Pecastaing v. Globe Indemnity Co.

145 So. 259, 176 La. 31, 1932 La. LEXIS 1945
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1932
DocketNo. 31991.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 So. 259 (Pecastaing v. Globe Indemnity Co.) 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
Pecastaing v. Globe Indemnity Co., 145 So. 259, 176 La. 31, 1932 La. LEXIS 1945 (La. 1932).

Opinion

ST. PAUL, J.

This is an action by a dative tutor on behalf of his minors, against their father and the surety on the bond he gave as their natural tutor and to secure the price for which his minor children’s property was adjudicated to him as parent holding the property in common with them. Act No. 223 of 1920; Act No. 68 of 1924; Act No. 283 of 1926; Act No. 106 of 1924.

There was judgment below for plaintiff as prayed for; and the surety appeals.

I

Mrs. Annie Norman Pecastaing died intestate December 18, 1928, leaving four minor children born of her marriage with Cyrille Pecastaing. At her death she left one piece of separate property, which is not involved here, and her interest in the community of acquets and gains which had existed between her and her husband.

That community owned the following seven pieces of real estate in the city of Monroe, to wit:

*35 (1) Lot on South Fifth street, near Layton avenue, having 100 feet front and 110 in depth.

(2) Another lot on South Fifth street, near Layton avenue, having 50 feet front and 110 in depth.

(3) Lot on South Fifth street, at the corner of Layton avenue, having 50 feet front and 143 in depth on said avenue.

(4) Lot on Dick Taylor street, having 30 feet front and 146 in depth.

(5) Lot on South Third street, at the corner of Stone avenue, having 50 feet front and 150 in depth on said avenue.

(6) Lot on Layton avenue near South Fifth street, having 40 feet front and 150 in depth.

(7) Lot on Stone avenue, near Fifth street, having 35 feet front and 100 in depth.

Of course these descriptions mean nothing here; but Monroe is the parish seat of Ouachita parish, where the trial judge holds Ms court, and thus there is a common-sense reason as well as a legal one for attaching much weight to his appreciation of the values of these properties,

II

The uncontradicted oral testimony is, that in 1928 sins of these seven pieces of real estate were alone worth more than $44,000. They were then mortgaged for $22,500; and were further encumbered with $.1,923.48 in paving liens and a judgment for $548.10; all aggregating $24,971.38.

The official appraisers, on whose estimation the children’s share in the properties was adjudicated to their father (under the provisions of Rev. Civ. Code, art. 343, as amended by Act No. 78 of 1914), valued the minors’ half interest in the properties at $6,000. But the testimony of one of the official appraisers is that this value was placed on the minors’ equity, or the net value of their interest in the properties after deducting the debts owing by the community; and this testimony is uncontradicted although the other appraiser was easily available. In other words, the official appraisers undertook to liquidate the community extra judicially. This they had no right to do, as the adjudication to a parent cotenant of a minor must be'for the whole value of the property without deduction; the liquidation of the community, if there be one, should follow and be done judicially. But the fact remains that the official appraisers did as aforesaid.

HI

In final analysis these are the contentions of the parties:

Plaintiff contends that the father (who was destituted of the tutorship because of having gone into insolvency) having bought the minors’ share in the property for $6,000, there is nothing left for the father (and his surety) but to pay the price regardless of any equities between the father and his children; and he relies on Townsend v. Atterberry, 171 La. 885, 132 So. 411, 412, in support of his position.

That case does not support this contention ; it is authority for the proposition that, where a parent has his minor’s property adjudicated to him, neither he nor his surety, especially one who becomes such after the adjudication, can complain that the price of *37 ad indication was too great, no more than any other purchaser, or surety for a purchaser, can afterwards complain that the price promised at the time of the sale was too much. But, we said distinctly that “we do not dispute the fact [and it still appears to us indisputable] that the surety on the tutor’s bond is liable for only such balance as may be due by the tutor in final accounting.” And we see not the least conflict between these two propositions.

On the other hand appellant accepts de plein eceur the proposition that the surety, and, for that matter, the principal debtor himself is liable for only such, balance as may be due on final accounting. Hence it argues that the father, and by the same token his surety also, may deduct from the price of adjudication the debts with which the adjudicated property was encumbered. But it contends that the estimation of the official appraisers is conclusive, and accordingly that the price of adjudication was absorbed more than twice over by (the wife’s half of) the debts with which it was burdened. In other words, it contends, and correctly, that the debts due by the' community must be deducted from the value of the property belonging to the community before it can be ascertained how much is due the minor heirs of the deceased wife. But it denies that it may be shown that these debts had already been deducted from the value of the property at the time when the estimation was made by the official appraisers and the property adjudicated to the father, which was, of course, highly irregular, but seems nonetheless to have been the fact.

IY

We do not think that the estimation made by the appraisers at the taking of an inventory is conclusive of the value of the property inventoried. In Babin v. Nolan, 4 Rob. 278, 285, this court said:

“The principal object of the law, in requiring a public inventory to be made of all the effects, moveable and immoveable, belonging to a succession or to a community, is to establish the existence of all the property, and to show the whole amount or value thereof. Such inventory is to contain the estimate of all the effects to be made as to each article, by appraisers, who must be appointed and sworn by the judge or notary who makes the inventory; * * * and after it has been registered; it shall be admitted as proof in courts of justice. * * * Such an inventory is to serve as the basis of the settlement of the estate, so far as it shows the effects, moveable and immoveable, moneys and credits belonging thereto, and so far as it establishes its situation; but we are not ready to say that it should be received as conclusive proof of the real value of the property there: in described, so as to be used as the exclusive criterion by which the interested parties are to be charged, in the partition of the property, and settlement of the estate. Except where the law has positively said that the property so inventoried shall be taken at the estimation price, we understand that the estimation made by the appraisers, not being conclusive, must often yield to the proof of its being excessive or incorrect.”

We reaffirm this doctrine.

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Related

Globe Indemnity Co. v. Ætna Casualty & Surety Co.
192 So. 234 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)
Caskey v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
183 So. 242 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 259, 176 La. 31, 1932 La. LEXIS 1945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecastaing-v-globe-indemnity-co-la-1932.