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Jun 04, 2026
Filiation disputes arise when someone claims the right to inherit as a child of the decedent, but the legal parent-child relationship was never fully established before death. In an intestate succession, descendants are the first class of successors, but a person born outside marriage must still connect that status to Louisiana’s filiation rules. La. C.C. arts. 880, 196, 197.
Formal Acknowledgment Versus Judicial Proof
Article 196 recognizes formal acknowledgment. If that route is unavailable, Article 197 permits a child to institute an action to prove paternity. When the action is brought after the father’s death, paternity must be proved by clear and convincing evidence. La. C.C. arts. 196, 197.
The formal-acknowledgment route can be powerful, but it is not casual. In Succession of Dangerfield, the First Circuit held that an act of donation satisfied Article 196 and entitled the claimant to be recognized as an heir. In re Succession of Dangerfield, 207 So. 3d 427 (La. App. 1 Cir. 2016).
The one-year succession deadline
For succession purposes, Article 197 imposes a one-year peremptive period running from the death of the alleged father.
That deadline is unforgiving. In Perry v. Clay, the court treated the one-year limit as the absolute latest point to bring the filiation claim in the succession context. Perry v. Clay, 288 So. 3d 163 (La. App. 3 Cir. 2019).
The 2024 Procedural Clarification
Louisiana Revised Statute 9:410 now clarifies that a filiation action under Article 197 is an ordinary proceeding that may be brought separately or cumulated in the succession. Opening a succession does not itself institute the filiation action. La. R.S. 9:410.
That clarification matters because some families assume that merely appearing in the succession preserves the filiation claim. It does not. The claim must be filed procedurally in the manner the law requires. La. R.S. 9:410; La. C.C. art. 197.
Field Law Can Help
Filiation fights are rarely just emotional disputes – they are timing disputes, proof disputes, and procedural disputes. If you believe heirship depends on proving parentage after death, Field Law can evaluate whether the claim is still available and what evidentiary showing Louisiana law will require.