176 So. 684 | La. Ct. App. | 1937
Junius Baltimore, or John Baltimore, Jr., passed away, on December 3, 1935, leaving a succession which inventoried $1,562.37.
Sidney A. Marchand was appointed administrator of the estate and filed his final account in which he showed cash on hand of $993.01 resulting from the sale of certain assets of the succession. He proposed to pay this amount, first, in the liquidation of certain claims against the estate amounting to $619.26, and, second, the balance of $373.75 to the father and mother of the deceased as his sole heirs.
Virginia Parker Baltimore, claiming to be the widow of the deceased in necessitous circumstances, filed an opposition to the account, and asked that she be paid the $1,000 allowed by article
It appears that after the final account was filed the remainder of the assets of the succession were sold for $395.66, making the total available funds on hand the sum of $1,388.67. Therefore, if the claim of the widow is not considered a debt of the succession, the succession is entirely solvent; if, on the other hand, this claim is considered a debt of the succession, it is insolvent. The administrator claims that the succession is solvent, and, as article
There is a certified copy of a marriage certificate in evidence showing that opponent and the deceased soldier were married on June 24, 1935, in the parish of Ascension. The evidence shows that they lived together as man and wife until Baltimore's death in December following this marriage. These parties had been living together for some time prior to their marriage, but that fact does not affect the right of the widow to claim the homestead allowance of $1,000. Succession of Marc, 29 La. Ann. 412; Veillon v. Lafleur's Estate,
For several years prior to his death, the deceased was under curatorship for the purpose of receiving compensation due him under the War Risk Insurance Act (
Moreover, article 403 of the Civil Code prohibits a contest of the validity of the acts of a person on account of insanity after the death of the person, unless his interdiction was pronounced or petitioned for prior to his death, with only two exceptions given in the article. This rule applies to an attack on the validity of a marriage for the same cause. Ducasse's Heirs v. Ducasse,
The administrator has failed to prove the illegality of the marriage, and it follows that opponent is the lawful widow of the deceased soldier, and as such entitled to all the rights of such.
The evidence shows that the only property owned by the widow is a bed and bedding and a small amount of personal effects which she values at $10. The value of the bed and bedclothes cannot be very *686
much, at least not enough to take the widow out of necessitous circumstances. In order for her to claim the homestead of the widow under article
The administrator strenuously presses in this court his contention that, as the succession is not insolvent, the widow's homestead is not applicable, and relies on an expression in the Succession of Justus, 44 La.Ann. 721, at page 725, 11 So. 95, 96, to support his contention. In that case the court had under consideration the question of whether the claim of the surviving husband for the marital fourth out of the succession of his deceased wife, survived in favor of the husband's heirs where he did not himself make a claim before his death. In the course of the opinion the court used the following language:
"It [the marital fourth] may be assimilated to the charity or bounty extended or conferred on the necessitous widow or minor heirs by the act of 1852 (now article 3252, R.C.C.), with this difference, that the marital fourth is taken from the solvent succession or the heirs; while the $1000 are allowed in insolvent successions in preference to creditors. Both are laws in derogation of common rights."
But the above expression must be viewed purely as obiter dicta. The question there involved did not concern the conditions under which the necessitous widow could claim the $1000 under article 3252 of the Code. According to the case of Veillon v. Lafleur's Estate, supra, and Succession of Thompson, 4 Orleans App. 21, the claim of the widow for the homestead allowance under article
The claim of the widow primes all other claims shown on the account except that for the cost of selling the property. Succession of Campbell,
The amount of property owned by the widow, however small, should be deducted from her claim. The record shows the value of the widow's property to be $10. The judgment will have to be amended.
For these reasons, it is ordered that the judgment appealed from be and the same is hereby amended by reducing the claim of the widow from $1,000 to the sum of $990, in preference and priority over all debts or claims of the estate, save and except the cost of selling the property of the estate, and as thus amended the judgment is affirmed; all cost to be borne by the succession.