Brewer v. Brewer

83 So. 30, 145 La. 835, 1919 La. LEXIS 1796
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1919
DocketNo. 22334
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 83 So. 30 (Brewer v. Brewer) 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
Brewer v. Brewer, 83 So. 30, 145 La. 835, 1919 La. LEXIS 1796 (La. 1919).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment declaring plaintiffs the owners of [837]*837a half interest in two squares of ground claimed by her, in New Orleans. Plaintiffs, answering the appeal, pray that the judgment be amended so as to declare them the sole owners of the property.

The two squares were bought by George Brewer, in 1860, during his marriage with Mary Addie Langley, and became the property of the matrimonial community. 'She died, intestate, in 1873, leaving seven children, issue of her marriage with George Brewer, namely: George H. Brewer and David S. Brewer, who were of age, and Mary Addie Blake Brewer, Elizabeth Frances Brewer, Catherine Euphemia Brewer, John Wesley Brewer, and Isabella E. Brewer, all minors. John Wesley Brewer died intestate and unmarried in 1883, and his seventh interest in his mother’s succession was inherited by his brothers and sisters. George H. Brewer died intestate in 1893, leaving as his only child and sole heir Charles W. Brewer, one of the plaintiffs in this suit. Mary Addie Blake Brewer married Joseph A. Sturtevant and died intestate in 1915, leaving as her heirs at law five children, who are plaintiffs in this suit, namely: Joseph R. Sturtevant, Mary V. Sturtevant, Ernest O. 'Sturtevant, Herbert D. Sturtevant, and Warren G. Sturtevant. The four other plaintiffs are the son and daughters of the deceased Mary Addie Langley Brewer, issue of her marriage with George Brewer, who died intestate in 1884, namely: David S. Brewer, Elizabeth Frances Brewer, Catherine Euphemia Brewer Nutting, and Isabella E. Brewer Lee.

Defendant is the widow by second marriage of George Brewer. There were no children of that marriage.

George Brewer was confirmed and qualified as natural tutor of his five minor children in 1873, and his son George H. Brewer was appointed undertutor. The tutor, George Brewer, had the community property adjudicated to him, under authority of article 343 of the Civil Code, section 2363 of the Revised Statutes. Thereafter, he went into bankruptcy, and the property in question was sold to the defendant in this suit, who was separate in property from her husband.

Plaintiffs contend that the adjudication to their father of the half interest they inherited from their mother was absolutely null for the following reasons, viz.: (1) That though the adjudication purported to be of the whole property, the family meeting only recommended the adjudication of the interest of the minor children; (2) that the property was not susceptible of being adjudicated to the surviving parent, under the provisions of article 343, R. C. C., and section 2363, R. 'S., because it did not belong exclusively to the surviving parent and his minor children, hut belonged in part to the two major sons; and (3) that the adjudication was never recorded, and, although the tutor afterwards went through the form of granting and recording a special mortgage in lieu of the mortgage resulting from the adjudication, the special mortgage was null because it was not given for a specified or limited sum of money, and therefore the registry of the act did not cure the defect resulting from the failure to record the adjudication.

Plaintiffs contend that the sale made to defendant in the bankruptcy proceedings of her husband, was null, even as to the half interest which he owned as surviving partner in community with his first wife, because the sale was, in substance and effect, a sale by the husband to the wife, in violation of article 2446 of the Civil Code.

[1-3] We agree with the ruling of the district judge that the adjudication of the community property to George Brewer was null, mainly because the property, being owned-partly by two major heirs, was not subject to the adjudication allowed by article 343 of the Civil Code and section 2363 of the Revised Statutes. Although the wlíole property [839]*839was adjudicated, the family meeting only recommended the adjudication of the minor’s interest. Besides, under the ruling in Succession of Burguieres, 140 La. 46, 28 South. 883, the adjudication was without effect because it was never recorded in the mortgage office. It is true, this court held, in Brewer v. Wright, 130 La. 491, 58 South. 160 (in which the present defendant was plaintiff, but to which the present plaintiffs were not parties), that the substitution of the special mortgage cured the .defect in the title of the present defendant, to these squares of ground, resulting from the failure to record the adjudication in the mortgage office. But the court’s attention was not then called to the invalidity of the special mortgage that was given in lieu of the general mortgage. Our opinion is that the special mortgage was null, not merely because there was no specified or limited debt or obligation, but because the act of mortgage and proceedings of the family meeting recommending it showed upon their face that the mortgage was not given to secure- any debt or obligation whatever. It was declared in the proceedings that the interest of the minor children in the succession of their deceased mother, after payment of the debts of the succession, would not be anything. A mortgage, being only an ancillary obligation, cannot exist without a primary obligation. R. C. C. art. 3309; State v. Citizens’ Bank, 33 La. Ann. 705. The special mortgage given in this case purported, not to secure the price of the adjudication, but “to secure the rights and property of the said minors and the faithful administration and discharge of the functions of the said George Brewer as their natural tutor.” That, in connection with the declaration that the minors had no interest in the succession, nor property rights under administration by their natural tutor, was the same as to say that the mortgage was given as an idle ceremony.

[4] Defendant pleads the prescription of five years, established by article 3542 of the Civil Code, against actions for nullity or rescission of contracts, testaments or other acts. Our opinion is that the prescription applies only to voluntary or conventional acts. As to public sales or judicial transfers, the five-year prescription cures only informalities. See article 3543, R. C. C. The adjudication of the minors’ interest in the property to their father was not a conventional transfer; and the invalidity of the transfer of their interest was not a mere informality, because the property was not subject to adjudication in the manner attempted.

[5] Defendant also pleads the prescription of two years, under section 5057 of the U. S. Rev. Stat., declaring that no suit, either at law or in equity, shall be maintainable in any court, between an assignee in bankruptcy and a person claiming an adverse interest, touching any property or right of property transferable to or vested in such assignee, unless brought within two years from the time when the cause of action accrued. The statute quoted, taken from the Bankruptcy Act March 2, 1867, c. 176, 14 Stat. 517, was repealed by the Act of June 7, 1878, e. 160 (20 Stat. 99). Our opinion is that the statute was not applicable to the minor children of George Brewer because their interest in the property was not transferable to or vested in the assignee of George Brewer in bankruptcy. The property was not in the possession of the assignee, nor of his transferee, the defendant here; and the right of action of the heirs therefore did not accrue. See Brewer v. Yazoo & M. V. Railroad, 128 La. 544, 54 South. 987, and 231 U. S. 245, 34 Sup. Ct. 90, 58 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
83 So. 30, 145 La. 835, 1919 La. LEXIS 1796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-brewer-la-1919.