Successions of Tanner

895 So. 2d 584, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 0535, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 280, 2005 WL 249377
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 2005
DocketNo. 2004-CA-0535
StatusPublished

This text of 895 So. 2d 584 (Successions of Tanner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Successions of Tanner, 895 So. 2d 584, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 0535, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 280, 2005 WL 249377 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

lkirby, J.

Sandra Tanner, Orey Tanner, Jr. and Joan Martin appeal the trial court judgment dismissing with prejudice their petition seeking to annul the testamentary bequest of Clifford C. Tanner in favor of Jerald N. Andry. We affirm for reasons that follow.

The undisputed facts and procedural history of this case were set forth in this Court’s earlier opinion in In re Successions of Tanner, 2002-1570 (La.App. 4 Cir. 2/5/03), 836 So.2d 1280, writ granted, judgment reversed, 2003-0866 (La.6/20/03), 847 So.2d 1233, as follows:

Clifford Chester Tanner died testate on April 25, 2001; his last will and testament was dated April 12, 2001. His wife, Elise Joynes Tanner, pre-deceased him and died intestate. There were no children born of their marriage. In Mr. Tanner’s last will and testament he bequeathed the following: His furniture and personal belongings to the Volunteers of America; an undivided one-half (1/2) interest in his estate, free of all taxes and administrative charges, to Jerald N. Andry; one-eighth (1/8) interest in his estate, free and clear of all taxes and charges, to Sandra Tanner and Orey Tanner, Jr.; one-eighth (1/8) interest to the Theodore Roosevelt Lodge, # 415, Free and Accepted Masons; one-eighth (1/8) of his estate to the Encircler Chapter, # 191, Order of Eastern Star; and the remaining one-eighth (1/8) of his estate to Mrs. Joan Martin.
[586]*586|2On May 17, 2001, a succession proceeding was filed. The last will and testament of Clifford Chester Tanner was probated and letters testamentary were issued to Jerald N. Andry as executor of the succession. On August 9, 2001, the appellants, the only living relatives of the decedent, who are also particular legatees under Clifford Tanner’s will, filed a petition to nullify testamentary bequest [to Jerald Andry.] On November 2, 2001, the appellants amended their petition allegations to state that Jerald N. Andry violated the Louisiana Bar Association Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 1.8(c), by preparing a testament for a non-relative in which he received a substantial gift. On April 9, 2002, Jerald N. Andry filed a motion for summary judgment requesting that appellants’ petition be dismissed with prejudice. The matter was heard on May 24, 2002. On June 11, 2002, the trial court signed the judgment granting the appellee’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the appellants’ petition to nullify testamentary bequest.

This Court affirmed the trial court judgment granting summary judgment in favor of Jerald Andry, but the Louisiana Supreme Court granted writs, reversed the judgments of the lower courts and remanded the casé to the trial court for further proceedings after finding that genuine issues of material fact existed. In re Successions of Tanner, 2003-0866 (La.6/20/03), 847 So.2d 1233.

On remand, a trial on the merits was held on February 4, 2004. The evidence at trial consisted of documentary, evidence and the testimony of Morris H. Hyman.

Mr. Hyman, a lawyer, testified that he and Jerald Andry, also a lawyer, work in the same office building, but are not professionally affiliated with each other. On April 12, 2001, Mr. Andry asked Mr. Hy-man if he could prepare a will for Clifford Tanner, who was in the hospital at the time. Mr. Andry said he could not prepare the will himself because he was going to receive a bequest in the will. Mr. An-dry gave Mr. Hyman a copy of Mr. Tanner’s 1997 will, in which Mr. Andry |3was named as an executor of the estate, but not a legatee. Mr. Andry advised Mr. Hyman that Mr. Tanner wanted to make changes to the 1997 will. Those changes included eliminating bequests to certain Masonic organizations, and substituting a bequest to Mr. Andry of one-half of Mr. Tanner’s estate, a bequest valued in excess of $500,000.00.

Mr. Hyman prepared and personally typed the new will dated April 12, 2001. Without input from Mr. Andry or anyone else, Mr. Hyman decided to add a universal legatee provision. He met Mr. Tanner in his hospital room later that day, and brought the will he prepared with him. Also present in the hospital room were Jerald Andry and his brother and sister-in-law, Gilbert and Newell Andry. Jerald Andry introduced Mr. Hyman to Mr. Tanner, and told Mr. Tanner that Mr. Hyman was the lawyer to whom he had spoken about preparing a will for Mr. Tanner.

Mr. Hyman then spoke to Mr. Tanner for approximately ten minutes about the will and other topics. He testified that he had sufficient opportunity to assess Mr. Tanner’s competence during their conversation, and he determined that despite Mr. Tanner’s advanced age and illness, he was lucid and competent to execute a will. He explained to Mr. Tanner the changes he made to the previous will, and he also explained his reasons for including a universal legatee provision and the effect that this provision would have on the will. He told Mr. Tanner at the beginning of their conversation about the will to stop him if he wanted to make any changes. He said [587]*587he assured Mr. Tanner that it would be “no big deal” to redo the will if Mr. Tanner had changes. He said Mr. Tanner said he understood that, and Mr. Hyman then read the will aloud to Mr. Tanner with Gilbert and Newell Andry present as witnesses at Mr. Hyman’s request.

| ¿Mr. Hyman testified that as a result of his conversation with Mr. Tanner, he formed the opinion that the will he prepared expressed the true and actual intentions of Mr. Tanner at the time. After he finished reading the will aloud to Mr. Tanner, he asked Mr. Tanner if there were any changes he wanted to make, and Mr. Tanner said, “No.” When he asked Mr. Tanner if the will was his last will and testament, he replied, “Yes.” Mr. Tanner then signed the will.

Mr. Hyman testified that he is the lawyer for the estate of Mr. Tanner. Mr. Andry was named as executor of Mr. Tanner’s estate in both the 1997 and 2001 wills.

The deposition of Jerald Andry was one of the exhibits introduced jointly by the parties. In that deposition, Mr. Andry stated that he was named executor of Mr. Tanner’s estate in his 1997 will. Mr. An-dry had met and gotten to know Mr. Tanner through a mutual good friend, Fred Siegel, now deceased. During Mr. Tanner’s hospitalization for his final illness, Mr. Andry visited him and took care of personal business for him. He never considered himself to be Mr. Tanner’s lawyer. During Mr. Tanner’s hospitalization, Mr. Andry and Mr. Tanner discussed how Mr. Tanner wanted his estate distributed. In one of those discussions, Mr. Tanner told Mr. Andry that he wanted to name him as a beneficiary in his will instead of certain Masonic organizations. He also told him other changes he wanted to make to the 1997 will. He said he wanted to keep Mr. Andry as executor of the new will.

Mr. Andry said they discussed the consequences of Mr. Tanner leaving part of his estate to him. Mr. Andry told Mr. Tanner that changing his will to include Mr. Andry was going to make a lot of people very unhappy. Mr. Tanner’s response was, “You let me worry about that.”

|sMr. Andry went back to his office that day, April 12, 2001, and asked Morris Hy-man to prepare a new will for Mr. Tanner based on the changes that Mr. Tanner had indicated to Mr. Andry that he wanted to make. He said he told Mr. Hyman he could not prepare the new will himself because he was going to be named in the will. Mr. Andry’s deposition testimony as to the rest of the day’s events corroborates Mr. Hyman’s trial testimony'.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Mr.

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895 So. 2d 584, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 0535, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 280, 2005 WL 249377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/successions-of-tanner-lactapp-2005.