Edwards v. Edwards

29 La. Ann. 597
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1877
DocketNo. 701
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 29 La. Ann. 597 (Edwards v. Edwards) 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
Edwards v. Edwards, 29 La. Ann. 597 (La. 1877).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Spencer, J.

On the fourth of November, 1873, M. A. Edwards, administratrix of D. L. Edwards, obtained, by confession, judgment in the [598]*598parish court against W. S. Stutson, plaintiff’s husband, for some $220 on. Ms note dated December 1,1870. On the twenty-eighth of March, 1871, M. T. Edwards and wife sold, by notarial act, to their daughter, the plaintiff, the eighty acres of land in controversy in this suit, stating the price to be $1000 cash received. On the twenty-third of November, 1871,. said plaintiff, Elizabeth Stutson, by notarial act, acknowledged to have received from her father and mother $1500 in cash as an advance on her-inheritance.

M. T. Edwards and wife had eight children, four majors and four minors. About the same dates as above they made to each of the three-other majors (of whom D. L. Edwards was one) similar acts of sale of land, and took from each of them similar notarial receipts. They also sold and transferred to their minor children property of equal value.

M. T. Edwards died in 1872, and Ms widow, Adeline Edwards, qualified as tutrix of the minors.

In January, 1875, M. A. Edwards, administratrix, issued a fieri facias against W. S. Stutson, on said parish-court judgment, and caused the eighty acres'of land so convoyed by the father and mother to plaintiff to-be seized as community property.

A suit was thereupon brought in the name of the plaintiff in the district court of Ouachita, claiming the land as her paraphernal property,, and enjoining its sale for the husband’s debt. The affidavit for injunction was made by Stutson, the husband, as agent of his wife, the plaintiff, and the petition was signed by Stubbs & Stone, attorneys. On the sixteenth of March, 1875, the attorneys for plaintiff and the attorney' for defendants in that injunction suit (which was numbered 1216) made an agreement whereby it was stipulated that the case would be continued by consent until the September term following, on the condition that if Stutson shall on or before that time pay the amount of the enjoined-judgment, then said injunction suit to be discontinued at plaintiff’s costs, otherwise, “there shall be judgment therein dissolving the injunction at-plaintiff’s costs,” and directing the sheriff to proceed with the sale of the property, the sale not to be made before the first Saturday of January, 1876. On the fourteenth of September, 1875, this agreement was filed in the cause, and on the eighteenth judgment was entered up according; to its stipulations, dissolving the injunction without damages, and staying the sale till the time agreed upon. The land was thereupon again advertised for sale on the fifth of February, 1876, and part of it adjudicated to one Wood, said to be the father of defendant, M. A. Edwards, the-remainder not sold for want of bidders. On the fifteenth of February, 1876, this present suit was brought, reciting in substance the above facts, praying the nullity of said judgment of the eighteenth of September, 1875, also the nullity of the sale to Wood, and to be decreed owner of the-[599]*599property as paraphernal, and to enjoin its sale for the husband’s debts, etc.

The defendant first pleaded in defense the judgment in said suit, 1216, as res adjudicata, which was by the then judge overruled. Defendant then answered, reiterating the plea of res adjudicata, and claiming that, the property, having been bought after marriage, by the wife, was community property. The case was tried at the May term, 1877, and the-judge then presiding rendered judgment for defendant, sustaining the-plea of res judicata, dissolving the injunction, and directing the sheriff to proceed to sell under the fi. fa. against the husband.

Plaintiff appeals. There is a motion to dismiss the appeal on two-grounds : first, because this courtis without jurisdiction ratione materia}; and, second, for insufficiency of the surety on the appeal bond.

The matter in dispute is the ownership of the land (which is clearly-shown to be over five hundred dollars by the deed to plaintiff and the uncontradicted allegations of her petition under oath) and to validity of a judgment subjecting the same to the husband’s debts, and to annul a sale of part of it. We clearly have jurisdiction. As to the sufficiency of the surety on the appeal bond, this court can not notice the objection, because it is a court of appellate jurisdiction only. No objection to the sufficiency of the surety on the appeal bond was made, or tried, in the court below. True, the same party was surety on the injunction bond, and a rule was taken to dissolve for insufficiency, but it does not seem to have been passed upon by the 'court below. The proofs taken on that rule would not enable us to say, if we had the right, whether the surety was good or bad at the time of the appeal.

The motion to dismiss is overruled.

On the merits, there are but two questions:

First — As to the validity of the judgment of the eighteenth of September, 1875, and as to its effeét as the thing adjudged.

Second — As to the property being the separate paraphernal estate of the wife.

First — The judgment in suit No. 1216 was rendered on the eighteenth of September, 1875. This suit, to annul it, was instituted on the fifteenth of February, 1876, less than six months after its rendition. A judgment which is attacked by action of nullity within one year can not be pleaded as res adjudicata to the suit for nullity. Otherwise, the action of nullity would be a farce and a mockery, since the existence of the judgment attacked (which alone gives the right and tho occasion to the action of nullity) would be itself a bar to proceedings to annul it. In other words, the same fact, to wit: the existence of the judgment, would be at one and the same time the foundation and destruction of a right of action.

[600]*600We do not agree with defendant’s counsel that plaintiff’s remedy to avoid the said judgment was by appeal or motion for new trial. She did riot know, perhaps, of its rendition until the time for new trial had elapsed, and the grounds of nullity alleged are matters dehors the record, and could not, therefore, be brought to the knowledge of the appellate court. Plaintiff attacks the judgment on the ground that the attorneys had no authority from her to consent to it, and acted without her knowledge or consent. This is fully proven by her oath, which defendant makes no effort to contradict. These attorneys were practitioners before the court trying the cause, and, we think, the fact that they were not called by defendant to xDrove their authority from her, and to contradict the plaintiff’s oath, is strongly corroborative of its truth. We accept it as true.

Article 2997 of the Civil Code is too clear to require other citation of authority to establish the proposition that an attorney at law has not, as such, authority to confess a judgment to acknowledge a debt ” “ to compromise or refer to arbitration,” or “ to make a transaction in matters of litigation.”

Besides, it is the well settled jurisprudence of this State that a married woman can not, so as to bind her, or her property, confess a judgment for a debt of her husband or of the community. See 3 N. S. 498; 2 An. 3, 806; 12 An. 350; 14 An. 165; 15 An. 628. There is no dispute as to this debt being that of the husband and community.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 La. Ann. 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-edwards-la-1877.