Brown v. Furlong

117 So. 583, 166 La. 537, 1928 La. LEXIS 1917
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 12, 1928
DocketNo. 28853.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 117 So. 583 (Brown v. Furlong) 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
Brown v. Furlong, 117 So. 583, 166 La. 537, 1928 La. LEXIS 1917 (La. 1928).

Opinions

OVERTON, J.

This suit was instituted by eight of the legal heirs of Mrs. Florence A. Toombs, deceased, and by M. D. Dimitry, against the remaining legal heirs of the deceased, twenty-four in number, to effect by licitation a partition of movable and immovable property. The property sought to be partitioned is that recovered by the legal heirs of Mrs. Florence A. Toombs in Beattie v. Dimitry et al., 162 La. 571, 110 So. 759, and *539 in Succession of Toombs, 162 La. 585, 110 So. 764.

All the heirs against whom the suit is brought are nonresidents of the state, and six of them are minors. Edward Barnett, Esq., was appointed-curator ad hoc to represent all of them, including the six minors. The curator ad hoc filed an answer in which he admitted all the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, but later withdrew the answer, and resigned as curator ad hoc. Byron A. Irwin, Esq., was appointed curator ad hoc in the place of Barnett, and filed an answer, putting plaintiffs’ demand at issue.

Albert P. Garland, about this time, intervened in the suit, denying that Dimitry had any proprietary interest in the property to be partitioned, and alleging that the latter is entitled, as appears from his contracts with the parties litigant, only to an amount equal to 50 per centum of the amount recovered for them under said contracts, and that he (Garland), by virtue of a contract with Dimitry, the terms of which he has fulfilled, is entitled to one-half of the net amount of that fee, for which amount he prays for judgment, with recognition of his lien, as attorney at law, on the property recovered by Dimitry, with his assistance. This intervention was referred, upon motion of Garland, in the event the partition prayed for should be ordered to be made by sale, to be disposed of at the time of the distribution of the proceeds of the sale.

After Byron A. Irwin had filed his answer, as curator ad hoc for all the defendants, thirteen of them, through attorneys selected by them, appeared and filed an answer to take the place of that filed in their behalf by their curator ad hoe. However, as it appeared that six of these defendants were minors, and were not represented by a tutor or guardian, the court ordered the answer struck from the record, so far as relates to the six minors, and that the answer filed in behalf of the minors by the curator ad hoc should stand as to them.

After these documents were filed and the foregoing proceedings had, the case was called for trial, evidence was adduced, and the case was continued for argument. Two days later plaintiff moved that a nonsuit be entered in the case. The court ordered the nonsuit entered conditioned on the payment of costs. Later, upon motion of some of the defendants, and after a hearing had, the order of nonsuit was set aside. Thereafter, some fifteen of the defendants, including the six minors, mentioned above, through Dimitry as their attorney, filed an amended petition, making themselves parties plaintiff in the case, and adopting all the allegations and the prayer of the original petition for a partition. These plaintiffs alleged, after adopting the allegations and prayer of the original petition, that L Lawrence Davis, who had been a resident of the state of Arkansas, but who had not been heard of for over 10 years, was an heir of Mrs. Toombs, the deceased, and was a. necessary party to the suit. They also alleged that, as he was not a resident of the state of Arkansas (meaning Louisiana), a curator ad hoc should be appointed to represent him, and the court appointed a curator ad hoe for that purpose, who filed an answer in Davis’ behalf.

After this amended petition was filed, what may be termed another trial of the case was had. All the evidence offered at this trial was objected to, (1) because there was no order reopening the case; (2) because the amended petition, by which the defendants, mentioned above, were made plaintiffs, and J. Lawrence Davis, who had not previously been made plaintiff or defendant, was made a party defendant, was never served on the other defendants; and (3) because the six minors, whom it was sought to switch from defendants to plaintiffs, did not appear in the *541 amended petition through a duly qualified guardian or tutor.

In deciding the case we may disregard the so-called second trial, and we may also disregard the filing of the amended petition, attempting to change the six minors and others from parties defendant to parties plaintiff, and making X Lawrence Davis a party to the suit as a party defendant, and still reach the Conclusion that plaintiffs are entitled to the judgment of partition for which they pray.

We may disregard the so-called second trial, because, as relates to it, no new evidence was offered, or at least none of any importance. In fact, the evidence offered on that trial consists of all the evidence offered on t'he first trial, which was reoffered in globo, and also one or two pieces of documentary evidence which, as we gather from the confused record, was already in evidence, and, moreover, is of no importance in deciding this case. Therefore, so far as relates to the evidence, the so-called second trial, which was virtually an informal reopening of the case after the evidence had been closed, may be disregarded, and the same conclusion reached as would be, if the evidence offered on the second trial were not disregarded.

As relates to the amended petition attempting to change the six minors and others from defendants to plaintiffs, and making X Lawrence Davis a party defendant, as a new' party to the suit, that petition may also be disregarded without affecting the regularity of the proceedings. The disregarding of it merely has the effect, so far as relates to the six minors and others, which it was the purpose of the amendment to change from defendants to plaintiffs, of leaving them in the position of defendants, which they occupied before the amendment was filed. The disregarding of the amended petition so far as relates to X Lawrence Dayis, who, by the amendment, was made a, party to the suit, will not affect thé regularity of the proceeding, for Davis is not a necessary party to the - suit. He was made a party defendant, through a curator ad hoe, on the theory that, if alive, he had a possible interest in the suit, as a forced heir of his mother, who was an heir of the decedent, Mrs. Toombs, the former owner of all the property sought to be partitioned herein. Davis’ mother died some two years or more after the death of Mrs. Toombs. When his mother died, Davis’ existence was unknown, and so far as appears is still unknown. Article 77 of the Civil Code provides that “in case a succession shall be opened in favor of a person whose existence is not known, such inheritance shall devolve exclusively on those -who would have had a concurrent right with him to the estate, or on those on whom the inheritance should have devolved if such person had not existed,” and the next article of the Code preserves to him, his representatives or assigns, the right to claim his inheritance, should the right be asserted before prescription has accrued. In a recent- case, touching the necessity of making a person, whose existence was unknown at the time a succession fell to him, a party to a partition suit to partition the effects of the succession, it was said:

“The deceased had also a brother, who disappeared more than 20 years before her death' and has never been heard from since.

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Related

Williams v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.
208 So. 2d 699 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe Sugar Co.
35 Haw. 262 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1939)
Powell v. Larance
155 So. 13 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1934)
Brown v. Furlong
127 So. 731 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1930)
Succession of Toombs
118 So. 488 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 583, 166 La. 537, 1928 La. LEXIS 1917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-furlong-la-1928.