Thormann v. Broderick

26 So. 382, 51 La. Ann. 1747, 1899 La. LEXIS 619
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 12, 1899
DocketNo. 12,866
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 So. 382 (Thormann v. Broderick) 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
Thormann v. Broderick, 26 So. 382, 51 La. Ann. 1747, 1899 La. LEXIS 619 (La. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Plaintiff brings this suit in the capacity of Administratrix of Joseph Eabacher, deceased.

After alleging her appointment and qualification as such, she avers it to be “among the duties and functions” devolving upon her as administratrix “to get in and collect all the debts due and owing thereto.”

She then sets forth that defendant is indebted to the succession in the sum of $7000, with interest and costs and attorney’s fees, by reason of two promissory notes, drawn to his own order and by him endorsed, each for the sum of $3500, which she avers to he due and unpaid and secured by mortgage on certain property in the City of New Orleans, which is described — which mortgage had been executed in favor of Joseph Eabacher, and any future holder of the notes.

She represents that although the ownership of the notes is vested in the Succession of Joseph Eabacher, the notes themselves are not in her possession, or under her control, but are outside of the limits of the State, having been removed by some unauthorized person in a-manner unknown to her, after the death of said Eabacher, and after their maturity.

Averring that she alone is authorized and vested with power to sue for, collect, receive and grant acquittances for the amount due on the notes, she prays judgment in her favor as administatrix against defendant for the sum due, with recognition of mortgage, etc.

On the face of this declaration the action seems plain and simple [1749]*1749enough. But the record discloses that under its guise is presented the far-reaching question of conflict of jurisdiction between a State Court here and a State Court in another of the Commonwealths of the Union.

Joseph Fabacher died in New Orleans'on March 3, 1897. On the side of the plaintiff it is claimed he was, at the time, a resident of Louisiana and had been for many years. On the side of defendant it is claimed he was temporarily only sojourning in New Orleans at the time of his death, that his residence was in Waukesha, Wisconsin, and had been for about two years prior to his decease.

On the 27th day of March, 1897, a petition was presented to the County Court of Waukesha County, Wisconsin, by A. J. Frame, alleging the death of Fabacher, his residence at the time in Waukesha, his possession in that City of an estate in personal property of the value of $65,000 and in realty of $2500; that he left a last will wherein he named the said Frame as executor;-and that the family surviving -him consisted of his widow, Magdelina Fabacher, and eleven children, all of age, except two.

He prayed for the probate of the will and for letters testamentary to himself as executor.

Three days later, fo-wit: On March 30, 1897, the present plaintiff presented a petition to the Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans, alleging the death of Fabacher, that he was her father, that he resided in New Orleans at the time of his death and for many years before, that he left property within the jurisdiction of the Oourt, that she was the sole surviving heir and legitimate child of the deceased, issue of his union with her mother, Mary Frey, under a marriage celebrated in the year 1850, and that Mary Frey, subsequently, to-wit: — in January 1874, obtained a decree of divorce from her father. She represented she desired and was entitled to be appointed administratrix of iiis succession. She did not aver that the dead man left debts to be paid, nor did she aver he died intestate, though her application for appointment as administratrix proceeded upon that hypothesis.

She prayed for an inventory and appraisement, that an attorney for absent heirs be named, and for her appointment and confirmation as a cbninistratrix.

No one opposed her application and in April, 1897, a decreo appointing. her administratrix was entered. She qualified as such April 30, 1897.

[1750]*1750An inventory was taken and the only property returned was a cemetery lot, tomb, etc., valued at $3500. It was claimed, however, that sonic furniture and household effects in a house on Calhoun street, Now Orleans, belonged to the deceased. An effort was made to inventory same. This was resisted by the widow on the ground that same belonged to her son. Subsequently, under the order of court, these effects were inventoried and appraised át $1381.70.

Shortly after becoming the administratrix in Louisiana, Mrs. Thormann appeared before the County Court in Waukesha, Wisconsin, and made opposition to the probate of the will there. This will Lad been made by Joseph Fabaeher in that State and pursuant to its laws. He had deposited same in a safe deposit vault in Waukesha, where it was found after his death, together with bonds of the City of New Orleans and other securities, constituting his personal estate, among them the two notes of Broderick forming the basis of this suit-.

In her opposition to the probate of the Wisconsin will, Mrs. Thormann, in her individual capacity, averred herself to be the daughter and sole heir of Joseph Fabaeher. She set forth the marriage of her 1 aronts, their subsequent divorce, charged the illicit connection of her father with Magdelina Frey, the birth of children of that union, all of whom, save one, were named as legatees in the will. She showed that after the divorce which her mother had secured, her father married Magdelina Frey and thereafter three children were born of the union, all of whom were named as legatees in the will. She alleged that continuously from 1843 to the time of his death, her father was domiciled in the City of New Orleans, was a Resident and inhabitant there, that in consequence the Wisconsin court was without, jurisdiction to probate the will, or in the matter of the settlement and distribution of the estate in Wisconsin.

She charged that the attempt on part of Joseph Fabaeher to acquire a domicile in Waukesha ivas made with a fraudulent purpose and intent of depriving her of her legitimate and horiditary rights as his sole heir at laiv.

She charged, further, “undue influence” over her father in the matter of the execution of his will, by Magdelina Fabaeher and other persons and beneficiaries, and averred the will ivas not executed in the manner and form required by laiv.

The will, itself, was dated October 29, 1890. Waukesha was the [1751]*1751place of its execution, and the maker thereof declared himself in the instrument to be a citizen of Waukesha.

To Magdelina, whom he refers to as his “beloved wife,” he bequeaths the income from $20,000 four per cent New Orleans City bonds. To lus brother in Evance, an annuity of two hundred dollars as long as-he should live, and $100 additional at hi,s death to provide for his funeral expenses. The remainder of his property he bequeathed to ten of his twelve surviving- children, naming them, and they were to have, too, the $20,000 City bonds upon the death of his wife — she tobo paid the income from same during her life as above sot forth.

The decision of the County Court of Waukesha County, handed down Sept. 1, 1897, was against Mrs. Thormann on her opposition to the probate of the will.

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Related

Thorman v. Broderick
52 La. Ann. 1298 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 So. 382, 51 La. Ann. 1747, 1899 La. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thormann-v-broderick-la-1899.