Bierhorst v. Kelly

68 So. 2d 111, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 801
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 1953
DocketNo. 20246
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 So. 2d 111 (Bierhorst v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bierhorst v. Kelly, 68 So. 2d 111, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 801 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge. '

This is a suit for a declaratory judgment, Mrs. Edith Levenberg Bierhorst, the prospective vendor of two lots of ground in New Orleans, seeks a judgment declaring that her title to the property is “full, complete, absolute, unconditional and merchantable.” The prospective purchaser of the property, Philip M. Kelly, who contends that the title of Mrs. Bierhorst is not full and complete, is made a party defendant, and also made defendants and cited through a curator-ad-hoc are two absentee brothers of Mrs. Bierhorst who, it is alleged, have not been heard from for many years.

There was judgment declaring the title of plaintiff to be full, complete, and merchantable, and from this judgment Kelly and the curator-ad-hoc of the two absent brothers have appealed.

The purchase price which had been agreed upon between the prospective vendor and the prospective vendee was $6,000, but when the appeals were taken to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, they were transferred to this Court, the Supreme Court stating that

“no question of specific performance * * , * is presented in the case * * * there really is no issue in contest between the parties.” [66 So. 2d 792.]

The question which is presented is purely one of law. The facts are not in dispute.

The property in question, until her death in 1933, was owned by Mrs. Cecile B. Levenberg, the mother of the petitioner. In addition to the petitioner, Mrs. Leven-berg was the mother of four other children, two daughters and' two sons, and when she died, she left many pieces of real estate, including that with which we are now concerned and which is described as follows :

Two Certain Lots of Ground, together with all the buildings and improvements thereon, and all the rights, ways, privileges, servitudes, appurtenances and advantages thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, situated in the Second District of New Orleans, in Square No. 164, Lakeview, bounded by Colbert (Late Iberville), Louisville, and Porteous (late Twiggs) Streets, and Fillmore Avenue, designated as Lots 23 and 24 on plan of survey made by E. L. Rustís, Civil Engineer and Surveyor, dated April 9th, 1947, a print of which is annexed to an act passed before Charles L. Rivet, Notary Public, on January 15th 1953, and according to which said Lots 23 and 24 adjoin each other and measure each, twenty-five feet (25') front on Colbert Street, the same width in the rear, by a depth between equal and parallel lines of one hundred twenty-nine feet (129'), Lot No. 24 forming the corner of Colbert and Porteous Streets.

[113]*113Her succession was duly administered, certain real estate was sold, and certain particular legacies were delivered, and, in 1940, the three daughters of the decedent (the present plaintiff and her two sisters) filed, in the succession proceedings, a petition in which they prayed that they be sent into possession of the balance of the estate, which included the property in question. This petition was based on the allegations that at the time of the death of the decedent, the existence of the two sons was unknown; that one son had disappeared and had not been heard from since 1931, and that the other had disappeared and had not been heard from since 1919. The petition also alleges that, at the time of the opening of the succession of the mother, the three daughters, acting on the assumption that the two sons (their brothers) were absent “heirs” within the contemplation of Article 47 of our LSA-Civil Code, had treated them as such and had provoked the appointment of an attorney to represent them as absent “heirs.” The petition further alleges that, since the existence of the two sons was unknown at the time of the opening of the succession of the mother, they should not have been treated as absent heirs within the contemplation of Article 47 of our LSA-Civil Code, but should have been treated as “absentees” within the contemplation of Articles 76, 77, 78 and 79 of the LSA-Civil Code, and that as a result the rights which the two sons would have had, had their existence been known, should, since their existence was unknown have devolved exclusively upon the three sisters. On this petition there was judgment recognizing the three daughters of Mrs. Lev-enberg, the petitioner, and her two sisters as sole heirs of the decedent and sending them into possession of the property which is involved here. Later the interests of the two other sisters were transferred to Mrs. Bierhorst.

On January 21, 1953, respondent, Philip M. Kelly made a written offer to purchase the property for $6,000 cash. This offer was accepted in writing by Mrs. Bierhorst. Kelly then refused to consummate the transaction, taking the position that the judgment under which the three daughters had been sent into possession of the property had not and could not vest in them a clear and merchantable title.

It is the contention of Mrs. Bierhorst that that judgment did vest a clear and merchantable title in her and her two sisters' and that the rights, of the two brothers or either of them, if either should be in existence, are limited to the right to make claim against their sisters for their proper share of the proceeds of the property, but that such rights as they had or either of them ever had cannot in any way affect the title to the real estate itself.

On behalf- of the petitioner our attention is directed to the decision of our Supreme Court in Succession of Butler, 166 La. 224, 117 So. 127. A reading of that decision discloses that, at her death in 1914, the decedent, Mrs. Sarah Butler, left an estate consisting of real and personal property. There were four children born to Mrs. Butler by a former marriage. Three of these children were present in Louisiana at the time of the death and the fourth, Francis Lory, Jr., had left the state eleven years before the death of the decedent and had not been heard from since 1904 ten years before the decedent’s death. On the death of the mother, the three children who were present provoked the opening of the succession, and, after having a curator-ad-hoc appointed to represent their absent brother whom they alleged to be an absent heir, they had themselves and the absent brother recognized as sole heirs of their mother and sent into possession of her estate.

In the succession proceedings, the three children who were present then provoked a partition contradictorily with the curator-ad-hoc of the absent brother, and, after the completion of the partition by licitation, they were sent into possession, each of an undivided share of the proceeds, and the share of the absent brother was placed to his credit in a bank in New Orleans. Later the three children, who had provoked the opening of the succession and the partition, brought the proceeding which finally reach[114]*114ed the Supreme Court, and they averred that they had been in error in treating their absent brother as an absent “heir” and in having the said absent “heir” recognized and sent into possession of a share of the estate, and they further averred that the said brother was an “absentee” whose existence was unknown and they prayed that they be sent into “the possession and absolute ownership” of the mother’s estate including the share which had been placed to the credit of the absentee, taking the position that since the “existence” of the brother was unknown, he was not an absent “heir” but was an “absentee”, and that therefore the share of the inheritance which would have passed to him devolved exclusively on those three who were present.

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Related

Bierhorst v. Kelly
74 So. 2d 168 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
68 So. 2d 111, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bierhorst-v-kelly-lactapp-1953.