Texada v. Spence

118 So. 120, 166 La. 1020, 62 A.L.R. 281, 1928 La. LEXIS 1985
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 4, 1928
DocketNo. 28893.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 118 So. 120 (Texada v. Spence) 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
Texada v. Spence, 118 So. 120, 166 La. 1020, 62 A.L.R. 281, 1928 La. LEXIS 1985 (La. 1928).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

Certain heirs of Mrs. Mattie Texada Neal sued to annul her will so far as it constitutes Walter L. Spence her residuary legatee and appoints him testamentary executor. The court below rejected their demands, and they have appealed.

The facts are as follows, viz.:

Walter D. Spence and Mrs. Sarilla O. Spence were husband and wife and lived together as such at the matrimonial domicile in the parish of Natchitoches. During her temporary absence on a visit to relatives in the state of Illinois, upon the fraudulent allegation that her departure was permanent, and that prior thereto she had been guilty of misconduct, Walter L. Spence obtained a judgment of divorce in proceedings contradictorily had with a curator ad hoc appointed to represent his wife. This judgment was rendered in June, 1924, and the following month Walter L. Spence intermarried with Mrs. Mattie Texada Neal, the testatrix referred to herein. Upon her return, subsequently, to the parish of Natchitoches, Mrs. Sarilla O. Spence sued to annul the judgment of divorce, on the ground that she was not legally represented in the proceedings and that the decree had been fraudulently Obtained. The district court annulled the judgment of divorce on December 19, 1925, and its judgment was affirmed by this court on .October 5, 1926. A rehearing applied for by Walter L. Spence was denied on November 2, 1926. Spence v. Spence, 162 La. 4, 110 So. 68. Mrs. Mattie Texada Neal died on October 28, 1926, while the application for a rehearing was pending. On the day before her death, she executed her olographic will, in which she bequeathed “all I possess in this world to my. dear husband, W. L. Spence,” except a legacy of a certain sum of money to be divided equally between a sister and a so-called adopted child named Mae. She also declared that she “wanted” her sister and “my dear-husband, as I know him to be” to act as guardians of the child, Mae, and she appointed W. L. Spence executor without bond.

*1023 Prom the day the judgment annulling the decree of divorce was affirmed by this court, Mrs. Neal and the defendant, W. L. Spence did not live together as husband and wife.

Plaintiffs seek to annul the testamentary disposition in favor of the defendant and his nomination as testamentary executor on three grounds, viz.:

(1) That the testatrix was mistaken at the time she executed the will, in that she believed Walter L. Spence was her lawful husband, whereas, in fact, he was not.

(2) That Walter L. Spence was,' in bad faith, living in open concubinage with the testatrix, and is therefore incapable of receiving a donation mortis causa of any portion of the immovable estate of the deceased.

(3) That the legacy herein sought to be set aside was obtained -by fraud, misrepresentation, and overpersuasion.

The first and third grounds of attack on the will are untenable. The good faith of the testatrix in entering into the marriage relation with W. L. Spence is conceded by the plaintiffs, and, in fact, is clearly established by the record. At the time her will was executed, she knew that the legality of her marriage was hanging in the balance, depending upon the final action of this court on the application for a rehearing in the suit for the annulment of the judgment of divorce from Mrs. Sarilla O. Spence. ' She had intervened in that suit, appealing to the mercy of the court. When she referred in her will to the defendant as “my dear husband, as I know him to be,” she was in no error whatever concerning his status. The expression as used in the will was merely the agonized cry of the testatrix proclaiming to the world her faith in the defendant and her belief in the validity of their marriage, irrespective of the decree of the courts. It is plain from the mere reading of the provisions of the will that the testatrix desired and intended to make the bequest under attack herein to W. L. Spence, and to no other person.

The allegation that the legacy to the defendant was procured by “fraud, misrepresentation, and overpersuasion” means merely that the disposition was made through suggestion and captation, since it is not pretended that the testatrix was subjected to any undue influence at the moment she executed her will. Under our law no inquiry is permitted into the motives which may have influenced a testator in making his testamentary dispositions. Oiv. Code, art. 1492. The undue influence, such as intimidation and fraud necessary to procure the annulment of a testamentary disposition, must have been exercised upon the testator at the moment the will was executed, not before nor afterwards. Zerega v. Percival, 46 La. Ann. 590, 15 So. 476, and authorities cited. See, also, Succ. of McDermott, 136 La. 80, 66 So. 546, and Succ. of Schlumbrecht, 138 La. 173, 70 So. 76.

The serious question presented for decision arises under the second ground of attack on the will of the de cujus. Oiv. Code,’ art. 1481, provides as follows, viz.:

“Those who have lived together in open concubinage are respectively incapable of making to each other, whether inter vivos or mortis causa, any donation of immovables; and if they make a donation of movables, it cannot exceed one-tenth part of the whole value of their estate. Those who afterwards marry are excepted from this rule.”

Plaintiffs contend that the testamentary disposition in favor of the defendant falls within the inhibition of the codal article, because the testatrix and the legatee were, in legal intendment, living together in open concubinage. They concede that the testatrix, having contracted the marriage in good faith, was the putative wife of the defendant and entitled, as such, to the civil effects produced by the marriage. Oiv. Code, arts. 117, 118. They argue, however, that the same rule *1025 is inapplicable to tbe defendant, because tbe basis of Ms marriage to tbe testatrix was tbe fraudulent judgment of divorce which he had obtained . against Mrs. Sarilla C. Spence. Their position is that the testatrix, though in good faith and with all the rights and privileges of a lawful wife, was the concubine of the defendant because he was in bad faith and not entitled to claim any rights or privileges by virtue of the marriage.

The defendant’s bad faith is not now a disputable question. It has been judicially determined. See Spence v. Spence, referred to, supra. The issue submitted for decision, therefore, is whether it constitutes open concubinage for a man and woman to live together as husband and wife under the authority of a ceremonial marriage, contracted in good faith by one of the parties and in bad faith by the other, which is subsequently found to be illegal. So far as we are advised, the case is res nova. It differs from Carmena v. Blaney, 16 La. Ann. 245,. where the parties to the marriage were held to be living in concubinage, because both were in bad faith; and from Gauff v. Johnson, 161 La. 975, 109 So. 782, where the parties to the marriage were held not to be living in eoncqbinage, because both were in good faith.

The issue must be decided by the application of legal principles and not by the exercise of sentimental emotions.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 120, 166 La. 1020, 62 A.L.R. 281, 1928 La. LEXIS 1985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texada-v-spence-la-1928.