Succession of Angerella Simms ( 2022 )


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  •                             STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    NO. 2022 CA 0186
    SUCCESSION OF ANGERELLA W. SIMMS
    Judgment Rendered:   OCT 19 2022
    On Appeal
    PP    from the
    19th Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge
    State of Louisiana
    Trial Court No. 102787
    Honorable Trudy M. White, Judge Presiding
    Chrystal Matthews Ingram                      Attorneys for Defendant -Appellant,
    Baton Rouge, LA                               Wiley M. Williams and Estate of
    Angerella Simms
    Jack M. Alltmont                              Attorney for Plaintiff -Appellee,
    New Orleans, LA                               Ralph A. Williams, It
    Steven E. Soileau                             Attorney for Defendant -Appellee,
    Shreveport, LA                                Jeffrey S. Norris
    Thomas D. Bourgeois, Jr.                      Attorneys for Defendant -Appellee,
    Vance A. Gibbs                                CLA Estate Services, Inc.
    Randal R. Cangelosi
    Baton Rouge, LA
    BEFORE: THERIOT, CHUTZ, AND RESTER, JJ.
    HESTER, J.
    This matter is again before us on appeal by Wiley M. Williams from a trial
    court judgment granting the petition to annul the previously probated testament
    based on Successions of Toney, 2016- 1534 ( La. 513117),            
    226 So. 3d 397
    , which was
    subsequently overruled by the Supreme Court in Succession of Liner, 2019- 
    02011 La. 6
    / 30121), 
    320 So. 3d 1133
    ,       1138.     In light of Liner and the facts herein, we
    vacate the judgment of the trial court and remand for further proceedings.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Decedent, Angerella W. Simms, died in August 2016. She had two children,
    Wiley M. Williams and Ralph A.               Williams; however, Ralph predeceased Ms.
    Simms.    On November 23, 2009, Angerella W. Simms executed a Last Will and
    Testament (" Will") in which she left " all         of [her] property ...   to the Angerella W.
    Simms Revocable Living Trust, to be administered according to the terms therein."
    The Will further provided that if the bequest to the Angerella W. Simms Revocable
    Living Trust (" Trust") " shall fail for any reason, or if said Trust is terminated prior
    to [ Ms. Simms' s] death,"     all of her property would be left to Wiley and Ralph, " in
    equal   proportions,   share   and   share    alike."    Pursuant to the Will,      Wiley was
    nominated to serve as executor of the succession, and he filed a petition seeking to
    probate the Will on April 4, 2017. On December 27, 2017, the trial court signed an
    order appointing Wiley executor and, on January 3, 2018, issued letters executory.
    On August 8, 2018, Ralph Anthony Williams, II (known as " Tony"),               one of
    Ralph' s two children, filed a petition to annul the probated Will, asserting that it was
    not in accordance with the formalities prescribed for a notarial will under La. Civ.
    Code art. 1577.   At the conclusion of the hearing on October 23, 2018, the trial court
    orally granted the petition to annul, concluding that the attestation clause executed
    by the notary failed to sufficiently comply with the requirements of La. Civ. Code
    art. 1577 as recognized in Successions of Toney, 
    226 So. 3d 397
    .
    2
    A judgment was signed by the trial court on December 26, 2018, annulling
    the previously probated Will, declaring that Ms. Simms died intestate, vacating the
    judgment probating the Will, withdrawing the letters of executorship, and ordering
    Wiley to render an accounting to Tony. Wiley appealed.
    After Wiley' s appeal was lodged in Succession of Simms, 2019- 0936 ( La.
    App. 1st Cir. 2121120), 
    297 So. 3d 110
     ("           Simms I"), this court issued a rule to show
    cause.     Thereafter, the trial court issued an amended judgment on October 8, 2019,
    attempting to correct the deficiencies identified by this court and also removing
    references to the withdrawal of the letters of executorship and the order that Wiley
    render an accounting to Tony. This appeal was dismissed because the October 8,
    2019 amended judgment, which would otherwise be a final appealable judgment,
    was fatally defective for lack of proper decretal language.'                  Id. at 115.   Particularly,
    the judgment failed to name the party in favor of whom the ruling was ordered, the
    party against whom the ruling was ordered, and the specific relief granted, i.e.,
    annulling the previously probated Will of Ms. Simms.                    Id.
    On remand, a revised amended judgment, correcting all the defects identified
    2
    by this court in Simms I, was signed by the trial court on August 26, 2021.                          This
    appeal followed.'
    A judgment annulling a previously probated testament determines the merits of that
    separate   action,
    brought in the succession proceeding, and accordingly constitutes a final
    appealable judgment. Simms I, 297 So. 3d at 115.             See also In re Succession of Theriot, 2008-
    1233 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 12123/ 08),   
    4 So. 3d 878
    , 882.
    2 While a revised amended judgment, nearly identical to August 26, 2021 revised amended
    judgment, was submitted to the trial court in March of 2020, this judgment was not signed, as the
    judgment had not been circulated to opposing counsel.
    3 We note that after the trial court annulled the will, a number of pleadings were filed in
    the succession proceeding, particularly a " Supplemental and Amended Motion ( 1) for Declaratory
    Judgment by way of Motion for Summary Judgment and ( 2) to Revoke Transfer of Assets from
    Trust to Wiley Williams Personally and Ordering Proper Distribution of the Trust Assets" filed by
    Tony. The trial court granted all relief requested by Tony in a judgment dated May 25, 2021.
    Wiley appealed the May 25, 2021 judgment, but this court dismissed the appeal, determining it
    not to be a final appealable judgment. Succession of Simms, 2021- 1219 ( La. App. 1st Cir,
    7/ 13/ 22), 
    2022 WL 2713470
    , * 4 ( unreported) (" Simms II"). Notably, this court stated, " the
    propriety of the declaratory relief relative to the Trust granted in the May 25, 2021 judgment is
    inextricably linked with the revised amended judgment annulling the will, which was ultimately
    3
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    The issue presented in this appeal is whether the Will of Ms. Simms should
    be annulled on the basis that it failed to sufficiently comply with the requirements
    set for a notarial will pursuant to La Civ. Code art. 1577.
    Louisiana Civil Code art. 1577 provides:
    The notarial testament shall be prepared in writing and dated and shall
    be executed in the following manner. If the testator knows how to sign
    his name and to read and is physically able to do both, then:
    1) In the presence of a notary and two competent witnesses, the testator
    shall declare or signify to them that the instrument is his testament and
    shall sign his name at the end of the testament and on each other
    separate page.
    2) In the presence of the testator and each other, the notary and the
    witnesses shall sign the following declaration, or one substantially
    In our presence the testator has declared or signified that this
    similar: "
    instrument is his testament and has signed it at the end and on each
    other separate page, and in the presence of the testator and each other
    we have hereunto subscribed our names this          day of ,
    a
    Additionally, La Civ. Code art. 1573 provides, "[ t] he formalities prescribed for the
    execution of a testament must be observed or the testament is absolutely null."
    In Toney, on which the trial court based its ruling, the Supreme Court held
    that the will at issue materially deviated from the requirements of La Civ. Code art.
    1577 and declared the will to be absolutely null. Toney, 226 So. 3d at 408.              The
    various clauses contained in the will and the attached affidavit,                even   when
    considered in aggregate, were found not to be substantially similar to the sample
    attestation clause found in La Civ. Code art. 1577( 2).       The clauses in Toney failed
    to mention that the will was signed on each separate page as specified in the sample
    attestation clause; lacked a declaration that the notary viewed the will being signed
    orthat the testator declared the instrument to be his last will and testament; and failed
    signed on August 26, 2021 and presently on appeal, as a decision in that appeal may render the
    issues in this appeal moot." Simms 11, 
    2022 WL 2713470
     at * 4.
    E
    to indicate that the witnesses signed the will in the presence of the notary.                  
    Id. at 405
    .   However, since the pronouncement of Toney and the ruling of the trial court
    in this case, the Supreme Court reexamined under what circumstances a will may be
    considered      a material     deviation    from the requisite form and, consequently,
    absolutely null.
    In Liner, 320 So. 3d at 1137, the Supreme Court observed that the plain
    language of La. Civ. Code art. 1579( 2) establishes that strict compliance with formal
    requirements       is   not   necessary;   rather,   an    attestation   clause    need    only    be
    substantially similar" to the language provided in the Civil Code.' A cardinal rule
    of the interpretation of wills is that the intention of the testator as expressed in the
    will must govern, and the formalities of a notarial will provide a protective function
    of guarding the testator against the risk of fraud.          Id. The court in Liner held that
    No the extent Toney stands for the proposition that an aggregate of slight deviations
    constitute a material deviation regardless of their cumulative effect on the risk of
    fraud, it is overruled." Id. at 1138. Instead, the attestation clause is to be construed
    liberally to determine whether it sufficiently evinces the requisite formalities to serve
    the protective function of guarding against the risk of fraud.              Id.   Specifically, the
    court in Liner stated:
    Courts must determine if a notarial will, with all formalities and
    evidence taken into consideration, reflects the testator was sufficiently
    protected against the risk of fraud. This involves a contextual analysis
    of the protective function of a will' s formalities in light of the document
    itself. ... If the court' s analysis reveals an increased likelihood that
    fraud may have been perpetrated, the deviations are material and cause
    to nullify the will exists. If not, the deviations are slight and should be
    disregarded.       Whether the deviating language sufficiently protects
    against the risk of fraud is construed liberally in favor of maintaining
    a
    Additionally, the testator in Toney initialed, rather than signed, the first two pages of the
    will, contrary to the requirements of La Civ. Code art. 1577( 1). Toney, 226 So. 3d at 404.
    The will at issue in Liner was governed by La. Civ. Code art. 1579, which provides the
    requisite formalities for the will of a testator who is unable to read. The form requirements for a
    notarial will under La. Civ. Code art. 1577 and for a notarial will when the testator is unable to
    read under La. Civ. Code art. 1579 are nearly identical but with the latter requiring additional
    formalities to safeguard the sight -impaired or illiterate testator.   See La. Civ. Code art. 1579,
    comments -    1997, comment ( a).
    the validity of the will.        Mere allegations of fraud are not outcome
    determinative.
    Id. at 1138. ( Internal citations omitted.) It is under this framework that deviations
    in attestation clauses should be reviewed. See Id.
    The will at issue in Liner contained the testator' s signature on each separate
    page and at the end of the entire document.               The trial court invalidated the 2015
    testament finding that the provisions of the attestation clause were not substantially
    similar to those set forth in La. Civ. Code art. 1579( 2). The court of appeal reversed
    concluding that, despite the omission of the language " at the end" and " on each other
    separate page,"    the attestation clause did not fail because the decedent' s signature
    actually appeared on the bottom of each of the eight pages of the 2015 testament and
    where the notary and witnesses attested to the decedent signing in their presence.
    On initially hearing the case, the Supreme Court reinstated the judgment of the trial
    court, finding the will to be null. Liner, 320 So. 3d at 1135- 36. After granting
    rehearing " to consider the direction of our jurisprudence on the interpretative
    standard applied to notarial wills," the Supreme Court vacated its original decision.
    Id. at 1135.
    On rehearing, the Supreme Court determined that the attestation clause
    verifying that Mr. Liner declared he " signed" the testament was substantially similar
    to the La. Civ. Code art. 1579 requirement that the attestation clause verify a testator
    declared he signed his name " at the end"           and " on each other separate page"         of the
    testament.     The Supreme Court also rejected the argument that the attestation clause
    failed to establish that the testator declared he heard the reading of the will in the
    presence of the notary and the witnesses.'               Noting that the argument advanced
    6 The court in Liner also rejected the argument that the attestation clause reflected an
    inconsistency in the notary both following and reading the testament. The pertinent portion of the
    attestation clause stated, " such reading having been followed on copies of the Will by Notary and
    witnesses, and the Testator declared that he had heard the reading, of the Will by the Notary."
    Liner, 320 So. 3d at 1139- 40. The appellate court observed and the Supreme Court reiterated that,
    as the person reading the testament, the notary is literally following the text of the document, albeit
    out loud, while fulfilling the purpose of La. Civ. Code art. 1579. This, the Supreme Court stated,
    0
    ignored the complete wording of the attestation clause, which indicated that the
    testament was signed and declared by the testator and the "              above named"       in the
    presence of the witnesses, the Supreme Court determined that a liberal construction
    of the contiguous clauses readily conveyed an understanding that the notary and
    witnesses attested that the testator declared, in their presence, the instrument that
    was his will. Liner, 320 So. 3d at 1135 and 1139- 40.
    In the present matter,      Tony maintained in the petition to annul that the
    EXECUTION" provisions of the Will failed to conform to the requirements set
    forth in La Civ. Code art.       1577, as held in Toney, 
    226 So. 3d 397
    . Tony called
    attention to three defects of form: ( 1)    the witnesses did not attest to having seen the
    notary sign the document; (       2)   the notary made no attestation at all but merely
    ascribed to the fact that he notarized the document; and ( 3) the notary did not state
    that he signed the document in the presence of the witnesses and testatrix.                    No
    allegations of fraud were advanced in the petition to annul, and it was not disputed
    that Ms. Simms signed her name at the end of the Will and on each other separate
    page.
    The " EXECUTION" provisions contained in Ms. Simms' s Will provided as
    follows:
    I, Angerella W. Simms, hereby declare that this is my Last Will
    and Testament, and I confirm that this is the testament that I intend to
    govern the distribution of my estate at my death.          I further declare that
    I have read this testament in its entirety, which is printed on 4 sheets of
    paper. For the purposes of identification, I have signed my name at the
    bottom of pages, 1,     2, &   3, and I now execute this testament in the
    presence of the undersigned Notary Public and the undersigned
    witnesses.
    signature of Ms. Simms]
    We hereby sign as witnesses, at the request of Angerella W.
    Simms, a document she declares to us is her Last Will and Testament.
    was assurance that the document read to the testator in Liner correctly reflected his testamentary
    intent. Id. at 1140. Affording a liberal construction to the language of the applicable attestation
    clause, the court in Liner found the inconsistency to have no effect on the likelihood of fraud and
    was a slight deviation to be disregarded. Id.
    7
    We acknowledge that we were present in the room with the testator and
    saw the testator sign this document, and that we remain in the room
    together and in the presence of Angerella W. Simms and the Notary
    Public, and sign now as witnesses. Each of us declare that in his or her
    opinion this testator is of sound and disposing mind and memory.
    signature of witnesses]
    Subscribed,      sworn    to,   and acknowledged    before   me,   the
    undersigned Notary Public, by Angerella W. Simms, the testator, and
    in the presence of the above named witnesses, competent and of the
    legal age of majority, in East Baton rouge Parish,           Louisiana,   on
    November 23], 2009.
    signature of notary]
    Emphasis added.)
    Tony alleged as deviations that the witnesses did not attest to having seen the
    notary sign the document and that the notary did not state that he signed the
    document in the presence of the witnesses and Ms. Simms. However, the witnesses'
    attestation specifically states, "[ w] e acknowledge that we were present in the room
    with the testator and saw the testator sign this document, and that we remain in the
    room together and in the presence of Angerella W. Simms and the Notary Public,
    and   now   sign   as   witnesses."    The notary' s attestation then provides such was
    s] ubscribed,    sworn to,   and acknowledged before me,       the undersigned Notary
    Public, by Angerella W. Simms, the testator, and in the presence of the above named
    witnesses."   Moreover, Ms. Simms' s attestation references the presence of both the
    witnesses and the notary. A liberal construction of these attestation clauses, when
    read together, evince       sufficient compliance with La. Civ. Code art. 1577( 2)'    s
    requirement that the notary and witnesses sign an attestation clause in the presence
    of the testator and each other. Under these contextual circumstances, the language
    of the attestation clauses adequately protected Ms. Simms against the risk of fraud.
    The next deviation alleged by Tony was that the notary made no attestation at
    all and only ascribed to the fact that he notarized the document.      The whole of the
    notary' s attestation together with the full attestation clauses of Ms. Simms and the
    8
    witnesses, which appear immediately prior to the notary' s attestation, indicate that
    Ms. Simms, the witnesses, and the notary were all in the presence of each other for
    the execution and declarations made in connection with the Will.          The notary' s
    attestation states that Ms. Simms swore,       signed,   and acknowledged to him the
    attestation made earlier in the document.        In view of the language of all the
    attestation clauses and affording a liberal construction thereto, we find this alleged
    deviation to be slight and that Ms. Simms was adequately protected against the risk
    of fraud.
    While the clauses contained in Ms. Simms' s Will do not confirm ward -for -
    word to the declaration set forth in La. Civ. Code art. 1577( 2),    the clauses, when
    read together, are substantially similar to the codal requirements and any deviations
    therefrom are slight.   Under a liberal construction of the attestation clauses herein,
    we find the clauses are sufficient to evince the requisite formalities in order to serve
    the protective function of guarding against the risk of fraud. Accordingly, we find
    merit to Wiley' s assignment of error.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons,      we vacate the trial court' s August 26, 2021
    judgment in favor of Ralph Anthony Williams, II and against Wiley M. Williams,
    annulling the Last Will and Testament of Angerella W. Simms.            This matter is
    remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. All
    costs of this appeal are assessed to Ralph Anthony Williams, II.
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022CA0186

Filed Date: 10/19/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/21/2022