Bonvillain v. Richaud

96 So. 21, 153 La. 431, 1923 La. LEXIS 1786
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 2, 1923
DocketNo. 25702
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 96 So. 21 (Bonvillain v. Richaud) 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
Bonvillain v. Richaud, 96 So. 21, 153 La. 431, 1923 La. LEXIS 1786 (La. 1923).

Opinion

O’NI'ELL, C. J.

This is an action to redeem a title lost by tax sale, or, in the alternative, to have the sale declared null. The suit was dismissed on an exception of no cause of action and the judgment waá affirmed by the Court of Appeal.

According to the allegations of the petition, plaintiffs are the six children, the only heirs at law, of Mrs. Susanna Nixon Bonvillain, who died on the 4th of March, 1913, when all of the plaintiffs were minors. Four of them are yet minors, represented by a tutor. The property in contest, being a house and lot, of small value, belonged to the plaintiffs’ mother until her death. It was her home and the home of her six children, and they have remained undisturbed in their possession and enjoyment of it ever since. The tax sale to the defendant, -Richaud, was made on the 22d of June, 1918, and recorded on the 31st of July, 1918, when the plaintiffs here were yet minors. The succession of their mother had not been opened by any judicial proceeding, and there had not been a tutor or guardian appointed to represent the minors, nor an administrator, executor, or other officer appointed to represent the succession.

Plaintiffs alleged that the tax sale was made without previous notice to them, or to any one authorized to represent them or their mother’s succession, and that the sale was therefore null. They alleged that they had not received formal notice that the tax sale [433]*433had been made, and that they had yet the right to redeem the title by paying the taxes and penalties, even if the sale was valid. They therefore tendered and deposited in court $36.50, alleged to be the total amount that the defendant, Richaud, had paid for the property, including all taxes paid since the sale, and all interest, costs, and penalties that he could claim; and, insisting that the tax sale was null, plaintiffs prayed, first, to be allowed to redeem their title, anil, in the alternative, to have the sale declared null.

The only reason for which it was held that the petition in this case did not disclose a cause of action was that plaintiffs did not allege that they had been, as the Court of Appeal says, “recognized” as the heirs of their deceased mother, by a judicial decree, in conformity with the provisions of the inheritance tax law. The court referred to Act 109 of 1906, p. 173, as amended by Act 199 of 1920, p. 330. ■

The act of 1920 is only an amendment and a re-enactment of section 16 of the Act of 1906. That section and the third section of the act of 1906 are the pertinent provisions on which the judgment of the Court of Appeal is based. Section 3 declares:

“It shall be unlawful for any heir, legatee or other beneficiary of a donation mortis causa to take or be in possession of any part of the things or property composing the inheritance, legacy or other donation mortis causa, or to dispose of the same or any part thereof, until he shall have obtained the authority of the court to that effect, as hereafter provided; and in case he shall so take or be in possession or shall so dispose of such things or property, or any part thereof, he shall no longer have the right of renouncing such inheritance or donation mortis causa, and shall remain personally liable for the tax thereon; but he may, without waiting for authority do such acts as may seem necessary to preserve the property from waste, damage or loss.”

Section 3 of the statute, therefore, hnakes it unlawful for an heir or a legatee to take possession or to remain in possession of inherited property, without proceeding against the tax collector, in the summary manner described in the statute, to have the inheritance tax fixed, or to have it judicially declared that there is no inheritance tax due. And the same section of the law declares what shall be the consequence of an heir’s taking possession, or remaining in possession, of inherited property, or of his disposing of any part of it, without having obtained a judicial decree fixing the inheritance tax or declaring the inheritance exempt from the tax. The consequence stated is that the heir or legatee who has been negligent in that respect becomes personally liable for the inheritance tax and cannot thereafter absolve' himself by renouncing the inheritance. The section of the law in question, however, concludes with the important saving clause, that an heir or legatee may, without waiting for judicial authority, do such acts as may seem necessary to preserve the inherited property from waste, damage, or loss.

A suit like this, to enforce the right of redemption of a title lost by a tax sale, or, in the alternative, to have the sale declared null, might well “seem necessary to preserve the property from loss,” especially when the period of prescription (under article 233 of the Constitution of 1898 and 1913, or section 11 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921) is about to expire. This suit was filed on the 5th of April, 1921, less than four months before the three years expired. The Court of Appeal expressed the opinion that the prescription of three years was suspended as long as the purchaser at the tax sale did not take possession of the property, even though the possession retained by the original owners, being in the opinion of the Court of Appeal, an unlawful possession, could not have any legal effect. We do not concur in either of 'those opinions. It is settled by a long line of decisions, and has never been denied or doubted by this court, that it is [435]*435not necessary that a purchaser at a tax sale shall take actual possession of the property in order to have the benefit of the prescription of three years. On the contrary, it is when the original owner of the property remains in possession that the prescription is suspended. In this case, -the plaintiffs, who owned the property from the time of their mother’s death until it was sold for taxes, thereafter remained in actual possession of it. .Their failure, in the meantime, to ask to,be recognized by a judicial decree to be the heirs of their mother, did not counteract the effect of their actual possession of the property on the prescription of three years.

Whether, under the circumstances, this suit, which of itself might have operated as an interruption of the prescription of three years, was such an emergency measure as was expressly permitted by the concluding words of section 3 of Act 109 of 1906, is a matter which we need not decide. The statute, especially as amended by the act 199 of 1920, does not, either in terms or by implication, forbid arf heir of a deceased person to sue to protect his possession, or to recover title or possession, of property inherited from the deceased, until the heir has paid the inheritance tax or has had the inheritance judicially declared exempt from the tax. What the statute declares is that an heir or a legatee shall not be given possession of inherited property by a judicial decree, or be allowed to dispose of any part of the property, until he has paid the inheritance tax or has had it judicially declared that the inheritance is not subject to the tax. But there is no reason why an heir or a legatee should be compelled to pay an inheritance tax on property which he claims by inheritance, or be compelled to have the inheritance judicially declared not subject to the tax, before the heir or legatee can institute a suit to determine whether he shall have the property. It will be time enough to consider the matter of the inheritance tax when the time comes for the judge to sign a final judgment or decree in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
96 So. 21, 153 La. 431, 1923 La. LEXIS 1786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonvillain-v-richaud-la-1923.