of the interdiction proceedings, Mrs. Yeates, following her return from the Highland Sanitarium early in June, became more or less estranged from the rest of her children and seemed to be obsessed with the idea that they were endeavoring to have her committed to an insane asylum. At this time she was also apparently concerned about her will. She took a document she had prepared to her attorney wherein she left everything she owned to her son Clifton, but .when she was advised that such a will was illegal, she had the attorney prepare a draft of the will she wanted and she copied it in his office. (Some time prior there *549

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 210, 213 La. 541, 1948 La. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-yeates-la-1948.