Dillon v. Freville

57 So. 316, 129 La. 1005, 1912 La. LEXIS 1041
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1912
DocketNo. 18,828
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 57 So. 316 (Dillon v. Freville) 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
Dillon v. Freville, 57 So. 316, 129 La. 1005, 1912 La. LEXIS 1041 (La. 1912).

Opinion

[1007]*1007Statement.

MONROE, J.

Plaintiff is a daughter of defendant by the latter’s first marriage to Samuel Nason, and she brings this suit against her mother, individually and as tutrix of plaintiff’s minor sisters, Edna and Irma Nason, for a partition of certain property (some of which is conceded to have been the separate property of Samuel Nason, and concerning other of which there is dispute), and for other purposes. She alleges that, in an account of tutorship (filed in court on November 19, 1908), her mother failed to charge the community with the .proceeds, or parts of the proceeds, of certain lots or tracts of land which were acquired by petitioner’s father, before marriage, and sold by him, after marriage, and which proceeds, amounting to $1,150 she alleges, inured to the community. She further alleges that defendant erroneously inventoried in the succession of Samuel Nason, as community property lot 2 and the south 100 feet of lot 9, in the town of Crowley, which was the separate property of the decedent, and that said property was fraudulently undervalued; that since November 5, 1908, defendant has been collecting revenues from the separate property of said decedent, and is indebted to petitioner for her proportion thereof; and she prays for judgment accordingly. Defendant admits that the property held in indivisión is not susceptible of division in kind and makes no objection to a partition thereof by licitation. She alleges that said property consists of bare lots in the improvements upon which plaintiff has no interest, and that her interest in the revenue derived from said property would not exceed $20; but that, should the court hold otherwise, plaintiff should be condemned for her proportion of the cost of maintenance and of the taxes.

Plaintiff thereafter filed a plea of estoppel alleging that defendant, in opening the succession, and in her account of tutorship, charged the estate of Samuel Nason, and credited the community with the value of said improvements and cannot now be heard to assert title to them.

Samuel Nason, a widower with three children, and defendant were married July 1, 1890, and it appears that he then owned the following pieces of property, to wit:

(1) Lot 15, in block 50, measuring 50x100 feet, in the town of Crowley, for which he paid $150 cash February 11, 1888. (2) Ten acres of land, north of Crowley for which he paid $50 cash February 11, 1888, and gave two notes for $50 each payable in one and two years. (3) Lot 10, in block 50, in the town of Crowley, for which he paid $100 cash February 11, 1888. (4) Lot 3, in block 149, in the town of Crowley, for which he paid $15 cash February 20,1888. (5) Twelve acres of woodland, northwest of Crowley, for which he paid $75 cash February 29, 1888.

April 7, 1891, Nason exchanged the “northern third of lot 10, in block No. 50” for the “southern two-thirds of lot 9 in block No. 50,” and “lot No. 2 in the same block,” and he paid $55 “to boot.”

June 18, 1891, he sold the “12 acres” for $120 cash.

September 24, 1891, he sold the “lot 3 in block 149” for $50 cash.

August 22, 1893, he sold the “10 acres, north of Crowley” for $500 in notes of $100 each, payable in from one to five years.

January 31, 1899, he sold to Wm. F. Campbell, “23 feet of ground taken off the north side of lot No. 15, in block No. 50,” for $1,-800, of which $600 were paid in cash, and, for the balance, the purchaser gave his two notes for $000 each, payable in one and two years.

April 22, 1S99, he died; and on November 21, 1899, his widow filed an inventory upon [1009]*1009which there appears, as the separate property of the decedent:

1. The southern portion of lot 15 in block 50, appraised at......... $1,250 00
2. The two promissory notes received in part payment of the price of the 23 feet, off the north side of said lot 15.................. 1,200 00
3. “The southern two-thirds portion of lot 10, in block No. 50 * * * together with the buildings and improvements thereon, which were placed there, during the marriage by the husband; and which were paid for with community funds, and which enhanced the value of said community property as hereinafter set forth”.................. 375 00
4. The claim of the separate estate against the community for the value, on April 7, 1891, of the northern one-third of lot No. 10, in block 50, “without any of the buildings, improvements, trees, etc., on said lot”............... 40 00
Total valuation of separate property ..................$2,865 00
“From the above” (the procSs verbal proceeds) “must be deducted the charges in favor of the community against the separate estate of the deceased, S. Nason, for the buildings and improvements placed by the deceased on his separate property during marriage, and paid for with community funds as aforesaid — the said charges and recompense due to the community being the enhanced value resulting to the separate property of the estate at the date of the dissolution of the community, on April 22, 1899, as follows:
(a) From the buildings and improvements heretofore described under item 1...................$500 00
(b) From the buildings and improvements on the property sold to Campbell, as described above, under item 2, due allowance being made for the fact that the one-third of the purchase price of said property had been paid previous to the dissolution of the community. This charge is. made only to the extent of two-thirds of the enhanced value of said property by reason of the said buildings and improvements, and the said two-thirds is 240 00
(e) From the buildings and improvements on the property herein before described under the item 3...................... 75 00
Total enhanced value............$815 00”

Under the title “Community Property” we find the following items in the inventory, to wit:

“Lots 1 and 2 in block 50 * * * and the southern two-thirds portion of lot 9 of said block * * * appraised at $1,040, from which, however, are deducted $40, as stated above (4) leaving the net appraisement $1,000.
“(2) Recompense due the community by the separate estate of S. Nason for the enhanced value, at the time of his death, of his separate property, by reason of the buildings and improvements thereon, paid for with community, funds, as herein before fully set forth, $815.-00.”

Then follow items of cash, merchandise, household effects, open accounts, etc., making the total appraisement of the community property, $3,362.50.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 So. 316, 129 La. 1005, 1912 La. LEXIS 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-freville-la-1912.