Successions of Rhea

78 So. 2d 838, 227 La. 214, 1955 La. LEXIS 1233
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 14, 1955
Docket41971
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 78 So. 2d 838 (Successions of Rhea) 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
Successions of Rhea, 78 So. 2d 838, 227 La. 214, 1955 La. LEXIS 1233 (La. 1955).

Opinion

PONDER, Justice.

Mrs. Louise Rhea Baxter, administratrix of the successions of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac T. Rhea, brought a rule to show cause in the Civil District Court against the Inheritance Tax Collector for the Parish of Orleans asking the court to fix the inheritance tax due the State of Louisiana in the sum of $1,052.93, alleging that the decedents were residents and domiciled in the State of Tennessee. In answer to the rule, the Inheritance Tax Collector alleged that the decedents were domiciled in Louisiana and asked for judgment in his favor for the sum of $29,012.93 on the succession of the late Isaac T. Rhea, and for the sum of $138,131.99 on the succession of Mrs. Isaac T. Rhea. After hearing the evidence, the trial court arrived at the conclusion that the decedents were domiciled in Tennessee and made the rule absolute and fixed the inheritance tax due the State of Louisiana in the sum of $1,052.93. The Inheritance Tax Collector for the Parish of Orleans has appealed.

Mrs. Isaac T. (Posey Blanker) Rhea died in Memphis, Tennessee on September 4, 1952. Shortly thereafter her husband, Isaac T. Rhea, died on October 2, 1952 in Memphis, Tennessee. Isaac T. Rhea was born in Davidson County, Tennessee on June 8, 1877. Posey Blanker, his wife, was born on May 10, 1892 in Shelby County, Tennessee. In the year 1919, Isaac Rhea and Posey Blanker were married in New Orleans and established their domicile at 730 South Carrollton Avenue in the City of New Orleans. On February 23, 1939, Mrs. Rhea purchased property at 1415 Exposition Boulevard in New Orleans and she and Mr. Rhea then moved to this address.' The home on South Carrollton Avenue was sold on April 29, 1949. The decedents continued to live at 1415 Exposition Boulevard until March of 1946 when Mr. Rhea received word that his sister had passed away in Nashville, Tennessee and he and his wife left New Orleans to attend the funeral. While there Mr. Rhea became ill and accompanied his wife to a cottage in Monteagle, Tennessee which was owned by his wife. They resided there until September 1946 at which time Mr. Rhea was taken to Baptist Hospital at Memphis, Tennessee. He remained in the hospital for two weeks and was sent to Highland Hospital, Ashpville, North Carolina for further treatment. He left the hospital on December 7, 1946 and he and his wife registered at the Battery Park Hotel, Asheville, North Carolina *220 where they lived for approximately three yéars.

On February 1, 1949, the decedents went to Memphis, Tennessee and Mrs. Rhea entered into an agreement to purchase the Firestone Estate located at Germantown, Tennessee. Shortly thereafter, they returned to Battery Park Hotel, Asheville, North Carolina. Mrs. Rhea consummated the sale of the Firestone Estate on April 28, 1949. On August 15, 1949, the Rheas moved to the Firestone Estate and resided there until their death in 1952. On July 27 and 28, 1949 a portion of the furniture, silverware, china, glassware, linens and clothing were shipped to their residence at the Firestone Estate from New Orleans. The stocks, bonds and jewelry owned by Mr. and Mrs. Rhea were kept in a safe that was located at 1415 Exposition Boulevard. This safe, with its contents, was shipped to Germantown, Tennessee in July of 1949. This contained 451.6 shares of the Preferred Stock of Mente & Company and 7,469.4 shares of the Common Stock of Mente & Company owned by Isaac T. Rhea. In August, 1949, Inez Hamilton, employed as a cook at the residence on Exposition Boulevard went to the Firestone Estate to perform similar duties. In November, 1949, Lillie Belle Larrie, Mrs. Rhea’s personal maid, also went to live on the Firestone Estate to become Mrs. Rhea’s maid. Two Boston bull dogs, pets of the Rheas, were sent' to Germantown; Tennessee in September of 1949. In October, 1949, the Firestone Estate was re-

named “Rhea Farms”. At the time that Inez Hamilton, the cook, and Lillie Belle Larrie, the maid, were asked to come to Germantown, Tennessee by Mrs. Rhea, she employed one Irenne Larrie and one Flem Webb to care for the premises at 1415 Exposition Boulevard, which they did until June, 1950 when the house was closed. From February, 1948 through May, 1950, the premises at 1415 Exposition Boulevard were occupied by Mr. J. Lucius McGehee and his family. Mr. McGehee was a godchild of Mrs. Rhea. On June 30, 1950, the property at 1415 Exposition Boulevard was sold and' the remainder of the furniture and personal belongings of the Rhéas was shipped to Rhea Farms in Tennessee. In •1950, Mr. Rhea opened a personal savings account in the First National Bank of Memphis, Tennessee and Mrs. Rhea opened a checking account in the same bank during that year. Both wills of decedents were found in Tennessee - at the death of the Rheas. The Rheas kept seven' automobiles at Rhea Farms, three of which carried Tennessee license plates and four of which carried Louisiana license plates. Isaac T. Rhea was a member of and paid dues in the following organizations: Tennessee Club, Memphis, Tenn., in which he owned stock; New Orleans Country Club,' New Orleans, La., in which he owned stock; The Stratford .Club, New Orleans, La.; The Southern Yacht Clftb of New Orleans, New Orleans, La.; The New Orleans Athletic Club, New Orleans, La.; The Pass Christian Yacht Club, Pass *222 Christian, Mississippi; The Mystic Club, New Orleans, La.; The Rex Carnival Club, New Orleans; The International House, New Orleans; The Greater New Orleans Chamber of Commerce; Fairgrounds Corporation, New Orleans. Mrs. Rhea was a member of the following organizations: Dillettante’s Club, Memphis, Tennessee; New Orleans Country Club, and the Orleans Club, New Orleans. Isaac T. Rhea made substantial contributions to charity, including contributions to the following churches: St. George’s Episcopal Church, Germantown, Tennessee; • Catholic Church, Memphis, Tennessee; Protestant Church, Pass Christian, Mississippi; Catholic Church, Pass Christian, Mississippi. After the death of Rhea, his safety deposit boxes in the Whitney National Bank of New Orleans at the Main Office and the Carrollton Branch were opened and found to be empty. At the time of his death, Rhea had a balance in his checking account at the Whitney National Bank in New Orleans in the amount of $12,502.16; Mrs. Rhea at the time of her death had a balance in a checking account of the Carrollton Branch of the Whitney Bank of New Orleans in the amount of $16,689.79, and a balance in her checking account in the First National Bank in Memphis, of $24,206.68. At the time of his death Isaac Rhea owned 95,045.4 shares of the 100,000 shares of common stock issued in Mente & Company, of which he was President, and he also owned 6,764.7 of the 7,000 shares of preferred stock of Mente & Company, At his death, the safe at Mente & Company was found to contain 6,233.5 shares of the preferred stock and 87,576 shares of the common stock owned by Isaac Rhea. From the time he left New Orleans in March, 1946, until he died, Isaac Rhea kept in touch with Mente & Company as far as his health would permit, by long-distance telephone calls and frequently by the use of the, mails.

Mr. and Mrs. Rhea paid both Federal and State income tax in Louisiana from 1947 to 1951 inclusive.

After the death of the Rheas,- Mrs. Louise Rhea Baxter qualified as administratrix of the successions of the decedents in proceedings in the court of Shelby County, Tennessee.

Dr. William W. Taylor, a physician who treated Mr. Rhea for his illness in Tennessee, testified that Mr.

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78 So. 2d 838, 227 La. 214, 1955 La. LEXIS 1233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/successions-of-rhea-la-1955.