Caraway v. Hebert

182 So. 164, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 306
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1938
DocketNo. 1863.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 So. 164 (Caraway v. Hebert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caraway v. Hebert, 182 So. 164, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 306 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

This case comes up on an agreed statement of facts. Eugene Houssiere died in 1924, leaving a surviving widow and ten children as his heirs. He left several tracts of land situated in the parishes of Jefferson Davis, Acadia and Vermilion, together with- considerable movable property. Among the assets of the succession was a five acre tract of land in the Town of Jennings known as the “Home Place”. This tract of land is in the form of a square and faces the Old Spanish Trail Highway, and a residence is located on the Southeast portion of the five acre tract.

Two of the heirs transferred their undivided interest in this five acre tract to-the widow, and subsequently a judgment was rendered in the succession sending the widow and heirs 'in possession of the succession property situated in Jefferson Davis Parish, and separate judgments were rendered sending the heirs in possession of the - immovable, property located in the other two parishes. The proportion of ownership in the five acre tract was stated in the judgment as an undivided ^oth to the surviving widow, and a Yz oth undivided interest to the eight heirs who had not transferred their interest to the widow.

In 1929, one of the eight children and heirs died, and his undivided interest in this five acre tract was purchased by the widow at sheriff sale. This five acre tract was then owned in indivisión by the widow' and seven heirs in the proportion of 1%oth to the widow and Yz oth each to the seven heirs. The widow was given a life usu-fruct in this five acre tract with the residence situated thereon by the will of the deceased, and this usufruct was recognized in the judgment sending the heirs in possession.

In 1937, the plaintiff herein, one of the heirs, purchased from the widow and five other heirs all of their undivided interest in and to a strip of land measuring 220 feet east and west by 200 feet north and south located in the southwest corner of the five acre tract, and the widow released and renounced her right of usufruct on this strip of land, but reserved her usu-fruct on the remainder of the five acre tract. The plaintiff thus became the owner- *166 of an undivided ^oth of this strip of land carved out of the five acre tract, and the defendant, as the only other heir, remained the owner of an undivided %oth interest therein. The remainder of the five acre tract was owned by the widow and seven heirs in the proportion of oth to the widow and an undivided %oth to each of said heirs, subject to the usufruct of the widow.

Plaintiff brought this suit against the defendant for a partition of this strip carved out of the southwest corner of the five acre tract, alleging that she had offered to purchase the interest of the defendant therein and had ttsed every reasonable means to bring about an amicable partition of this strip of land, but that defendant refused to consider any reasonable proposition. As a part of the agreed statement of facts, it is admitted that this strip of land sought to be partitioned cannot be conveniently divided in kind without loss, and without serious diminution in value.

The crux of the case is presented in the following allegation of the defendant’s answer:

“That the plaintiff herein is without right in law to demand, as she does in this action, a partition of a part only of the residence and ‘Home Place’ of five acres, more or less, leaving the rest undivided; and respondent objects to any such partial partition.”

The trial judge rendered judgment recognizing plaintiff and defendant to be the owners of the said strip of land in the proportion of an undivided 1%oth to the plaintiff and an undivided %oth to the defendant, and decreeing a partition of said strip of land by licitation. The defendant has appealed.

The succession of Eugene Hous-siere was closed, and the heirs were sent into possession of the property by a judgment of court. -The five acre tract, as well as the other property of the succession, was thereafter held by the heirs as ordinary co-owners, and a partition of the property held by any or all of the heirs in common would not involve the partition of a succession, but would be governed by the rules and procedure applicable to the partition of property held by ordinary co-owners. Medicis et al. v. Medicis, 155 La. 171, 99 So. 27; Prichard et al., v. McCranie et al., 160 La. 605, 107 So. 461; Mitcham et al. v. Mitcham et al., 186 La. 641, 173 So. 132.

Where the succession has not been closed, and a partition of the succession property-is sought by one or more of the heirs, all of the succession property must be brought into the partition proceedings, as the succession property, however separate in nature and different in location, is considered as a unit, and the court having jurisdiction of the succession has jurisdiction of the partition proceeding. C.P. art. 164; Maguire v. Fluker, 112 La. 76, 36 So. 231.

Learned counsel for plaintiff contend that the Maguire-Fluker Case, supra, is no longer the law, being in conflict with subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court, But the only conflict that we find in that case with more 'recent cases is on the point wherein the court held in that case that the action of partition was one involving property belonging to a succession, even though the heirs had been sent into possession by a judgment of court. It does appear that that part of the decision is in conflict with many other decisions of the Supreme Court, some of which we have cited above, which hold that after the heirs are sent into possession by a judgment of court they hold the property of the succession as ordinary co-owners.

We must therefore hold in this case that the strip of land held by plaintiff and defendant as co-owners and sought to be partitioned herein, as well as the remainder of the five acre tract held by plaintiff and defendant in common with the other original co-owners, is held in in-división by them as ordinary co-owners, and the property no longer bears the status of succession property. This being true, the Maguire-Fluker Case which holds, correctly as wc believe, that all of the succession property must be partitioned in its entirety and not by piece-meal, is not directly applicable to the present case where the co-owners hold in common as ordinary co-proprietors, unless the same rule is to be applied in the partition of property so held in common as applies to succession property.

The question presented for decision in this case is whether or not one entire and integral tract of land originally held in common by ordinary co-owners can be partitioned at the suit of one co-owner in separate and distinct parts where, by transfers among some of the co-owners, the ownership of the separate and distinct part of the tract has been changed so as to *167 eliminate any right or ownership of the other co-owners ■ in the separate and distinct tract, other than the defendant against whom the action is brought. We are cited to no cases in this state directly in point, nor have we been able to find any.

The case of Ware et al. v. Vignes et als., 35 La.Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 164, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caraway-v-hebert-lactapp-1938.