Decuir v. Decuir

105 La. 481
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
DocketNo. 13,737
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 105 La. 481 (Decuir v. Decuir) 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
Decuir v. Decuir, 105 La. 481 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Three plaintiffs. Bridget Deeuir, wife of Prade, Odile Deeuir, wife of Guillory, and Eugenie Deeuir, wife of......... instituted suit against a number of defendants, alleging them to be their co-owners, for partition of a tract of land in Iberia parish, containing 160 arpents.

The allegation is made that the property cannot be divided in kind and its partition by licitation is sought.

Defendants answer, in substance, that the land in question was sold at sheriff’s sale in September 1873 under a decree of court; that prior to this sale it was divided into four lots of 40 arpents each; that at said sale Alexander Singleton, Joseph Deeuir, William Ferdinand and Godfoy Deeuir each purchased one of the 40 arpent lots; that the purchasers went into possession respectively of the lots so purchased and erected improvements on same; that they have held as owners in good faith under titles translative of property for more than twenty-three years; and that their title is protected by prescription which they plead.

The tract of land in question was originally owned by Balthazar Decuir. He died in 1861 and his succession was opened in the parish of St. Martin, where he had lived and where the land was situated.

He left a large family of descendants and the parties in interest in this suit are his heirs at law.

Singleton, Ferdinand and Joseph Deeuir, who purchased as above at the sale made in 1873, had all married daughters of Balthazar Deeuir. Godfoy Deeuir, who was the other purchaser, was his son.

Following the death of Balthazar Deeuir, Alexander Singleton became curator of his succession. He caused all the property of the succession, save the realty (the tract of land now in question) to be sold, paid out of the proceeds all the debts and charges against the estate, and filed an account showing a balance due the heirs and a tableau of distribution of the same among them. This was in 1861.

The Civil War coming on, nothing further appears to have been done in this succession until 1872, when Bridget Deeuir, wife of Prade, Joseph Deeuir, husband of Elizabeth Deeuir, and Godfoy Deeuir filed a petition in the then parish court of St. Martin’s parish, alleging their [483]*483heirship of Balthazar Decuir and giving the names of other descendants and heirs, whom they made parties defendant.

They averred the ownership in indivisión of these heirs in the tract of land now in question, that they were unwilling to hold the same longer in indivisión, and desired its partition.

They represented it could not be divided in kind to advantage among so many and asked its sale to effect partition.

An order or judgment in this proceeding was rendered in August 1873, directing the sale of the property and a commission issued to the sheriff of Iberia parish to effect the sale, which he did, and it was at this sale that Alexander Singleton, Joseph Decuir, William Ferdinand and Godfoy Decuir purchased as aforesaid.

It is this sale that the defendants herein rely upon to defeat the present demand for partition.

In reply to the answers of defendants setting up this sale in bar of the action, plaintiffs filed an amended petition, in which they averred that the tract of land is still held in common by the heirs of Balthazar Decuir for the reason that the judgment ordering the sale just alluded to and the sale itself were and are absolute nullities.

This nullity, it is represented, grows out of the fact, among others averred:—

That Eugenie Decuir, one of the heirs (and one of present plaintiffs), was not cited, nor legally represented in said suit and made no appearance therein — being at the time an absentee from the State.

That Odele Decuir, wife of Guillory, one of the heirs, was not asked to be cited, was not cited and did not become a party to the suit. That the suit being an ordinary action for partition by heirs against heirs, all of full age, and the property being of a value exceeding $500, the Parish Court of St. Martin’s parish was without jurisdiction, the property being situated out of the parish and defendants being non-residents of the parish. 'That Alexander Singleton became a purchaser at the sale of a portion of the property in the teeth of a prohibitory law —he being at the time administrator of the succession.

The prayer of this amended petition was the same as in the original petition — that the partition be ordered and the property be sold to effect it.

The territory now forming the parish of Iberia originally pertained to the parishes of St. Mary and St. Martin.

In 1868 the parish of Iberia was created. That part of the new par[484]*484ish where the land in question is situated was, prior to 1868, within the jurisdiction of St. Martin parish. So that, when the partition suit of Bridget Decuir et al. vs. Celimene Decuir et als., No. 6789 on the docket of the Parish Court of St. Martin parish, was instituted in 1872, it was with reference to property then situated in another parish, and against defendants residents of that other parish.

The trial judge looked upon the instant suit as one to set aside and annul the judgment rendered by the Parish Court of St. Martin parish in 1873 and the sale of realty made by the sheriff of Iberia parish in that year in virtue of that judgment.

In this he was mistaken. The present suit has for its object the partition of property represented to be still held in undivided ownership by the heirs of Balthazar Decuir.

Holding that under Article 608 of the Code of Practice an action of nullity can only be brought before the court, or its successor, which rendered the judgment, and that no discretion was left to him since the record disclosed patent on its face a jurisdiction other than his, he dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction, reserving to plaintiffs all legal rights in the proper forum.

The error of this ruling lies in the failure of the judge to distinguish between judgments that may be voidable and those absolutely void.

As to the former, suits of nullity must be brought before the court which rendered the judgments. As to the latter, if a judgment is absolutely null for defects patent on the face of the proceeding, the party opposing its effect as to him need not resort to a direct action in the court which rendered it to secure the declaration of its nullity.

Bledsoe vs. Erwin, 33 La. Ann. 618. In that ease the court used this language:—

“If the charge of nullity of judgment had been coupled with a main and controlling demand, the question of validity of judgment could be inquired into and determined by any court having jurisdiction of that demand, which was the true or real object of the suit.”

And it was there held that in an action to recover land from one who claims to have acquired it under a judgment absolutely null, it is not necessary that the plaintiff should even allude to such judgment.

See also Clark vs. Hebert, 15 La. Ann. 279.

If a judgment be an absolute nullity, 'this nullity may be invoked by any one against whom it is interposed, at any time and anywhere.

This proposition is supported by a long line of decisions of which the following are some:—

[485]*485Edwards vs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 La. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decuir-v-decuir-la-1901.