Wappler v. Cordaro

126 So. 2d 809
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1961
DocketNo. 9396
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 So. 2d 809 (Wappler v. Cordaro) 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
Wappler v. Cordaro, 126 So. 2d 809 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This suit involves a contest with reference to two conflicting instruments, each of which is contended by the parties involved to constitute the last will and testament of Lorene Blue Cordaro made in olographic form.

The material facts are undisputed. Lorene Blue Cordaro,'a resident of Bossier Parish died in the City of Shreveport on May 21, 1956, survived by her husband, Dominic J. Cordaro, and by two sisters and a brother, leaving neither ascendants nor descendants. By petition filed in Probate Proceedings No. 2038 in the Twenty-Sixth Judicial Court of Bossier Parish on May 28, 1956, one of decedent’s sisters, Sheba O. Wappler, presented for probate a purported olographic last will and testament of decedent dated January 10, 1956. On May 31, 1956, decedent’s surviving husband, Dominic J. Cordaro, in ex parte proceedings filed under No. 2042 on the Probate Docket of the same court, presented and caused to be probated, ‘by judgment rendered in said proceeding, an instrument purporting to be the olographic last will and testament of the decedent dated September 27, 1954. By petition dated and filed June 12, 1956 in the same court under docket No. 21,074, Sheba O. Wappler prayed for the nullity of the judgment rendered in Probate Suit No. 2042 and for recognition of the asserted last will and testament which she had presented for probate in Probate Suit -No. 2038 on the docket of the court. By petition dated and filed Juné 11, 1956 in Suit No. 2038 on the Probate Docket of the said court, Dominic J. Cordaro opposed the validity of the instrument dated January 10, 1956 and prayed that the same be declared null, void and of no effect. Subsequently Dominic J. Cor-daro filed an exception of no cause of action and an answer to plaintiff’s petition in Suit No. 21,074. By agreement these actions were consolidated, and, after trial, there was judgment in Probate Suit No. 2038 recognizing the instrument dated January 10, 1956 as the last will and testament pf the decedent, and a 'separate judgment was entered on the same date in Suit No. 21,074 revoking and annulling the judgment rendered in Probate Suit No. 2042. From these judgments Dominic J. Cor-daro, as opponent in Probate Suit No. 2038 and as defendant in Suit No. 21,074, has appealed.

The instrument dated September 27, 1954, admittedly constitutes an olographic will, valid in form in all respects. Under this will the testator left all of her property to her husband, Dominic J. Cordaro. In the asserted olographic will dated January 10, 1956 the testator bequeathed all of her property to her sister, Sheba O. Wappler, and the sister’s husband, Fred Wappler. It is the validity, vel non, of this document which presents the sole issue on appeal, for, unquestionably, if valid, being of a later date, it supersedes the disposition of decedent’s property made in the instrument 'dated September 27, 1954.

■ In connection with these proceedings it is necessary to make two additional ob[811]*811servations, first, that Fred Wappler, husband of Sheba O. Wappler, was made a party plaintiff in the action to annul the probate of the will dated September 27, 1954, and, second, that during the pendency of this appeal Dominic J. Cordaro filed a petition of voluntary bankruptcy and H. E. Harper, as Trustee in Bankruptcy, has been substituted as party appellant in lieu of the said Dominic J. Cordaro.

The single specification of error urged by counsel for appellant is that the purported will dated January 10, 1956 “ . . is invalid because it is not signed by the Testatrix. It is signed with the Testatrix’ first name -only: ‘Lorene’.” It is urged that the signature constituting solely the first name of the testatrix is not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of Article 1588 of the Civil Code, LSA, and as a consequence the judgment validating the document as the last will and testament of the decedent and admitting the same to probate constituted error.

The contested document is in the form of a letter admittedly directed to and received by plaintiff, Mrs. Sheba O. (Fred) Wap-pler, written by the hand of the decedent and .reading in its entirety as follows:

“Jan-10-1956
“310 Riverside Dr.
“Bossier City, La.
“Dear Sister — Mrs. Fred Wappler
“Nick tried to kill me. I am writting this to tell you I want all my property to go to you & Fred. I want to have an O. E. S. burial. Call Mrs. O. M. Waldrop, Coushatta Rd. is in charge of that.
“I want to buried at my place in Forset Park. Call Dr. W. L. Sewell at Baptist Church here in Bossier— Mrs. L. T. Manning on Wyche St.
Your Sister
Lorene”

No question is raised as to the fact that the name “Lorene” was appended by the hand of the decedent, but it is urgently con-tended that the use of the first name alone-is not valid as a signature to an olographic testament. This argument is predicated upon the provisions of LSA-C.C. Article 1588 which reads:

“Olographic Wills. — The plographic testament is that which- is written by the testator himself..
“In order to be valid, it must be-entirely written, dated and signed by the hand of the testator. It is subject to no other form, and may be made anywhere, even out of the State.”.

Learned counsel for appellant relies heavily upon the case of Succession of Armant, 43 La.Ann. 310, 9 So. 50, and additionally cites in support of his contention Succession of Bechtel, La.App., 99 So.2d 495; In re Poland’s Estate, 137 La. 219, 68 So. 415; Succession of Bradford, 124 La. 44, 49 So. 972; Succession of Dyer, 155 La. 265, 99 So. 214, arid Succession of Fitzhugh, 170 La. 122, 127 So. 386.

We may dispose of a number of the above cited cases on the ground of factual distinctions. In the Fitzhugh case the testatrix did not affix any signature on the single sheet of paper which .contained'certain testamentary dispositions, and" the court declared that the superscription and signature of the testatrix on an envelope in which the purported will was enclosed did not accord with the codal requirement that the testament be signed. The identical fact and the same holding were involved in the matter of Poland’s Estate. In Succession of Dyer, while the will itself was in proper form, the court held invalid an unsigned postscript. In Succession of Bechtel our brethren of the Orleans Court refused to give effect to an unsigned document, rejecting the contention that the signature on a separate sheet of paper was a valid compliance with the codal article.

Diligent counsel have not cited, nor has our research disclosed, any case in Louisiana jurisprudence which has determined [812]*812the exact issue presented, that is, whether a signature consisting solely of the first name of the testator adequately complies with the codal requirement that the docu-unent be “signed.”

The rejection of the above cited cases brings us finally to the case of Succession of Bradford and that of In re Armant’s Will, both cited supra.

In the Bradford case the will of the testator in olographic form was attacked, first, on the ground of improper designation of the beneficiary, and, second, because of the alleged insufficient signature of the testator. The court held that the signature “J. W. Bradfor” was sufficient, despite the fact that the testator’s name was “J. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 So. 2d 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wappler-v-cordaro-lactapp-1961.