Couret v. Couret

18 So. 2d 661, 206 La. 85
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 22, 1944
DocketNo. 37045.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 661 (Couret v. Couret) 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
Couret v. Couret, 18 So. 2d 661, 206 La. 85 (La. 1944).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The plaintiffs are appealing from a judgment maintaining a plea of estoppel and exceptions of no cause or right of action and dismissing their suit. It is a suit to annul a judgment rendered by consent of the parties on the 21st day of May 1942 in a case entitled Gustave Couret v. Walter Garmard et al. The appellants set forth six grounds on which they contend that the' judgment complained of, dated May 21, 1942, should be annulled, namely:

1.■ That the judgment by its terms is conditioned upon the attorneys’ (representing the opposing litigants) reaching some agreement in the future on the very question presented to the court for decision.

2. That the provisions of the judgment are contradictory in that it approves and homologates certain accounts filed by two of the defendants, John P. Couret and William H. Couret, as executors of their father’s estate and as mandataries under a power of attorney from the heirs, dated August 25, 1931, and at the same time the judgment maintains certain oppositions which are said to have been leveled at every item on the accounts.

3. That the judgment complained of, dated May 21, 1942, is in direct conflict with the proper procedure in that it orders that certain promissory notes owed by one of the defendants and belonging to all of the parties to this suit jointly shall be sold at public auction instead of ordering the notes collected, and- that the judgment thereby destroys the value of the notes, which are the principal assets to be partitioned among the parties to the suit in which the judgment dated May 21, 1942, was rendered.

4. That the judgment dated May 21, 1942, being a consent judgment, was merely a contract between the plaintiff and the defendants in the suit in which the judgment was rendered, and was not an adjudication of their rights; and that the so-called judgment or contract is voidable under article 1846 of the Civil Code because the sole and only cause for the contract or decree was a mistake of law.

5. That, through a mistake of law, the decree allows attorneys’ fees to the defendants in thé suit in which the judgment was rendered, which was a contested partition suit; and that the allowing of at *89 torneys’ fees in a contested partition suit is expressly forbidden by Act No. 69 of 1918.

6. That, through another mistake of law, the consent decree allows compensation to two of the defendants in the suit in which the judgment was rendered, namely, John P. Couret and William H. Couret, for their services as mandataries under a procuration which made their services as mandataries gratuitous, according to the provisions of article 2991 of the Civil Code.

The defendants’ plea of estoppel and their exceptions of no cause or right of action are founded upon one and the same contention, namely, that the judgment complained of, dated May 21, 1942, was not only a consent judgment but also a compromise judgment, and was consented to by the plaintiffs in this suit under the advice of the attorneys then representing them, and with full knowledge of all of the facts on which the judgment was to be rendered.

As a rule, of course, in a suit to annul a judgment, it would be begging the question to allow the judgment sought to be annulled to have the effect of res adjudicata, or to let it serve as the basis for a plea of estoppel. Edwards v. Edwards, 29 La.Ann. 597; Holbrook v. Holbrook, 32 La.Ann. 13; Heroman v. Louisiana Institute, 34 La.Ann. 805; Anderson v. Benham, 40 La.Ann. 336, 4 So. 454; Lazarus v. McGuirk, 42 La.Ann. 194, 8 So. 253; Succession of Williams, 168 La. 1, 121 So. 171. But calling the defense, set up in the present case, a plea of estoppel, as well as an exception of no cause or right of action, is a matter of no importance. The question presented by the pleas is whether the plaintiffs, on the face of the record, are bound by the judgment which was rendered with their consent and as a compromise settlement of the issues presented in the suit in which the judgment was rendered.

The pertinent facts as set forth in the petition in this suit, and in the judgment which the plaintiffs are suing to annul, are as follows: The plaintiffs, Gustave Couret and Nelson Couret, and the defendants, Dr. Maurice Couret, William H. Couret, John P. Couret, and their brother, Dr. John Sidney Couret, now deceased, were sent into possession of the succession of their father and mother, John F. Couret and Mrs. Louise Lamothe Couret, as their only heirs, on September 21, 1931, by a judgment of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans. John Sidney Couret died on June 17, 1942, and by a judgment of the civil district court his widow, Mrs. Alphonsine B. Montagnet Couret, and his daughter, Miss Margarite Louise Couret, were sent into possession of his estate; and they are defendants in this suit. John P. Couret and William H. Couret were th,e testamentary executors of the will of their father and they qualified as such. Soon afterwards they were given a procuration by all of the co-heirs to manage the estate of their father and mother. One of the brothers, Dr. Maurice Couret', was in debt to the extent of $24,014.42, which amount was paid by the mandataries with funds belonging to the estate of their father; and Dr. Maurice Couret gave his three promissory notes for the amount to the mandataries. The notes were secured by the *91 pledge of certain collaterals which were worth less than the amount of the debt. It is alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition that the mandataries, John P. Couret and William H. Couret, “consistently failed and refused to make any effort to collect the said debts from Dr. Maurice Couret”. In May 1937 Gustave Couret brought suit against his co-heirs for a judgment ordering John P. and William H. Couret to render a full and complete account of their administration, as executors and as mandataries, of the property entrusted to them in their fiduciary capacity, and of the proceeds and avails-thereof. The plaintiff, Gustave Couret, prayed also for the appointment of a notary public to make an inventory of the property of the estate, and for a judgment ordering a partition, either by licitation or in kind, between him and the co-owners of the property, and condemning the mandataries to pay to the plaintiff such amount as would be determined.to be due him from the accounting and partition which he asked for. John P. Couret and William H. Couret employed a firm of attorneys one of whom represents them on this appeal, and in their answer to the suit they set up a claim of $3,000 compensation for their services, — claiming $1,000 as their fee as executors and $2,000 for their services as mandataries for the period since the date of their appointment in 1931. They claimed also a fee of $1,000 for the services of the firm of attorneys employed by them, “rendered to the estate of John F. Couret, outside of these proceedings”,— meaning outside of the suit of Gustave Couret v. Walter Garmard et al. John P. and William H. -Couret filed an elaborate and detailed account of their administration, covering fourteen typewritten pages. Gustave Couret filed an opposition to the account, averring generally that he opposed every item on it and required strict proof thereof, and averring specifically that he opposed the claims of John P. and William H. Couret for fees as executors and as mandataries, amounting to $3,000, and for $1,000 for their attorneys’ fee.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 661, 206 La. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couret-v-couret-la-1944.