81 So. 208 | La. | 1919
This is a petitory action, in which the plaintiffs allege that they-are the natural children, or duly acknowledged illegitimate children, of Rachel Clark, deceased, and claim title by inheritance from her, to the exclusion of her legitimate sister, from whom defendants . hold title by purchase. The suit was tried twice in the district court. The first trial resulted in a judgment for defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Appeal. That court reversed the judgment, but, on rehearing, found that the plaintiffs had failed to prove that they had been acknowledged by their mother in any one of the forms required by law to convert them into natural children and permit them to inherit the estate of their mother, under article 918 of the Civil Code. The case was then .remanded to the district court to allow the plaintiffs to prove that they had been “duly acknowledged” by their mother. The plaintiffs proved merely that the deceased, Rachel Clark, a colored woman, had reared them as her children and had verbally and informally declared that they were hers and that a white man whom she named, and who had died without ever acknowledging the paternity in any way, as far as the record discloses, was their father. The district judge, observing an opinion expressed by the court of appeal (prior to the ruling of this court in the Succession of Lacosst, 142 La. 673, 77 South. 497), but without adopting the opinion as his own, gave judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendants then brought the appeal to this court.
The record contains an admission that the property in contest is worth more than $100 but less than $2,000, and there is noth
It is ordered that this case be trans-’ ferred to the Court of Appeal, First Circuit. The costs of the present appeal are to be borne by appellants; all other costs are to depend upon the final judgment.