Dreyfus v. Richardson

33 La. Ann. 602
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8221
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 602 (Dreyfus v. Richardson) 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
Dreyfus v. Richardson, 33 La. Ann. 602 (La. 1881).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Bermudez, C. J.

On the first of May, 1878, L. E. Bolt assumed to sell to Frank Wilson, for $30,000, all and singular his undivided interest in and to the lands and real property belonging to the estate of James E. Wilson, deceased, acquired by him from James B. Wilson, Jr., one of the heirs of the latter, and from Lula B. Farish. another heir of the same person. The act contains a description of the lands and real estate in question.

In order to secure the payment of the notes issued to represent the price, vendor’s privilege was retained on what was sold, and a mortgage was consented on the same object, and besides on the undivided interest of the purchaser, also an heir, in and to the described property.

.At.the maturity of one of the notes, for $10,000, the defendants instituted executory proceedings, averring that the plaintiff herein was the dative executor of Frank Wilson, who had since died, and asking that said property be sold to satisfy his claim, in capital and interest, and further praying for all necessary orders and for general. relief. Upon the petition, accompanied by the note and act of sale and mortgage, the court made an order granting the prayer, and ordering that the mortgaged property be seized and sold for cash, etc., to pay petitioner.

Thereupon, a notice was issued by the clerk of the court to the dative executor, in the usual form, with the admonition that, if within three days the claim be not satisfied, the mortgaged property would be seized and sold according to law.

[604]*604Within the delay,, M. Dreyfus, who is also the dative executor of James H. Wilson, sought and obtained an injunction, to prevent the execution of the order of seizure and sale, on the main ground, that the property described in the proceedings and against which the writ is directed, belong to the succession of James H. Wilson, and is in his possession and control, for the purpose of the liquidation of the affairs thereof, and that the pretended sale thereof by Holt to Frank Wilson, or by other persons to Holt, was illegal’ null and void, and is not sufficient to base the executory process upon. He concluded by praying that the property be decreed to belong to the succession of James H. Wilson and to remain in his lawful possession; that the order of seizure and sale be declared illegal and null; that the injunction be perpetuated, and that there be judgment against Richardson & May for costs of the proceeding.

The defendants answered, averring absence of right or interest in M. Dreyfus, as dative executor of James H. Wilson; setting forth the validity of their claim and security; and praying for a dissolution of the injunction, with damages against the principal and surety on the bond.

The case was tried. From a judgment dissolving the injunction, as having prematurely issued, and refusing damages, both parties have appealed.

A good deal has been said and written, touching the right of the heirs of James H. Wilson to sell to Holt the interest which it is alleged they have, and of Frank Wilson to have affected the interest which it is said he has.

Whether they had or not the right to do as they have done, whether the defendants be or not creditors of Frank Wilson’s succession and have or not the security which they claim to have, is not at all the question decisive of the case, although it may be considered as raised by the pleadings.

It is worthy of note that M. Dreyfus, who is the dative executor of both Frank Wilson, the son, and of James H. Wilson, the father, is not a party to'the present suit, as he distinctly appears therein only as dative executor of James H. Wilson. The defendants have not brought him as dative executor of Frank Wilson. So that, on the one hand, he has no right to speak and does not utter a word on that last capacity, and on the other, no judgment can be rendered recognizing the validity or declaring the nullity of the claim and mortgage on which the executory proceedings issued.

Going to the length, however, arguendo, that James H. Wilson had left but one heir, and that the latter, being of age, had borrowed money and, to secure the payment of it, had mortgaged, not his interest in this and in that piece of real estate, composing in part the succession acera[605]*605ing to him, but the entirety, as a unit, of his right of inheritance or of his interest in his father’s succession, the question which arises is:

Whether the holder and owner of such claim and security, however legal the same may be, can proceed via executiva and have the property composing the security,.seized and sold, while the succession, of which that property forms part, is still under administration, so as to strip the succession representative of the possession to which he would otherwise be entitled for a liquidation of the succession affairs ? •

The law negatives the question.

It is manifest that what the heir himself could not do, his transferee, or creditor, cannot do.

It is settled by adjudications as numerous as mile-stones on the highway, that, as long as the succession of the ancestor is under administration for the purpose of paying debts and legacies, if there be any, the- heirs cannot dispossess the succession representative without first tendering the amount necessary to pay the charges of the succession.

It is optional with them to do so or not, but they cannot take away the seizin without complying with this essential prerequisite.

B. C. O. 1671,1678, 1679, 940, 941; 5 L. 106; 5 An. 645; 12 An. 611, 864; 14 An. 14; 13 An. 582; 2 An. 923; 21 An. 278; 24 An. 270; 25 An. 56, 220; 27 An. 503; 29 An. 347; 30 An. 93, 128,1067; 31 An. 493; 32 An. 849; No. 8180, not yet reported.

In the case of Deblieux & Co. vs. Hotard, 31 An. 194, the Court, Spencer, J., said:

“ The substance of the motion is to take the property out of the hands of one officer, the executor, and to put it in the hands of another officer, the sheriff.
It is manifest that, until said’ succession is administered and its debts and legacies paid, the executor cannot be compelled to surrender the property or any part thereof.
It. is equally manifest that until said succession has been partitioned among the heirs or their assigns, no specific sum or thing can be turned over to Joseph Hotard, much less an undivided tenth of an aggregation of things. What authority or mission have the executor of the deceased and the creditors of one heir to ascertain, fix and determine the amount or things to be turned over to that heir in a proceeding to which the other heirs are not parties ?
If, therefore, the plaintiffs have by their garnishment made a valid seizure (upon which we express no opinion), they can suffer no injury by the property being left in the hands of the executor, to be by him administered under supervision of the court, to 1he end that the debtors’ interest therein may be ascertained, fixed and determined. If the seizure is valid, it is not, nor is the privilege resulting therefrom, impaired by [606]*606leaving the property where it ought to be, in the hands of the executor. No irreparable injury can result therefrom.”

The record shows that in this case the succession of James H.

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Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyfus-v-richardson-la-1881.