3 Rob. 78 | La. | 1842
The testimony does not, in our opinion, show a valuable consideration in the legal sense of the term. It discloses rather the motives which led the deceased to execute, in favor of the plaintiff, this note, which was clearly intended to cover a donation to her. Admitting that the small sum, which was either lent or given in 1825 to the deceased, created sucha natural or moral obligation as could form a sufficient consideration for a note of an amount about equal, it is obvious that the enormous overplus for which he bound his estate was a donation which he wished to make in her favor in consideration of the kind treatment and frequent assistance he had received from her husband, at whose house he wras then sick, and impressed with the belief of his approaching dissolution. We are confirmed in this conviction, from the circumstance that on the trial below the plaintiff was ruled to produce, and did produce in court a paper purporting to be the last will of the deceased which she had in her possession, and in which she was appointed his universal legatee: Some time before the institution of the present action, this paper had been sent by the plaintiff to the executor of her deceased husband, and presented to the probate judge, but being found altogether
It is, therefore, ordered that the judgment of the Court of Probates be affirmed with costs ; reserving, however, to the plaintiff any claims she may have against the estate of the late Felix Matthes.