Callahan v. Fluker

47 La. Ann. 427
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1895
DocketNo. 11,670
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 47 La. Ann. 427 (Callahan v. Fluker) 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
Callahan v. Fluker, 47 La. Ann. 427 (La. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, 0. J.

Plaintiffs, as heirs of one Louis Young, who, it is alleged, died in the parish of East Feliciana, place of his residence, in 1888, sue the defendant, praying “for judgment against him ordering him to deliver to them all title deeds and land patents of lands belonging to the succession of Louis Young, and to convey and transfer to them any or all of certain lands described in their petition, in his name, and that he be perpetually enjoined from disturbing them in their ownership of said lands by claiming the ownership thereof himself.”

This prayer is based upon allegations that on the 7th July, 1883, the defendant and Thomas B. Lyons, attorneys at law, engaged in their profession in the parish of East Feliciana, presented a petition to the District Court of that parish in behalf of one Dutart for letters of administration on the said succession, alleging that he was a creditor thereof — that Dutart never gave the bond required by law; that no letters of administration issued to him, and that at no time was he the legal representative of the succession. That the deceased left no debts, that his personal property was of more than sufficient value to defray the expenses of his last illness and fuñera charges. That no inventory was ever taken of the property in East Feliciana, and the inventory pretended to have been taken in the parishes of St. Helena and Livingston were never homologated by the court; that the' pretended administrator allowed more than a year to elapse from the date of the alleged appointment prior to the 8th of October, 1894», without filing an account of his administration, which ipso facto would have [429]*429divested him of the administration of the succession even, if he had been legally appointed, and that more than a year elapsed after opening the succession before an attorney was appointed to repre - sent the absent heirs. That on the 8th of October, 1894, defendant, acting as attorney for the said pretended administration, presented a petition to the court and obtained an order for the sale of all the property, real and personal, belonging to the succession to pay the debts thereof.

That no schedule or statement of debts due by the succession has ever been filed, nor is there any evidence of the existence of any; that there was no authority in law for the sale of the real property or immovable property belonging to the succession before the personal property was exhausted, nor was it shown that the proceeds thereof would be insufficient to pay the debts, and that the said order of sale was improvidently given because the court had nothing before it to show the amount, character or value of the property it was ordering to be sold or the amounts of debts due. That in the meantime the said Dutart had removed from the parish, at least one hundred miles, and defendant was, in fact, administering the succession in his capacity as attorney for the same. That on the 3d of December, 1884, the sheriff of the parish of East Feliciana, pursuant to the aforesaid order of sale obtained by defendant, adjudicated to the latter for the sum of seventy-five dollars the property described in the petition, situated in the parishes of Livingston and St. Helena; that the price of said adjudication has never been'paid, and that the amount in dispute herein, the value of the said lands, is.the full sum of two thousand dollars. That defendant was without capacity to become the purchaser at the said pretended sale, which was provoked by himself by reason of the fiduciary relationship existing between himself and the succession, even if all the proceedings leading up to the adjudication had been valid and regular, which.fact they specially deny, and they aver that the title to the succession was not ..divested thereby.

They aver that they have made demand of the defendant;, who is domiciliated in the parish of Orleans, for all the titles) deeds and patents, including title to the said lands in said succession, and that he refuses to deliver the same to petitioners, and claims the ownership thereof. The prayer of the petition,upon the allegations is that which we have given in the beginning of this statement of, the pleadings.

[430]*430Defendant excépted to the demand upon the grounds—

That he had not been legally cited.

• That the demand was barred by the prescription of one, three, five and ten years.

That plaintiffs are absolutely without legal right to maintain the suit or stand in judgment for the cause set forth in their petition.

That the court was without jurisdiction ratione material to hear and determine the same.

That the probate proceedings and judgment of the District Court for East Feliciana in the succession of Louis H. Young, and the sale in pursuance thereof under which the defendant became the purchaser of the land described by plaintiffs, having been authorized and rendered by a court having jurisdiction, as shown affirmatively on the face of the record sent up by plaintiffs, can not be attacked in a collateral proceeding, but can only be annulled in a direct action in the court which authorized such proceedings, rendered such judgment and ordered such sale.

These exceptions seem to have been all fixed for trial in block and so tried, and upon this trial evidence was introduced by the defendant without objection from the plaintiffs. Defendant himself went upon the stand and testified, and from his testimony it would appear that the matter involved in this litigation is over two thousand dollars. Plaintiffs, by appealing to this court, recognize that as a -fact such is the case.

The evidence referred to as offered by the defendant consisted of the record of the Sixteenth Judical District Court for the parish of East Feliciana of the succession proceedings in the matter of the succession of Louis H. Young. It was offered “for the purpose of supporting the plea of prescription set up by defendant, and for the purpose of supporting the exception of no cause of action, and the further purpose of supporting the allegation in the petition that this is a collateral attack upon a judicial proceeding, and for all other purposes the court may see fit to use on the trial of this cause.”

On the trial of the exceptions plaintiffs introduced in evidence the proees verbal of the sheriff, being part of the record offered by the defendant, also the inventory for the purpose of showing that the land acquired by the defendant at the succession sale is identical in description with that sued upon in this case.

The District Judge adjudged and decreed that the peremptory ex[431]*431■ception filed by the defendant to the jurisdiction of the court be sustained and plaintiffs’ suit be dismissed with costs.

From that judgment plaintiffs have appealed.

We are of the opinion that the court erred in sustaining the plea to the jurisdiction and dismissing plaintiffs’ suit. Though no reasons are assigned for the court’s action, we think it was based upon the theory that plaintiffs’ suit was a collateral attack upon judicial proceedings, and that it fell under the provisions of Art. 608 of the Oode of Practice, which requires an action of nullity of judgment to be instituted before the court which rendered the same; that therefore it should have been brought before the District Court for East Feliciana. The court was in error as to plaintiffs’ demand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 La. Ann. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callahan-v-fluker-la-1895.