Brian v. Bonvillain

35 So. 632, 111 La. 441, 1902 La. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 21, 1902
DocketNo. 14,129
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 35 So. 632 (Brian v. Bonvillain) 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
Brian v. Bonvillain, 35 So. 632, 111 La. 441, 1902 La. LEXIS 179 (La. 1902).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, C. J.

This case was before us in 1900, and was remanded. The pleadings and facts, as far as they could be then ascertained, will be found reported in 52 La. Ann. 1794, 28 South. 261. The cause was remanded to have the minor children of the defendant made parties, so that the issues raised should be disposed of at one and the same time, contradictorily between all parties ' in interest. On - the return of the case a tutor was appointed and qualified to the minors, who filed an answer in their behalf. The case was tried and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendants appealed. We were in hope that, under the opportunity afforded by the remanding, testimony would be introduced explanatory of some matters which certainly called for explanation, but the record returns to us very little different from what it was as it first came before us.

In the first opinion we said: “Recitals in several of the acts offered in evidence are perplexing in character, particularly those in the act between Mrs. Gracieuse Cornen, widow of Edouard Sigur, and her grandson J.. Oscar Sigur, the vendor of the plantiff, and those in the act of exchange between Gracieuse Sigur, wife of C. E. Noveret, and J. Oscar Sigur and the children of Clara Sigur, deceased wife of G. Callery, who was a daughter of Edouard Sigur.” The act referred to between Mrs. Gracieuse Cornen (Mrs. Edouard Sigur) and J. Oscar Sigur was an act of donation by Mrs. Sigur to her grandson Oscar of one-sixth of the plantation known as the “Home Place.” The heirs of Mrs. Callery were parties to this act. The act declares that “this donation is made not subject to any future collation by said donee as an heir of said donor, but is donated to the said Oscar Sigur for the purposes of the settlements this day made among and with their heirs of said estate” (succession of Edouard Sigur). The Callery heirs declare that they “take cognizance of the donation and transfer hereinbefore made and they do [443]*443ratify and confirm the same as herein made and donated, and that said property shall not hereafter be subject to any collation on the part of said donee as heir of his grandmother; and they hereby each for himself fully and freely relinquish and abandon to the said Joseph O. Sigur all their respective rights, claims and demands in and to all said real property hereinbefore donated by them and each of them, held and owned as heirs and legal representatives of the estate of Edouard Sigur, and recognizing and warranting and guaranteeing the title to said tract of land as complete, perfect and irrevocable.”

The only portion of the morturia proceedings in the matter of the succession of Edouard Sigur, or connected therewith, in the record, is the inventory taken in the succession, and this act of donation. We are not Informed what the settlements were which are referred to in the act of donation as those “that day made between the donor and the heirs of Edouard Sigur and the heirs themselves inter se,” which settlements seem to have brought about, or at least to have influenced the mother in making, the donation to Oscar Sigur, and making it free from collation. The purpose and scope of the relinquishment by the Callery heirs “of all their rights, claims, and demands” is not explained. What disposition between these parties was made of the Richland Plantation does not apxsear. We do not understand how or why the Callery heirs and Oscar Sigur obtained as large an interest in that plantation as they seem later to have had in it; nor do we understand why, in the act of exchange made by Mrs. Noveret of a sixth interest in the Richland Plantation for a third interest in the Home Plantation, Mrs. Noveret conveyed any portion of her said interest in the Richland Place to the Callerys. We can only deal with the rights of parties as we have knowledge of the situation from the record. If the defendants cannot explain how it is that Oscar Sigur appears to have, if he does not really have, an interest of one-ninth in the Home Plantation, we ourselves are unable to explain it. We understand the defendant on the first trial to concede that Oscar Sigur had in fact a ninth interest in the Home Plantation at the time of his sale of the plantation, but that he had estopped himself from claiming that interest by reason of his participation in the settlements made in the Succession of Mrs. Edouard Sigur, and the various acts of transfer connected therewith. Most of the evidence taken in the district court upon the return of the same was to establish that Oscar Sigur was fully advised of every step taken at that time, and that everything he did at that time was with full knowledge. Oscar Sigur himself testified that, if any act on his part had the effect or might have the effect of compromising his rights, it was done in error of fact. If the view of the legal situation which we took on the first trial of estoppel, as affecting third parties, innocent purchasers without notice, was a correct one, it would matter little whether we erred in making the statement we did in the original opinion, that, although Oscar Sigur was in and about the premises at the time of the execution of the different acts then passed between different parties, his attention was not x^articularly directed to any of them, for it would only be upon the hypothesis that the estoppel extended beyond Sigur and to the plaintiff that he would be concerned in that particular question. As we hold title of the' defendant A. A. Bonvillain to be good and complete without invoking estoppel, the only parties in raising and maintaining that .issue are the minors holding title under the donation from their grandmother Mrs, Noveret to their mother, the first wife of the defendant Bonvillain. As the minors were not legally parties to this suit after its return to the district court, nothing heretofore said affects them. The matter before us is an original one. This court in reality decided no issue at the first hearing. It announced certain conclusions of fact drawn from the evidence, the correctness of which are not disputed, but conceded, but having discovered of itself at the last moment that the minors, the real parties in interest, were not before the court, it remanded the cau^e to be further proceeded with. What was said at that time as to estoppel was not called for, and, for the purposes of this case, must be considered not written.

The counsel for the defendants say in their brief that they Submit that in the argument of the case in 1900 it was contended by the counsel for the defendants, and, as they [445]*445thought, with good reason, that the transfer from Oscar Sigur to the plaintiff, Brian, was an aleatory contract; that in this court’s opinion no mention was made of that argument or of the facts on which it was predicated. That is true, for the reason it was thought, from what was said in the argument, that it was conceded as a fact Oscar Sigur still held a ninth interest in the Home Place unless he had forfeited it by estoppel. We shall direct our attention first to what the contract between the plaintiff and Oscar Sigur was.

The contract was one of exchange. In the act Oscar Sigur declared that he did thereby grant, bargain, sell, assign, convey, set over, and deliver into, and give in exchange unto, Alexis Brian, all his right, title, interest, and claim and demand in and to all the immovable property owned by Hermogene Sigur, his father, Edouard Sigur, his grandfather, and Mrs. Gracieuse Cornen, his grandmother, at the time of their respective deaths; he being the son of Hermogene Sigur, and the grandson of Edouard Sigur, and his wife and the said Oscar Sigur inheriting from them.

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 632, 111 La. 441, 1902 La. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-v-bonvillain-la-1902.