In re Dimmick's Estate

35 So. 801, 111 La. 655, 1903 La. LEXIS 563
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 14, 1903
DocketNo. 14,724
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 35 So. 801 (In re Dimmick's Estate) 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
In re Dimmick's Estate, 35 So. 801, 111 La. 655, 1903 La. LEXIS 563 (La. 1903).

Opinions

PROYOSTY, J.

Frank Dimmick, testamentary executor of his father, Addison Dimmick, deceased, and administrator of the succession of his mother, Levisa Car[657]*657penter, having filed the account of his administration, Frank Pulford, as tutor of one of the heirs, his minor child, grandson of the de cujus, filed an opposition.

We take up in regular order, and dispose of, the grounds of opposition:

First, that in accounting for the proceeds of the crop of 1S99 on the Bellevue Plantation the accountant has improperly deducted $479 for alleged expenses paid out of his own moneys in making the crop. It is asserted that this claim is manufactured out of whole cloth, and that, even if just, the administrator is debarred from now urging it, because the proper time to have urged it was in the defense of a certain suit heretofore litigated between the opponent and the accountant individually; that the judgment in said suit is res judicata of the said claim, or, at any rate, that, not having urged the claim in said suit, the accountant must be held to have abandoned it, under article 156 of the Code of Practice, providing that “if one demand less than is due him, and do not amend his petition in order to augment his demand, he shall lose the overplus.”

The certain suit here in question was a suit brought by the present opponent against the accountant individually after the death of Addison Dimmick to set aside a transfer made by the deceased, Addison Dimmick, to the accountant, of one-fourth undivided of the same Bellevue Plantation whereon was made the crop of 1899, the proceeds of which are being accounted for and litigated. The transfer thus sought to be annulled purported to have been made in satisfaction of services rendered by the accountant to the deceased, Addison Dimmick, from July, 1886, to the date of the transfer. But no sum was named in the act of transfer as being the value of the services, or the amount due for them, and that was made the ground of the attack. It was said that as a sale or as a dation en paiement the transfer was null for want of a fixed price. The transfer had been made in February, 1898, and from that time the cultivation of Bellevue Plantation had been for the joint account of the accountant and his father, and at their joint expense, in the proportion of one-fourth to the accountant and three-fourths to his father. The date of the death of the father was December, 1899; the date of the filing of the suit was April, 1900; the date of the filing of the answer to the suit was October, 1900. In this answer defendant prayed that, in case the transfer was set aside, he should have judgment for the services which formed its consideration. He could have included in the same answer a demand for this $479 now in question, but he did not do so; and the contention of opponent is that the judgment in the suit is res judicata of the demand, nevertheless, or, at any rate, that the time to make the demand was then, and that, not having made it then, accountant must be held to have abandoned it, and is now estopped from urging it.

We do not see how the demand can be res judicata when it has never been presented to any court, and still less been passed on by any court. Nor do we see why the accountant was bound, under penalty of abandonment, to urge the demand in that suit. It grew out of the making of the crop, and could well be deferred for settlement until the time came to account for the proceeds of the crop. In fact, the accountant was not even bound to demand in that suit the restitution of the consideration of the transfer. Long ago it was held that a defendant in a petitory actiou is not bound to urge his claim for useful improvements by way of reconventional demand, but may await the termination -of tlie petitory action, and then bring a separate suit. Gracie v. Gayoso, 7 Mart. (N. S.) 650. Nor did his urging the demand for his services impose upon him the obligation of also urging at the same time the demand for these expenses. The two demands were distinct and separate. A plaintiff is not compelled to include in his suit all the demands he may have against the defendant. It is expressly provided in the Code that he may do so (article 148), but it is nowhere provided that he must do so. Surely no one will contend that a plaintiff is bound to include in his petition all the debts the defendant may owe him, under the penalty of being held to have abandoned and remitted those he has not included. If he holds several mortgage notes he may foreclose on them separately. Townsend v. Payne, 42 La. Ann. 909, 8 South. 626.

[659]*659The cases cited by opponent’s learned counsel were decided on their peculiar facts, as the following examination of them shows:

In the case of McCaleb v. Fluker, 14 La. Ann. 316, a judgment had been obtained on a mortgage claim, and the judgment had been paid in full, and a receipt given accordingly; and then, after all this, suit was brought to recover attorney’s fees, because the act of mortgage stipulated that the mortgagor should pay any costs that might be incurred in collecting the debt. The defense was that the act of mortgage did not stipulate the payment of attorney’s fees, and that the payment had been received in full satisfaction. The court held that, even on the supposition that the debt previously existed, the debt had merged in the judgment, and the defendant had been released by the terms of the receipt and the consent given. Here was but one debt, with accessories. Evidently it is no more permissible to separate the accessories from the principal for separate suit than it is permissible to divide the principal itself. But in the instant case the two demands were distinct and separate.

In Stafford v. Stafford, 25 La. Ann. 223, a wife sued her husband in separation of property, and in restitution of her paraphernal funds, which she alleged were in danger of being lost, owing to the embarrassed condition of . her husband’s affairs, and she obtained judgment. Afterwards, for the transparent purpose of enabling her husband to shield his property from his creditors, she brought another suit for another and very much larger amount of alleged paraphernal funds, which, if due at all, had been due at the time of the first suit. Said the court: “The fairness and genuineness of the claim is doubtful. No explanation whatever is tendered of so anomalous and unusual a proceeding as suing for only part of her demand, when the whole was due, and, according to the allegations, was in danger of being lost. After a full consideration of the case, we conclude that she ought not to recover.” Citing article 156, Code Prac., and the 14 La. Ann. ease, supra.

The ease must be admitted to be a. peculiar one. We are not advised whether the husband owed the wife two debts, or only one. If the latter, there was a clear ease of dividing a debt and bringing two suits, and article 156, Code Prac., came into full play. If the former—that is to say, if the debts were distinct and separate causes of action—the decision can be justified only on the supposition that there is in the wife’s suit for separation of property something peculiar, whereby the wife must either urge none of her moneyed demands, or else include them all, under penalty of losing those not included. In either event the case has no analogy with the one in hand, for in the instant case there were clearly two distinct, separate causes of action, and the accountant is a mere ordinary litigant, not bound to include in his suit all the demands he happens to' have against his adversary.

In Payne v. Anderson, 35 La. Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 801, 111 La. 655, 1903 La. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dimmicks-estate-la-1903.