Ducre v. Milner

140 So. 158
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
DocketNo. 765
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 So. 158 (Ducre v. Milner) 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
Ducre v. Milner, 140 So. 158 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

Plaintiff is claiming an undivided portion of a tract of land in the alleged possession of defendant.

'Defendant first filed in limine an exception to the capacity of plaintiff to sue as the legitimate child of Toussaint Ducre, her alleged father, from whom she claims to have received the property in contest by inheritance.

In the alternative, defendant filed exception, as follows: “Exceptor pleads no right or cause of action and judicial estoppel in that Article V of the petition, the plaintiff alleges judicially a survey for partition of the tract of ground alleged to have been bought by Toussaint Ducre and others as having been subdivided by P. N. Judiee, civil engineer and surveyor, February 16, 1867, and said petitioner, while she declares that there has been no written approval or ratification of said plat or survey and subdivision and no division of same by any written act or instrument, failed to negative the fact by affirmative and substantive allegation that Tous-saint Ducre and others had not physically accepted said subdivision as made by P. N. Judiee, parish surveyor, February 16, 1867, and by their actual occupancy for sixty years and sales of their respective interests, actually 'accepted said survey and prescribed the one against the other after a lapse of thirty years. Exceptor showing that it is necessary for the plaintiff to negative facts of actual occupancy as well as facts of written act of partition to give her a cause of action, in order to explain lack of possession of the land for a period of sixty-four years; and ex-ceptor further pleads there is misjoinder of plaintiffs and non-joinder of defendants herein.”

The trial judge maintained the exceptions of want of capacity in plaintiff to sue, of no [160]*160cause of action, and of 'judicial estoppel. Plaintiff appeals.

Tlae points presented for decision here are in reference of the exceptions of want of capacity in plaintiff to sue, and of no cause of action urged in the exceptions filed by defendant ; also another based by defendant on the ground that in her testimony, as plaintiff said she was married, her counsel should have amended her petition by having- her husband authorize her to sue.

Plaintiff is a resident of Tampa, Fla., and was examined under commission.

Testifying in reference to her legitimacy, says that her father’s name was Tous-saint Ducre, and that of her mother Adelaide Bellancier Ducre; that Toussaint and Adelaide Bellancier lived together openly as man and wife and every one in the community regarded them as a married couple; that they always told her they were married, was eared for by them; that they educated her and provided her with a home and sustenance; that they always claimed her as their child, along vpith her six sisters;' that she was taught to look to them for support and assistance as her parents, and those living around who knew them took the same view of their relationship.

The testimony of the plaintiff shows that Toussaint Ducre and Adelaide Bellancier held themselves out to the public as man and wife, reared a large family, supported plaintiff, educated her, and gave her all the assistance they could and the care a child can expect from his parents.

Under such a state of facts, the law will presume that the parties thus representing themselves as husband and wife were lawfully married, and that their children are legitimate, “until it is shown that no marriage between them ever took place, or that it was void on account of some nullity established by law.” John Blasini v. Succession of Silvester Blasini, 30 La. Ann. 1388; Holmes v. Holmes, 6 La. 463, 26 Am. Dec. 482.

The proof of the marriage of Toussaint Ducre to Adelaide Bellancier does not depend entirely on the evidence of plaintiff, herein-above referred to, as the record shows that suit No. 4540 between Drauzin Ducre and the defendant herein was offered by plaintiff to establish the marriage between her father and mother.

The evidence of several witnesses , in that suit shows that Toussaint Ducre was married to one Couchen or Narcisse Bellancier many years ago; plaintiff being now 61 years of age. The marriage took place in the.Catholic Church at Bonfocieau, St. Tammany parish, which has since, with its records, been destroyed by fire. It is true that the witnesses say that Ducre was married to Cou-chen or Narcisse, but she is referred to by these witnesses as being a Bellancier, the name given her by plaintiff in her evidence. We feel satisfied from the evidence that Toussaint Ducre was married to plaintiff’s mother, and that her legitimacy sufficiently appears from the evidence and which has not been overcome by any proof that no marriage ever took place between" them or was void on account of some nullity established by law.

Counsel for defendant contends that the record in suit No. 4540 was introduced by plaintiff without qualification or restriction.

In making the offer, counsel for plaintiff said it was introduced in evidence to show that defendant had admitted the marriage between Toussaint and Adelaide, when and where they were' married, etc. > Counsel did not say, I restrict the offer to that purpose, but in stating what he wanted to show was a modification or restriction of the evidence to the purpose for which it was introduced, and the record in that case, under the offer thus made, cannot be used by defendant in support of his contention that the evidence in that suit showed that plaintiffs father had taken actual possession of the lot assigned him according to the survey by P. N. Judice made in 1867. If counsel for defendant desired to make use of the evidence to sustain the contention that plaintiff had actually occupied the land in contest, he should have made an offer along those lines, but he did not, and cannot now maintain the position taken by him in that respect.

We shall next consider the contention urged by defendant, that, as it was discovered during the trial that plaintiff was a married woman, her petition should have been amended by having authorization of the husband to bring the suit. Such exceptions attacking the capacity of plaintiff to sue are, under the general rule governing in such cases, required to be filed in limine.

Let us say, however, that the exceptions filed by defendant were not equivalent to an answer, and that this rule does not apply. Keeping the foregoing in mind, let us look at the nature of this suit to see whether or not plaintiff could not legally institute this suit in her own name and without the assistance of her husband.

There can be no question that she is suing for land which she is claiming by inheritance from her deceased father.

Act No. 170, 1912, p. 310, and Act No. 186, 1920, p. 304, in amending article 2334, O. C., and in classifying the property of married persons, says: “Separate property is that which either party brings into the marriage, or acquired during the marriage * * * or by inheritance,” etc.

Here, from her allegation, it is obvious that' plaintiff is entitled to the property by inheritance whether she brought it in marriage [161]*161or acquired it thereafter by inheritance. In either case, it is claimed by her as her separate property by inheritance.

Under the provisions of Act No. 244, 1918, p. 435, as amended by Act No. 219, 1920, p. 364, a married woman, in reference to her separate property, may appear in court in the same manner and to the same extent as though she were a feme sole.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ducre-v-milner-lactapp-1932.