Landreaux v. Louque

43 La. Ann. 234
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1891
DocketNo. 10,768
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 43 La. Ann. 234 (Landreaux v. Louque) 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
Landreaux v. Louque, 43 La. Ann. 234 (La. 1891).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

Plaintiffs commenced executory proceedings in the foreclosure of a mortgage on property of the late matrimonial community of Norbert Louque and wife by citation to the surviving husband alone; and the beneficiary heirs of the deceased wife filed a third opposition to the sale on the ground that the community was dissolved by the death of their' mother; that their father from that moment ceased to be head and master of the community; that as legal heirs of their mother, all of her rights and obligations passed to them as an inheritance, and therefore no valid sale could be made of the one-half interest in the property mortgaged, which was owned by their mother and inherited by them, unless they were duly notified thereof.

[235]*235The plaintiffs in execution concede the claim made by the opponents as a. general proposition, but allege that although the legal community be dissolved by the demise of one of the spouses as matter of fact, yet it has subsequently a fictitious existence for the purpose of liquidating and discharging community debts, and that the right of possession by the heirs is held in suspense so long as there are community debts remaining unpaid.

In this case they allege that the heirs of Mrs. Louque are without interest to make complaint of their proceedings, because the Louque community is insolvent, and no residuum will remain after its debts are paid. ,s

On the trial judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs in execution, rejecting the demands of the opponents, and they have .appealed.

The record discloses the following facts, viz:

That plaintiffs sold the property in controversy to Norbert Louque in December, 1877, for $32,000, of which $4500 was paid in cash, and for the balance of the price said vendee executed his several notes, payable at future dates with interest.

That in order to secure same, a spécial mortgage and vendor’s lien were stipulated in the public act of conveyance, and also the pact de non alienando. Some of the notes first maturing were paid, and the remainder were'subsequently acknowledged, andthetime of their payment extended. In June, 1886, Mrs. Odile Louque died, leaving •as her surviving heirs the opponents,, who accepted her succession with the benefit of inventory, and another son who renounced her succession. Notice'of the order of seizure and sale was given to Norbert Louque, surviving husband, alone. The sale having been opposed without resorting to an injunction, the property was adjudicated to the seizing creditors for the sum of $20,000, same being more than two-thirds of the appraisement, and less than half of the debt and interest due. It is a fact admitted in this court that the property in question constituted the sole asset of the legal community.

Under this state of facts, the question for decision is whether the •opponents were entitled to notification of the executory proceedings, and could a valid sale of their one-half undivided interest in •the common property be made without it.

[236]*236It is elementary that the interest of the wife’s heirs in fhe community is only a residuary one, and their inheritance is subordinated to the payment of community debts. Succession of Dumestre, 49 An. 411; Factors and Traders Insurance Co. vs. Levi, 42 An. 432; 33 An. 467, 585; 35 An. 297; 36 An. 157; 38 An. 759; Hen. Dig., p. 1496; Louque’s Dig., p. 416.

In addition to the fact that the heirs can not take possession' of the undivided interest in the community property, which they have inherited from the deceased wife, until community debts are paid, is the binding force of the authentic mortgage, which imports a confession of «judgment, and contains the clause of non-alienation, one of the effects of which is to entitle the mortgage creditor to proceed in the foreclosure of the property mortgaged, on giving notice to the original debtor, and without paying any attention to any transferee of same.

It is settled that executory proceedings against a deceased mortgagor can be taken on giving notice to the administrator of his estate alone, and the surviving husband is personally and individually responsible for the payment of community debts, whether they are ordinary or secured by mortgage, while the heirs of the wife are only contingently liable, and may relieve themselves from personal responsibility by renouncing her succession, or accepting it with the benefit of inventory — as Mrs. Odile Louque’s heirs have done.

It is not easily perceived what reason there can be, under the cir■cumstances of this case, for making the beneficiary heirs of the deceased member of the insolvent community parties to the executory proceedings, which were taken against the surviving husband alone.

It is the accepted jurisprudence of this court that such proceedings can be conducted against the surviving husband alone. This principle has been decided specifically in several cases. For instance, it was said by our early predecessors, in Lawson vs. Ripley, 17La. 238, that, after dissolution of a community “ by the death of the husband, it is uniformly understood that his estate is bound to pay the debts contracted during the marriage; if it be dissolved by the death of the wife, the survivor is generally alone applied to for the satisfaction of the community debts; and the wife or her representatives, “although their distinct interest to the community attaches at the dissolution of the marriage, subject to their right to renounce and be exonerated from the payment of the community debts, have [237]*237nothing to claim out of the acquets and gains until such debts are paid or liquidated.”

This opinion was followed by and quoted as authority for many subsequent cases, and notably in Baird vs. Lemee, 23 An. 424.

In Hawley, Adminisrator, vs. Crescent City Bank, 26 An. 230, the court expressed its unqualified approval of this doctrine, and said:

“ Upon the dissolution of the community by the death of the wife, the responsibility of the husband in regard to the community debts is not changed. He is absolutely and personally bound .for their payment, and his separate property may be seized and sold for their acquittal. This being his position, he has under his control the community property, which by law is expressly subjected to the payment of the community debts; and he has, so far as the final-settlement and liquidation of the conjmunity after its dissolution is concerned, the same rights he had during its existence, because he is, after the dissolution, under the same responsibilities for the community debts that be was before the dissolution. It is but just that he should have those powers. The community property continues under his control until the debts are paid. Until their final settlement and discharge the heirs have no absolute rights to the property of the community that can be'legally recognized. Their interest in it continues contingent and uncertain until, by the result of the final discharge of all the obligations of the community, it is known whether there are assets remaining for partition between the suryiw r and the heirs of the deceased spouse.”

The individual liability of the husband for community debts after the death of the wife was recognized and enforced in Bienvenue vs. Fournet, 28 An. 623; also in 26 An. 290.

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Bluebook (online)
43 La. Ann. 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landreaux-v-louque-la-1891.