Haley v. Woods

113 So. 144, 163 La. 911, 1927 La. LEXIS 1954
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 25, 1927
DocketNo. 26388.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 113 So. 144 (Haley v. Woods) 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
Haley v. Woods, 113 So. 144, 163 La. 911, 1927 La. LEXIS 1954 (La. 1927).

Opinion

OYERTON, J.

W. W. Elder was married four times. 1-Ie died in 1912, testate, and is survived by his- widow, Mrs. Efiie Elder, now Mrs. Haley, and two children, Wingfield and Sallie Elder, who are minors, and also by issue of each of his three remaining marriages. By his will he left all of the land owned by him in this state, the land J)eing known as the “Louisiana Place,” containing about 141.-5 acres, to Wingfield and Sallie Elder, the children of his last marriage, who, through their mother and guardian, Mrs. Haley, are the plaintiffs in the present suit. The deceased left property in Texas, as well as in this state, and the will was admitted to probate in both states.

After the will was admitted to probate here, W. P. Elder, one of the children of a preceding marriage, brought suit in this state to annul the will of his father. In that suit a judgment was rendered by the trial judge, recognizing, among other things, that W. P. Elder owned in indivisión with his brothers and sisters, Leonard, Wingfield, and Sallie Elder, Mrs. Etta Robinson, and Mrs. J. W. Hill, the “Louisiana Place.” This judgment was not satisfactory to Mrs. Haley, and she, op her own behalf and on behalf of her two children, the plaintiffs herein, appealed to this court. On appeal, the judgment rendered by the trial court was reversed, in so far as it affected the rights of Mrs. Haley and 'her two *913 children, Wingfield and Sallie Elder, and the demand of W. P. Elder, the plaintiff in that suit, was dismissed as in case of nonsuit. Elder v. Elder, 142 La. 95, 76 So. 252.

W. P. Elder did not institute another suit to annul his father’s will, nor was another suit instituted hy any one for that purpose. However, on January 18, 1922, over nine years after the death of W. W. Elder, and over four years after the judgment rendered hy this court in the suit- to annul his will became final, Mrs. J. W. Hill, a resident of Houston, Tex., and one of the children of W. W. Elder, the deceased, brought suit to effect a partition of the “Louisiana Place,” which, by the terms of the will, had been left to Wingfield and Sallie Elder, setting up the judgment of the district court, rendered in the suit to annul the will, which this court had reversed, as declaratory of her interest- and the interest of her coheirs and co-owners in the property. Wingfield and Sallie Elder, among others, were named as parties defendant to the suit, and, they being at the time no longer residents of this state, a curator ad hoc was appointed to represent them. On the same day that the suit was filed, the curator ad hoe signed an acknowledgment of the service of the petition and citation in the suit.

The guardian of Wingfield and Sallie Elder made no appearance in the case, and the curator ad hoc, appointed to represent these minors, who are described in the petition merely as absentees, filed no answer. On March 21, 1922, judgment was rendered, ordering that the “Louisiana Place” be sold at public auction to. effect a partition. This judgment was amended on April 26, 1922 (apparently irregixlarly so), and, on July 8, 1922, the property was offered at public sale to effect the partition, and was purchased by J. W. Woods, a stranger to the suit.

The guardian of Wingfield and Sallie Elder learned of the partition suit and of the sale to effect the partition several months after the sale was made, and on January 11, 1923, instituted the present suit on behalf of her wards to have decreed null and void the judgment ordering the partition and the sale made in pursuance thereof, and to have them recognized as the owners of said property. Various grounds are urged to annul the judgment and sale. We find it necessary, however, to consider only one. of the many grounds urged, and that ground is that no service of the petition and citation in the suit in which the judgment of partition was rendered was made on the curator ad hoc appointed to represent the plaintiffs herein, or upon their guardian, and that the acknowledgment of service by the curator ad hoc in the partition suit was in fact nothing more than a waiver of service, which he was not authorized to make, and the judgment based thereon is therefore a judgment rendered without citation, and hence is null and void, and, being null and void, the sale made in pursuance thereof is also null.

Article 195 of the Code of Practice provides as follows:

“If the minors, the interdicted or absent persons,' against whom the suit is brought, had no tutor or curator, and the plaintiff has had a special tutor or curator appointed to defend them in the suit, the service must be made on that curator in person, or at his domicile.”

In Jacobs v. Kansas City, S. & G. Ry. Co., 134 La. 389, 64 So. 150, the court, after quoting the foregoing article, said:

“The Code, on the subject under consideration, requires that service of the proceedings must be made on the tutor ad hoe or the curator ad hoe in person, or at his domicile. This notice or service is the citation; and the want of it is fatal. The statute must be construed strictly, as every law should be that derogates so much from the general principles of our jurisprudence and decides upon the rights of those who are incapacitated or absent. . It is a privilege to allow a plaintiff to pursue such person in this way, and he cannot complain if he is required to follow exactly the formalities which the act prescribes; and, above all, he *915 cannot be permitted to neglect that proceeding which the law has ordered as to serving the citation, which is to be the basis upon which all the subsequent proceedings in the cause rest.”

The jurisprudence is well established to the effect that a tutor ad hoc or a curator ad hoc cannot, under the authority vested in him by law, waive service of. the petition and citation. Stockton v. Hasluck, 10 Mart. (O. S.) 472; Hill v. Barlow, 6 Rob. 142; Ticknor v. Calhoun, 28 La. Ann. 258; Cormier v. De Valcourt, 33 La. Ann. 1168. It is true that it has been held that a tutor ad hoc or a curator ad hoc may acknowledge,service of the petition and citation. Millaudon v. Beazley, 2 La. Ann. 916; Bartlett v. Wheeler, 31 La. Ann. 540. However, these cases are based upon the theory that the service of the petitions and citations which was questioned in them was actually made, and that all that the curators ad hoc did in these cases was merely to acknowledge that which, so far as appeared, had actually been done. These decisions have no application, where it appears that no service was in fact made. Referring to these cases, this court said in Jacobs v. Kansas City, S. & G. Ry. Co., supra (134 La. 390, 394, 64 So. 152), that:

“Defendants cite a line of authorities wherein the court has held that where it does not clearly appear that the curator ad hoc had waived service of the- petition, and where it rather appears by some acknowledgment that there had been an actual service, the proceeding will not be treated as null; but these cases have no application to a suit where it is definitely shown that the curator or tutor ad hoe had waived service of citation.”

In the Jacobs Case, from which the foregoing excerpt is taken, the tutors ad hoc signed what purported to be an acknowledgment of service of the petition, but expressly waived service of citation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ballard v. McBryde
275 So. 2d 464 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Humble Oil & Refining Company v. Waters
159 So. 2d 408 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Keller v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.
96 So. 2d 598 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1957)
Flatte v. Nichols
96 So. 2d 477 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1957)
Clark-Kelley Livestock Auction Co. v. Pioneer Bank & Trust Co.
81 So. 2d 869 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1955)
May Finance Co. v. Nagy
62 So. 2d 152 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1952)
Ideal Savings Homestead Ass'n v. Kerner
23 So. 2d 200 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1945)
Ideal Savings & Homestead Ass'n v. Kerner
23 So. 2d 200 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1945)
Parker v. Ohio Oil Co.
186 So. 604 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)
Lynn v. Lafitte
177 So. 83 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)
Blunson v. Brocato
172 So. 180 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)
Young v. Gretna Trust & Savings Bank
168 So. 85 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1936)
Lawrence v. Sunrise Petroleum Co.
163 So. 742 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)
Spears v. Spears
136 So. 614 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 So. 144, 163 La. 911, 1927 La. LEXIS 1954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haley-v-woods-la-1927.