Succession of Taylor

Wyly, J.

Milton Taylor died leaving a succession in Mason county, Kentucky, the place of his domicile, a succession in Hamilton county, Ohio, and a succession in this State. On the thirteenth of March, 1870, John I. Rickey, the dative executor from Hamilton county, Ohio, caused the will of the deceased to be probated in the Third District Court, and applied to be appointed dative executor thereof in this State. An opposition was filed to his appointment by P. B. Eouke, public administrator, who claimed the office himself. The court appointed him, and, on appeal, the action of the court below was affirmed. See tho case reported in 23 An. 22.

On the twenty-fifth of July, 1871, Mary Jane Taylor, wife of Milton Rodgers, was recognized as sole heir of Milton Taylor, deceased, and was ordered to be put in possession of all the property and effects of the succession, “ on the said Mary Jane Taylor Rodgers giving bond with. good and solvent security in the amount delivered to her by said public administrator, conditioned as the law provides in such cases, reserving: to any heir at law his right to set up any claim he may have against said succession.”

In the application of Mrs. Rodgers, and in this order, the will of Milton Taylor, which the court had ordered executed, was entirely ignored— no reference whatever was made to it.

On the third of August, 1871, Phoebe Ann Duneanson and John James-Taylor, claiming also to be the children of Milton Taylor, prayed to be recognized as heirs and put in possession of two-thirds of the property of said succession. Their application was opposed by Mary Jane Rodgers. The controversy was finally settled in favor of said applicants,, this court holding that “ the evidence which establishes the status of the *368appellee as the child, of the deceased, shows with equal clearness that the petitioners herein are also his children.” See the case reported in 24 An. 326, decided in May, 1872.

On the twelfth of March, 1872, Thomas J. Throop, “ as administrator with the will annexed,” representing the estate of the deceased, by appointment of the probate court of Mason county, Kentucky, and as attorney in fact for Mason County Court, one of the legatees under the will, brought this suit against the public administrator, appointed dative executor of the will, and against Mary Jane Rodgers, Phoebe Ann Pun-•eanson, and John James Taylor, claiming to be heirs at law of the deceased, and he prays that the decree of the thirteenth of March, 1870, -■ordering the execution of Milton Taylor’s will, be carried into effect; tliat the judgment-recognizing said pretended heirs at law, and ordering them to be put in possession of the succession, be set aside and annulled; that ■the public administrator be'dismissed from the office.of dative executor for failing to file annual accounts, and for failing to deposit the funds of the succession in bank according to law; that he be condemned to pay-ten per cent interest and twenty per cent damages on the amount of the funds not so dexoosited; that petitioner be recognized .and put in possession of the succession; and if from any cause this relief' bo refused, that petitioner have judgment against the succession for the amount of the 'legacy to the Mason County Court, represented herein by petitioner.

The court below dismissed the suit on the peremptory exceptions filed by the defendants, and, on appeal, its judgment was reversed and the case remanded for trial. See the decision reported in 25 An. 446. The grounds for the action, as stated in the petition, are: The petitioner is administrator “ with the will annexed ” of the succession at the domicile •of the deceased in Kentucky, and that the succession in this State is an'■cillary to that, and by the laws of Kentucky his power as administrator is the same as that of executor with seizin; that the'judgments he seeks 'to annul were obtained by fraud and false testimony; that these pretended heirs were adulterous bastards of the deceased, and that their mother was a slave, and by the laws of Kentucky and Louisiana they are incapable of inheriting from the deceased; that the property in Kentucky is insufficient to pay the special legacies in the will, especially the legacy due the Mason County Court (which is capable of inheriting by the laws of Kentucky); that the public administrator has failed to account annually, according to law, and he has failed to deposit the funds of the succession in bank.

After the case was remanded, Mary Jane Rodgers, Phoebe Ann Dun-■eanson, and John James Taylor answered, and after denying generally •and specially the allegations of plaintiff, they “ admit that they are three-fourths white and one-fourth colored, as acknowledged in 1869 by their *369father, Milton Taylor, in the memorándum, to his will; they admit they are the natural children, duly acknowledged, of Milton Taylor, and that .their mother was originally purchased by their father, but was treated kindly by him as the mother of his children born in his house; they admit that they were bom in Kentucky, but were educated by their father and brought up in Ohio, where, they resided the greater part df their lives and where they now reside, and where their father, Milton Taylor, made his will and died, having resided there, much of. his time before his death. Respondents deny that their father had any other heirs, and they allege that in his will of 1869 he provided liberally for them and their children, but that those dispositions are void in Louisiana, and in said will of 1869 and the memorandum thereto, their said father duly acknowledged respondents as his natural children, besides having all their lives previously to 1869 acknowledged them in his letters, acts, and all kinds of private writings. Respondents aver that the property of their father, Milton Taylor, in Louisiana, is real property, and that the clause, in so far as it disposes of real property in favor of persons whom plaintiff claims to represent, is null and void, for this, to wit:

First — That the bequest in trust to the Mason County Court is contrary to the law of Louisiana prohibiting substitutions and ftclei com-missa.

Second — That the judges of the county court have no interest proper in the bequest, and the cestui que trust, or the real beneficiaries, are not designated or described with sufficient certainty.

Third — The language of the bequest is imperative, that the commissioners shall be appointed and the objects of the charity designated (which is even not alleged to have been done), and therefore the trust is prohibited.

Fourth — Not being residuary legatees, the justices of the county court can not take the legacy if it be impossible to execute the trust upon real property in Louisiana.

Wherefore respondents pray that the order, which was ex parte as to them, ordering the execution of the will of Milton Taylor, so far as it relates to real property, or its proceeds, in Louisiana, be annulled; that respondents be recognized as natural children of Milton Taylor, duly acknowledged, and put in possession as heirs as against the plaintiff, according to the decrees heretofore rendered in the promises; that plaintiffs demand be rejected with costs, etc. ■ •

After the case had been regularly submitted on the issues stated and ■on the several oppositions to the two accounts filed by the public administrator, which will be more fully noted hereafter, the court dismissed, for want of jurisdiction, the demand of Thomas J. Throop, “administrator with the will annexed,” etc., on the ground that the orders for putting *370the heirs into possession, sought to be annulled, divested the court of jurisdiction; it also amended the accounts and homologated them.

From this judgment Thomas J. Throop, administrator, etc., appealed.

The court committed a manifest error in dismissing for want of jurisdiction the demand of Throop, the administrator “with the will annexed,” whose functions are the same as a dative executor. He represents the succession at the domicile of the deceased, to which the succession here is ancillary. He has a right, after the debts of the succession here are settled, to demand of the public administrator, who is. dative executor, the residue of the funds of the estate, in order that the will may be carried into effect.

In Gravillon vs. Richards, executor, 13 La. 391, it was held: “The power of our courts to order the remission of funds belonging to a foreign succession opened here to the representatives and creditors authorized to receive them by the courts of the domicile of the deceased, is'undoubted; every motive of public policy requires such transmission for distribution.”

The orders recognizing as heirs at law the illegitimate colored children 'of. Milton Taylor residing in Ohio, and directing that they be put in possession, are revisable in an action of nullity for fraud by the court which, rendered them.

The will of Milton Taylor remains unrevoked, and the public administrator, as dative executor, remains in possession of the succession. In obtaining these orders these pretended.heirs entirely ignored the will of Milton Taylor, treating the succession as intestate.

We are satisfied from the evidence that they committed a fraud in withholding from the court, when attempting to prove their heirship, the fact that they were the illegitimate children of Milton Taylor by a colored woman who was his slave at the time of their birth, and who died his slave, and therefore, by the laws of Kentucky, the domicile of their origin, they were incapable of inheriting from their father.

The orders, therefore, obtained by Mary Jane Rodgers, Phoebe Ann Duncanson, and John James Taylor must be annulled. These persons are, therefore, without interest to contest with plaintiff, Thomas J. Throop, administrator, etc., on the question raised in their answer, whether the clause of the will conferring a special legacy on Mason County Court contains a prohibited substitution in the meaning of article 1520 of the Revised Code. ■ ■

If, however, the question were raised and answered in the affirmative, it would not defeat the demand of the plaintiff, because the various other clauses of the will remain, in force, not having been attacked, and as administrator “with the will annexed” at the domicile of the deceased, the plaintiff, charged with the execution of the will, is entitled to all the *371funds of the succession here remaining after payment of the debts. 13'. La. 296; 6 An. 161.

Looking at the accounts filed by the public administrator, and pending-■on the oppositions herein, we find that the proceeds of the sales of the.succession property exceed in the aggregate twenty-one thousand dollars, and that the only debt' of the deceased in this State was a mortgage > claim bearing on the propeity amounting in principal and interest to. @5773. Yet this public administrator, in utter disregard of his duty, and,, as we find, fraudulently, swells his accounts with false charges, exorbitant', court charges, and numerous claims not owing by the succession, and by these unjust and exorbitant claims, added to the mortgaged debt of @5773 actually owing by the deceased, he increases the debit side of his-accounts and reduces the funds in his hands to a balance only of @1058 25, which he acknowledges he owes the succession.

For the fraud which is manifest in the provisional account, the homolo-gation thereof in the judgment of the fifteenth of September, 1871, must, be annulled, as prayed for.

After examining the evidence bearing on the items of the two accounts,, we feel constrained to strike therefrom all the items debited, except the following, those rejected either not being proved or evidently not owing by the succession. Some are correct in part, and will be reduced:

Item No. 1 Andrew Hero,-notary. @1 00

Item No. 2 Clerk’s costs.. ’. 50 00-

Item No. 3 Hays & New, attorneys. 500 00-

Item No. 4 W. B. Morris, insurance. 40 65

Item No. 7 Lewis et al., appraisers, reduced to. 8 00-

Item No. 8 Deslonde’s account, reduced to. 190 50-

Item No. 13 Notice to creditors. 3 00-

Item No. 14 Attorney for absent heirs, reduced to. 100 00

Item No. 17 Mortgage debt.5,773 00'

Item No. 22 Administrator’s commissions.1,000 00

Item No. 23 Tracey, clerk’s fees. 101 40-

Item No. 24 Sheriff’s fees.-... 8 00-

Item No. 27 J. P. Ep ply’s account. 209 55.

Item No. 30 Balance of administrator’s commissions. 57 64

Item No. 32 E. Morel, attorney’s fee. 250 00

Item No. 34 Christy, notary. 10 00

Item No. 35 Deslonde’s account, reduced to.¡... 60 00

Item No. 36 Reserved for costs. 75 00-

Item No. 43 A. J. Ball. 300 00

Item No. 44 James O’Hara. 250 00

Item No. 45 John G-. Carlisle. 250 00

Item No. 46 Thornton E. Marshall. 150 00

*372As tlie public administrator failed to deposit in bank the funds of the estate as required by section seven of the Revised Statutes, he must be held liable, as prayed for, to pay twenty per cent per annum interest on §13,484, the amount of funds remaining in his hands after filing the provisional account, from August 21,1871.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed .from be annulled, and it is decreed that the orders herein recognizing as heirs Mary Jane Rodgers, Phoebe Ann Duncanson, and John James Taylor, and ordering them to bo put in possession of the succession of Milton Taylor be annulled; that the judgment homologating the provisional account on the fifteenth of September, 1871, be annulled; that all the items on the debit side of the two accounts filed herein be rejected, except items numbers one, two, three, four, seven, eight, thirteen, fourteen, seventeen, twenty-two, twenty-three, twenty-four, twenty-seven, thirty, thirty-two, thirty-four, thirty-five, thirty-six, forty-three, forty-four, forty-five, forty-six; that these items for the respective amounts thereof as stated in this opinion, form and constitute the debit sides of said accounts.-the credit sides remaining undisturbed, and as thus constituted, that said accounts be homologated, and the public administrator is hereby ordered to pay each item thereof to the creditors therein named; it is further ordered that Thomas J. Throop, administrator “with the will annexed,” etc., plaintiff herein, recover of the defendant, P. B. Fouko, public administrator, dative executor of the succession of Milton Taylor, all the funds belonging to said succession remaining after paying the items of said accounts herein homologated; also, that he recover judgment against him for twenty per cent per annum interest on §13,484 from the twenty-first clay of August, 1871.

It is further ordered that the succession of Milton Taylor pay costs of the court below and appellees pay costs of appeal.