Molero v. Bass

190 So. 2d 141
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1966
Docket2259
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 190 So. 2d 141 (Molero v. Bass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molero v. Bass, 190 So. 2d 141 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

190 So.2d 141 (1966)

Mrs. Camille Silvera MOLERO, Testamentary Executrix of the Succession of Manuel Molero
v.
Perry R. BASS, Howell E. Smith and John B. Connally, Individually and as Testamentary Executors of The Estate of S. W. Richardson (Sid W. Richardson), The Sid W. Richardson Foundation, Bass Brothers Enterprises, Inc., Richardson Oils, Inc., and the Prudential Insurance Company of America.

No. 2259.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 5, 1966.
Rehearing Denied October 5, 1966.

*143 Wilkinson & Wilkinson, Hugh M. Wilkinson, Jr., James Wilkinson, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Provosty, Sadler & Scott, Nauman S. Scott, Richard B. Sadler, Jr., Alexandria, for defendants-appellants.

Before YARRUT, SAMUEL, and BARNETTE, JJ.

BARNETTE, Judge.

This suit arises out of the ancillary succession proceedings in which the Louisiana property of Sid W. Richardson was administered. Richardson, a domiciliary of the State of Texas, died on September 30, 1959. Pursuant to directions in his last will and testament, his executors, Perry R. Bass, Howell E. Smith, and John B. Connally, defendants herein, opened ancillary proceedings in Plaquemines Parish, presented his will for probate, and qualified as his executors in this State. The succession proceedings were opened on March 24, 1960, and remained open until June 18, 1962, when judgment was rendered homologating the final tableau of distribution and account and discharging the executors. During the more than two years the succession proceedings remained open, Richardson's vast holdings of mineral interests were sold, the gross value of his liquidated estate being $21,862,000. After payment of inheritance taxes and costs of the administration, the net value of the succession was established at $19,841,564.30, which amount was delivered in cash to Bass, Smith, and Connally in their capacity as Richardson's *144 Texas executors to be distributed to his legatees through Texas probate proceedings.

The suit before us on this appeal was filed on May 27, 1964, by Camille Silvera Molero in her capacity as testamentary executrix of the succession of Manuel Molero, who died February 23, 1962. The petition alleges a cause of action based on an assignment of mineral interests from Richardson to Molero on August 15, 1945, and a breach of that assignment agreement in 1949. Named as defendants in the suit were Bass, Smith, and Connally, both individually and in their capacities as testamentary executors of the Richardson succession. The petition sought, inter alia,[1] an order directing Bass, Smith, and Connally to show cause why the judgment rendered on June 18, 1962, should not be revoked, why they should not be ordered to return the Louisiana assets of the succession for deposit in this State, and why they should not be ordered to appear and defend the suit. The district court issued the rule to show cause as prayed for by plaintiff.

Service on these three defendants in their capacity as executors was made through the Louisiana attorney who had been appointed agent for service of process in regard to the succession proceedings when the foreign executors had qualified to appear in proceedings in this State. Defendants filed declinatory exceptions of lack of personal jurisdiction and insufficiency of service of process. They also filed a dilatory exception of unauthorized use of summary process.

The plaintiff's rule to show cause and defendants' exceptions were tried together on June 22, 1964. Judgment was rendered on the rule and exceptions on February 5, 1965, which revoked and declared null the judgment in the succession proceedings, ordered the defendants to return to Louisiana all sums realized from the sale of the succession property, and ordered them to appear and defend the plaintiff's suit. The exceptions filed by the defendants were overruled.

Defendants then moved for a new trial which was granted. After hearing on March 19, 1965, judgment was rendered, January 17, 1966, which modified the judgment of February 5, 1965, to the extent that the June 18, 1962, judgment in the succession proceedings was revoked only insofar as it discharged defendants as executors. The order directing defendants to return the succession assets to the State was omitted; but the order that defendants appear and defend the suit was reissued, and the judgment overruling the exceptions was reaffirmed. The defendants have appealed suspensively and devolutively from the January 17, 1966, judgment.

The initial issue confronting this court is raised by plaintiff-appellee in her brief wherein she contends that because the judgment issued below is interlocutory, no appeal can be taken from it. Appellee cites several cases[2] which have held that exceptions to jurisdiction in personam and to service of process are not appealable. LSA-C.C.P. art. 2083 provides as follows:

"An appeal may be taken from a final judgment rendered in causes in which appeals are given by law whether rendered after hearing or by default, and from an interlocutory judgment which may cause irreparable injury."

The official comments following Article 2083 contain this statement:

"(a) The general concept that there is no appeal except in the case of final judgments is universal in order to prevent piecemeal appeals. [Citations omitted.] However, the right to appeal certain interlocutory *145 judgments, where irreparable injury would otherwise result, is retained in this Code.
"The 1870 Code of Practice Art. 566 states that one may appeal an interlocutory judgment when `such judgment may cause him an irreparable injury.' No attempt has been made to codify the jurisprudence in which interlocutory judgments have a final effect or may cause irreparable injury, since the jurisprudence has been largely a case by case process, rather than the development of a basic general rule."

Appellee contends that there can be no irreparable injury to defendants resulting from the judgment in question, since all the defendants have been required to do is to defend a lawsuit—an obligation incurred by every defendant in every suit.

In view of the case by case process of deciding questions of irreparable injury as pointed out in the comment quoted above, we have considered the background and posture of this suit and have reached the conclusion that an appeal does lie herein. We think that when a succession has been duly administered for more than two years, during which time claims against it could have been presented; when those proceedings have culminated in a judgment homologating the final account and discharging the succession representatives; when, after the succession has been closed for almost two years, a claimant attempts to bring back nonresident former executors to defend a claim which on its face involves a 36-page petition and a notice of lis pendens which involves 95 separate items of property; then the defendant executors who have raised obvious questions of jurisdiction, service, and use of summary process are entitled to have these questions determined with finality, including an appeal from an adverse determination in the trial court, if a favorable decision on those questions would spare the defendants the burden of additional lengthy litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 2d 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molero-v-bass-lactapp-1966.