Fisette v. Taylor

120 So. 872, 167 La. 1103, 1929 La. LEXIS 1738
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 28, 1929
DocketNo. 29134.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 120 So. 872 (Fisette v. Taylor) 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
Fisette v. Taylor, 120 So. 872, 167 La. 1103, 1929 La. LEXIS 1738 (La. 1929).

Opinion

O’NIELL, O. J.

This is a suit to annul a sale of the plaintiffs’ property, made by their father, as tutor, when they were minors. They inherited the property from their mother, whose maiden name was Amelia de Kerlegand. She died, intestate, in the latter part of 1894 or early part of 1895, and her succession was opened in February, 1895. She left eight minor children, issue of her marriage with Benjamin Sehexnailder, and he qualified as their natural tutor. The estate of the deceased, Mrs. Sehexnailder, consisted of the farm which is now in dispute, which was then appraised at $1,000, and two cows, appraised at $25, and the half of the community property, appraised at $403, consisting of mules, farming implements, and household effects. Mrs. Sehexnailder had inherited the farm from her father. The title was in dispute at the time of her death, in a lawsuit which she had brought against Placide Robin. She had won the suit in the district court, and it was pending on appeal when she died. Her husband, in his capacity of tutor of the minor' children, was substituted as plaintiff and appellee, and finally won the suit, but the children were condemned by the judgment of the Court of Appeal to pay the defendant, Robin, $26S.48. The farm was appraised later at $1,200.

In August, 1895, Benjamin Sehexnailder, as tutor of his minor children, filed a petition, alleging that the estate was deeply in debt, that the creditors-were demanding payment of their claims, and that it was necessary to sell the farm in order to pay the debts. He averred that he desired to avail himself of his right to have the community property adjudicated to him at its appraised value; hence he prayed for a family meeting to advise on the subject, and to decide upon the terms and conditions of the proposed sale. The judge ordered the family meeting to be held, and the members reported that they were unanimously of the opinion that it was for the best interest of the minors that the farm should be sold at public auction, for cash, and that the community property should be adjudicated to the tutor at its appraised value. The recommendations of the family meeting were approved by an order of the judge, and, acting under his order, the tutor, after legal advertisement, sold the farm at public auction, to Charles Savoie, for $1,000 cash. The sale was made on the 18th of September, 1895, and on the same day Savoie sold the farm to Benjamin Sehexnailder for $1,000, of which $608 was paid in cash and-the balance was payable in two annual installments represented by Sehexnailder’s promissory n'otes. He resided on the farm and cultivated it until the date of his death, the 18th of February, 1927.

In April, 1904, Benjamin Sehexnailder filed in court an account of his tutorship, in which he credited his children with the price of the farm and the appraised value of the personal property which he had received, including half of the community property which had been adjudicated to him, and charged them with the payments which he had made for the account of their mother’s estate, such as attorney’s fees, court costs, and the judgment in favor of Placide Robin, which had been acquired by Charles Savoie before the farm was sold. The account showed a balance of $61.30 due to each of the eight heirs, and it was approved by four of them, who had ai"xived at the age of majority, and who acknowledged receipt of the amount due to each of them. The account was approved also by the under tutor, who was the maternal grandfather of the four minor heirs. It is in the *1107 record and has the appearance' of being a true and correct account. Notice of the filing of it was published, under orders of the court, as required by law, and, after proof of the correctness of each and every item on the account, it was approved by a judgment of the court.

Among the four children who were yet minors when the account of the tutorship was rendered was Stephen Schexnailder, who, after marrying, died, leaving a minor child, named Yves Schexnailder, who is represented by his mother and natural tutrix as one of the eight plaintiffs in this suit. The seven other plaintiffs are the sons and daughters of the deceased, Benjamin Schexnailder and Amelia de Kerlegand.

On the 26th of September, 1898, Benjamin Schexnailder married Virginia Arnaud. There are twelve children of that marriage, six majors and six minors. The minors are represented by their mother, as natural tutrix, in this suit. She and her twelve children are the defendants.

The plaintiffs aver that the sale of their farm by their father, as tutor, to Charles Savoie, and the sale by him to their father, was a sale of the minors’ property to their tutor, through a person interposed, and was null for the following reasons, viz.: (1) That it was not stated in the petition for the family meeting or in the proces verbal of the deliberations that the sale was of absolute necessity or of evident advantage to the minors, as required by article 339 of the Civil Code; (2) that the report of the family meeting did not set forth “the reasons for its determination,” as required by article 340 of the Code; (3) that the property was sold for less than its appraised value, in violation of article 342 of the Code; (4) and that the sale was made in violation of two prohibitory laws, namely, section 157 of the Revised Statutes, which forbids an auctioneer to purchase, “either directly or indirectly, any property at a sale made by him,” and article 337 of the Civil Code, which forbids the tutor to buy the property of the minor, either directly or through the interposition of a third person.

The defendants denied that the sale made by Benjamin Schexnailder as tutor, to Charles Savoie, and the sale made by him to Benjamin Schexnailder, individually, constituted a sale by the tutor to himself through a third person interposed, and they averred that, even if it should be assumed that the two sales constituted a sale by the tutor to himself through a third person interposed, the tutor, being the surviving partner in community, was permitted, by the provisions of the second paragraph of article 1146 of the Civil Code, to buy the property of the minors. With regard to the complaint that the property was sold for less than its appraised value, the defendants pleaded that, inasmuch as the sale was for the purpose of paying the debts of the succession, the sale for a price less than the appraised value was valid. With regard to the two other complaints, the defendants pleaded that Savoie was protected by the judge’s order for the sale, being the order of a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and was not obliged to inquire into the regularity of the proceedings on which the order was based. As to these complaints, as well as the complaint that the property was sold for less that its appraised value, the defendants pleaded that they were only informalities and were therefore cured by the prescription of 5 years, according to article 3543 of the. Civil Code. The defendants pleaded'also, as to all of the complaints, that the heirs who approved the account rendered by their tutor in April, 1904, and who accepted the amount due to each of them, thereby ratified the sale which the tutor had made of their property, and were estopped to contest it, and that the judgment of the district court which approved the tutor’s account was not attacked directly and was not subject to at *1109

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 So. 872, 167 La. 1103, 1929 La. LEXIS 1738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisette-v-taylor-la-1929.