Pertuit v. Damare

24 So. 681, 50 La. Ann. 893, 1898 La. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 23, 1898
DocketNo. 12,680
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 24 So. 681 (Pertuit v. Damare) 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
Pertuit v. Damare, 24 So. 681, 50 La. Ann. 893, 1898 La. LEXIS 311 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, O. J.

On the 23d of August, 1890, by act before E. D. Laiche, deputy clerk and notary public in and for the parish of St. James, Felix P. Poché sold and delivered to Felix Damaré a certain tract of land, described in said act, for and in consideration of the price of thirty-two thousand dollars, of which price three thousand four hundred and twenty dollars were paid cash, and the balance was represented by eight promissory notes executed by the purchaser to his own order and by himself endorsed for different amounts payable at different dates at the office of the clerk of court of the parish of St. James, the notes bearing interest at eight per cent, per annum from their date until paid. These notes were, by the terms of purchase, secured as to payment by special mortgage on the property sold, vendor’s privilege being retained.

On December 31, 1896, the plaintiff, Pertuit, took out executory . process against the property mortgaged, as being the holder and ■ owner of three of the eight notes representing, as stated, the purchase price of the same — to-wit: one note of two thousand dollars, . maturing January, 1891; one note of four thousand dollars, maturing January 23, 1892, and one note of four thousand dollars, maturing .January 23, 1893. The act of sale and mortgage had been duly recorded in the record books of the parish of St. James.

[895]*895On the 5th of January, 1897, Auguste Domaré, as under-tutor of the minors Felieie, Roger, Azema, Fernand and George Damaré, issue of the marriage of Leontine Jolly, deceased, with Felix Damaré, filed a petition in the District Oourt for St. James, in which he alleged:

That on the 30th June, 1890, Felix Damaré was confirmed as natural tutor of the said minors, and petitioner as their under-tutor.

That on the 12th of January, 1891, Mrs. Azema Bourgeois, widow of Cesar D. Jolly, the grandmother of the minors, died, leaving said minors and Oesar Felix Damaré, their brother, her sole heirs. That at the time of said Mrs. Azema Jolly’s death, she was the owner and possessor of three promissory notes, made and subscribed by Felix Damaré, the father and tutor of said minors, under date of August 23, 1893, one for the sum of two thousand dollars, payable January 23, 1891, and two, each for the sum of four thousand dollars, payable respectively on January 23, 1892, and 1893, all to the order of said Felix Damaré, and endorsed in blank, bearing interest from date, at eight per cent, per annum; said notes being identified with an act of sale and mortgage passed before Emile J. Laiche, deputy clerk of court, and secured by special mortgage and vendor’s privilege on the property of said Damaré, fully described and set forth in the said act of sale. That being the sole heirs of their said grandmother, Mrs. Jolly, and she being the owner of said notes at her death, the said notes became the property of said minors and of their brother. That their said property in said notes had never been divested, and that said minors and their brothers were still the owners of said notes. That Felix Damaré, their father and tutor, had never been authorized by any order of court, or by the advice of any family meeting, to dispose, in any manner, shape or form, either ■directly or indirectly, of said three notes, the property of said minors and of their brother, and that they were still vested with full ownership of said notes. That in his said capacity of under-tutor of said minors, he represented and showed that on the 31st of December, 1896, one Elphege J. Pertuit, claiming to be the holder of said three notes (the property of said minors and their brother) instituted, via exeoutiva against Felix Damaré, the maker of said notes, and the tutor of said minors, in the suit entitled, Blphege J. Pertuit, vs. Felix Damaré, No. I960 of the docket of said oourt. That he was advised and averred that said notes, on the [896]*896death of their grandmother (the said minors and their brother being her sole heirs) went into the charge and control of Felix Damaré, their tutor, by reason of their said heredity — Mrs. Jolly’s succession never being opened and the said notes being her only property. That said Damaré, tutor, was absolutely without power or authority^ part with said notes or in any way to dispose of the same; that he was absolutely without power to confer on any one the title to said notes, the property of said minors; that any one taking said notes from said Damaré, the maker of the same, was charged with notice and acted tc en pleine connaissanee ” of the fact that said Damaré was without authority and power to destroy or impair, in the least, the ttile and ownership of said minors to said notes. That he distinctly charged and averred that said Pertuit acquired said notes long after maturity and with full knowledge of the title and ownership of said minors, in and to said notes, and that said Pertuit has no title or claim whatever to said notes or any part thereof. That the interest of said Damaré, tutor, and that of the minors were in conflict, and it was his duty as their tutor to intervene in said suit and protect the interest of the minors.

Should the court, however, hold that said, minors were not the owners of said notes by reason of the fact that the notes made by and due by their tutor, as tutor, had the effect of extinguishing said notes and as creating a cash indebtedness by the tutor to said minors, then, and in that event, and under the reservation, he said and averred that said notes should be decreed to be extinguished and the lien and mortgage securing the same, canceled and erased.

That under no conceivable circumstances had Pertuit, the plaintiff in said suit, any title or claim in and to said notes, or any lien or mortgage bearing on said property. That the further proceeding of said Pertuit in said suit would cause minors irreparable injury and damage, and the same should be arrested and stopped until the decision of the present suit. That petitioner should be allowed and permitted to intervene in said suit, and said Pertuit should be enjoined from taking any further steps in said suit until further orders of the court.

In view of the premises, he prayed to be allowed to intervene in his said capacity in behalf of said minors; that Pertuit, the plaintiff, and Damaré, the defendant (the latter individually and as tutor), be cited; that judgment be rendered in favor of the minors and against [897]*897said defendants, decreeing, recognizing and adjudging that said minors are the owners in the proportion of one undivided sixth each ■of the said notes as heirs of their grandmother, Mrs. Jolly; that said notes be delivered and turned over to said minors, and said Pertuit be decreed to be absolutely without right or interest in and to said notes. Should the court, however, hold that said minors are not the owners of the notes, then, and in that event and under reservation, petitioner prayed that said notes and all the accessories thereto are extinguished and wiped out, and their tutor is indebted unto them for the amount of said notes as so much cash received by him (tutor) for account of said minors, and that said lien, and the lien and mortgage securing the same, be canceled and erased; that a writ of injunction issue against the plaintiff, Pertuit, enjoining and restraining him from taking any further steps or doing anything whatever in said suit until the further orders of the court; that after due proceedings said injunction be maintained and perpetuated, with costs. ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 So. 681, 50 La. Ann. 893, 1898 La. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pertuit-v-damare-la-1898.