Banker v. Durand

25 La. Ann. 511
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1873
DocketNo. 805
StatusPublished

This text of 25 La. Ann. 511 (Banker v. Durand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banker v. Durand, 25 La. Ann. 511 (La. 1873).

Opinion

Morgan, J.

Charles Durand, a Prendí citizen, died in the parish of St. Martin on the twenty-sixth November, 1870. He left a widow and several children, of whom several were minors and some majors, and one was an absentee. The widow notified the probate court of the parish of St. Martin of her husband’s death, and prayed to be allowed to qualify as natural tutrix to her minor children, and asked for the appointment of an under tutor. Her petition was granted, and an inventory was ordered to be taken of the succession of her husband. Both tutrix and the under tutrix took the oath required by law on the thirty-first December, 1870. The inventory was taken on the twentieth December, 1870. Among the property of the deceased., mentioned in the inventory, was a plantation situate in the parish of St. Martin.

Banker, the plaintiff, a resident of the parish of Orleans, instituted proceedings via execiUiva against the above mentioned property on the thirty-first December, 1870, claiming to be the owner of two promissory notes, drawn by Durand to his own order and by jrini indorsed, each for the sum of $7500, dated New Orleans, third May, 1862, and payable respectively on the third July, 1863, and on the first May, 1864, with interest at eight per cent, per annum from maturity till paid, to secure the payment of which, together with counsel’s fees at the rate of five per cent., he mortgaged the property referred to. He prayed for an order of seizure and sale against the property for the amount alleged to be due on said note at the time the suit was instituted. He cited the heirs of age residing in the State personally, the one residing abroad through a curator, and the minors through their tutrix.

Subsequently, to wit: on the thirteenth March, 1871, he changed his proceedings from the via exeoutiva to the via ordinaria, and the same [512]*512parties were again proceeded against, as widow, tutrix and heirs, and again cited in the manner prescribed by law. The widow and tutrix filed a general denial. The heirs of age denied any indebtedness, and further denied that they could be made responsible for their ancestor’s ■debts, whose succession they, in their answer, accepted only with benefit of inventory. This answer was filed on thirteenth April, 1871.

Subsequent to these proceedings, an administrator was appointed to ■the succession of Durand. He appeared in the suit, and pleaded the prescription of five years. The other defendants do not make the plea. As regards the heirs of age and the widow, the plea can not extend its benefits to them. As to the succession and the minors, it does, their interest being in the succession, and the succession being represented by an administrator — for it will be observed that the. widow did not ■ask to administer the succession of her deceased husband as natural tutrix to her minor children; she merely asked to be confirmed as their natural tutrix, and; as tutrix, to cause an inventory of the prop■erty left by her deceased husband to be taken. The administrator was qualified only a short time before the plea of prescription was filed; and, in his brief, counsel for appellee doubts “ that an administrator, made so only two days before the judgment was signed, not ■a party therefore to the suit, without interest in the suit, can be allowed to come in by appeal to urge such defense.” We think differently. The administrator could make no appearance until he was duly qualified, and, when qualified, it was his duty to interpose any ■defense to a suit in which the succession he represented was submitted, which the law placed in his hands ; and as, by the law, he could have ■filed the plea in this Court at any time before the case was instituted, we do not see how he could have been deprived of the right of filing the plea before any judgment had been rendered in the court of the first instance, even if his right to do so had been contested, which we ■do not find from the record was done.

As we have heretofore seen, the notes sued on fell due respectively ■on the first July, 1863, and first May, 1864. On one of the notes, a payment is alleged to have been made on the twentieth November, 1865 ; on the second, a payment is alleged to have been made on the twenty-sixth March, 1869. The demand is for the balance due on the notes.

In our opinion the letter of Durand of the seventeenth December, 1866, to North, Duthil & Co., and his letter to G-. W. Banker, Jr., of twenty-fourth December, 1867, are acknowledgments of the debt, and take the case out of prescription. In the first letter, after expressing his disappointment at the result of his crop, he says: “Done je me trouve dans l’impossibilité de payer cette année les $7500 que je dois ¡i M. Duthil J’ai sujet d’espérer que je serai plus heureux dans le [513]*513produit de ma réoolte prochaine. Ainsi, mes chers Messieurs, je vous prie de m’accorder un an, en vous payant les intéréts & l’échéance de ■cette dette. Avec l’espoir que vous adhérez á ma demande, et confiant dans les bonnes dispositions d’anciens amis, Duthil, je suis,” etc. This was an acknowledgment of the debt, a confession of his inability to pay, the expression of a hope that he would be able to pay the following year, a promise to pay the interest, and a request for indulgence.

The same may be said with regard to his letter to Messrs. Q-. W. Banker & Co. of the twenty-sixth December, 1867. He says: Yotre lettre du seiziéme courant, m’est parvenue bier, par laquelle vous me ■demandez les paiements de mes billets $7500. Je n’ai, comme tout ■notre pays, fait aucun revenu cette annóe par rapport á l’inondation pour une partie des mes Cannes, et le ravage des chenilles dans mon cotton. II faut que je sois ici par le premier de Janvier prochain, pour régler avec mes affranchis, et renouveler leurs contrats pour la prochaine année, la quelle doit me produire audessus de trois cents boucauds de sucre. * * * * Aussitót ces tribulations terminóos,

je descendrai en ville, ce qui arrivera dans les premiers jours de .Janvier prochain; et la je ferai tout mon possible pour répondre a votre demande.”

It is contended that, in the first letter, mention is made of a debt due to Duthil, and it is suggested that it is not the debt due to Duthil which is sought to be enforced. But this is explained by the testimony, received without objection, by which it appears that the notes, sued on originally, belonged to Dupasseur; that they were, by him, transferred to North, Duthil & Co., and by them transferred to Banker.

The plea of prescription can not prevail.

The next objection is, that Mrs. Durand, when cited as tutrix of her ■minor children, had not been legally confirmed in their tutorship.

In this, there is error. The suit via execuiiva was instituted on the thirty-first December, 1870. On the same day the tutrix qualified. This was sufficient. But long after, when the proceeding was changed to the via ordinaria, she was again cited. This was done after she had taken her oath.

The next defense is that heirs, under benefit of inventory, can not ■be held responsible, personally, for the debts of a succession. To a certain extent this is true. Heirs are not responsible, beyond the amount of the property which they inherit, for the debts of their ancestor, provided they accept with the benefit of inventory. They may renounce.

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Bluebook (online)
25 La. Ann. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banker-v-durand-la-1873.