Girod's Legatees v. Pargoud

11 La. Ann. 329
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 La. Ann. 329 (Girod's Legatees v. Pargoud) 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
Girod's Legatees v. Pargoud, 11 La. Ann. 329 (La. 1856).

Opinion

Lea, J.

The facts out of which the litigation in this case arises are substantially as follows-:

C'uaad Frangois Girod, a resident of the parish of Assumption, in this State, died in the year 1813, leaving a last will and testament, by which (after making certain particular legacies) he bequeathed the bulk and residue of his estate in equal shares to eight of his brothers and sisters. One of these brothers, by name Jean Frangois Girod, died subsequently, leaving a will; by which he constituted, as his universal legatee, his brother, who bore the same name with himself. Thus the surviving Jean Frangois Girod became entitled to two-eighths of the estate of Claude Frangois Girod.

By the terms of the will of Claude Frangois Girod, his brothers, Nicholas and Jean Frangois Girod, both then residents of this State, were appointed his testamentary executors, which trust, it appears, they administered unfaithfully. By means of sales made under the sanction of judicial authority they became, through persons interposed, the purchasers of the entire estate of their testator: [330]*330Nicholas becoming the purchaser of the property in New Orleans, and his brother, Jean ‘Frangois, and himself becoming the joint purchasers of the lands and slaves in the parish of Assumption and elsewhere. Some years afterwards Jean Frangois sold out his half of the joint purchase to Nicholas for $70,000, who thus became the possessor of the entire estate of his brother Claude, which he held until he died, in 1840, leaving a will, by which he bequeathed the sum of $710,000 in different and unequal sums to several public institutions and private individuals in this city, who are the plaintiffs in this suit.

After the death of Nicholas Girod, and when it appeared that so large a portion of his estate had been diverted from the ordinary channel of inheritance, the legal heirs of Claude Frangois Girod instituted a suit in equity in the Circuit Court of the United States, sitting in New Orleans, against the legatees and legal representatives of Nicholas Girod, setting forth the foregoing facts, and many other matters of detail, which it is not necessary to recapitulate, claiming that the sales to Nicholas and Jean Frangois Girod, and the settlements based upon their accounts as executors be set aside and annulled as fraudulent, “ that the property be treated as belonging to the estate of Claude Frangois Girod, that it should be again sold, and its proceeds distributed among the heirs of Claude Frangois Girod, according to his will, and that the defendants be ordered to render an account of the rents and profits of the property from the time of those sales.”

This suit was brought against the estate of N. Girod alone, the whole of the property having been transferred to him before his death, as before stated. Jean Frangois having ceased to be a resident of the country, was not made a party to the litigation.

The plaintiffs gained their case. The court ordered that the adjudications to Jean Frangois and Nicholas, of the property belonging to the estate of Claude Frangois Girod be set aside and treated as nullities, and that the settlements based upon their accounts, as executors, be also set aside; that the adjustment of the mutual rights and credits to which the parties litigant were entitled should be referred to a master in chancery to take an account of the same and report thereon. And the court further decreed, (inasmuch ns Jean Frangois Girod was not a party in the cause, but was nevertheless, under the wills of his two brothers, entitled to a share of the estate of Claude Frangois to the extent of one-fourth part thereof,) that he should be permitted to “ become a party to the proceedings,” for the purpose of claiming his share in the general distribution, but stating at the same time that his claim would be subject to all the equities subsisting between the said Jean Frangois and Nicholas, and especially to the/allowance of the purchase money given by Nicholas to Jean for the one-half of the joint purchase of the property of their testator, with interest, etc.

Acting upon the permission granted by the decree of the court, Jean Frangois Girod did intervene in the subsequent proceedings, and claimed one-fourth of all the property and sums of money which, by the aforesaid decree, were due or might become due by the estate of Nicholas Girod to the estate of Claude Frangois Girod, subject to the deduction of the purchase money paid by the said Nicholas Girod toihc saidintervenor, as appears from an act passed before Lavergne, notary, on the 19ft January, 1831, via: the sum of $70,000, with interest” from the periods at which the several installments respectively became due, according .to the stipulations of the act of sale.

[331]*331To this intervention the legatees made appearance, and on grounds in the exception set forth, excepted to the right of Jean Frangois to make himself a party to the proceedings, and claimed “ in case that the court should he of opinion that notwithstanding the exceptions the said Jean Frangois Oirod is entitled to make himself a party to the said suit in chancery, that then the said Frangois should account not only for the sums set forth in the petition, with interest, hut also for all the damage and injury resulting from his illegal and fraudulent conduct as one of the executors in the administration, or rather mismanagement, of the succession of his testator,” which damage was alleged to exceed the sum of $300,000.

In this position towards each other stood the respective parties to this suit nearly five years after the original litigation had commenced.. Tired of the past, and uncertain of the future, they concluded to effect a compromise. Its terms are set forth in the briefs of counsel. In payment of the five-eighths of the balance due the estate of C. F. Oirod, belonging to the plaintiffs, they were to receive certain designated sums and specified credits, which it appears they were willing to take; the sixth article of the act of compromise, however, stipulates as follows: This proposition is made on the footing that the claim of J. F. Oirod is withdrawn; that the whole litigation is terminated; that the above amount is to be received by the plaintiffs clear of any costs, etc., and that thereafter the estate of Nicholas Oirod can divide any remaining assets among the legatees. The terms and stipulations of this compromise were embodied in a consent decree based upon it, bearing date of the 24th April, 1847.

Since then Jean Frangois Oirod has also died, leaving Hypolite Pargoud, the defendant, his universal legatee, and it is against him in that capacity, as the representative of Jean Frangois Oirod, that the plaintiffs in the institution of this suit have sought to make him responsible, first, for the sum of $70,000, being the price of the half of the joint purchase sold by.C. F. Oirod to his brother Nicholas; second, for the sum of $5000, with interest from the 19th January, 1830, being the proceeds of a tract of land sold by C. F. Oirod, for which the estate of N. Oirod

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 La. Ann. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girods-legatees-v-pargoud-la-1856.