Prichard v. McCranie

107 So. 461, 160 La. 605, 1926 La. LEXIS 1934
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketNo. 25783.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 107 So. 461 (Prichard v. McCranie) 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
Prichard v. McCranie, 107 So. 461, 160 La. 605, 1926 La. LEXIS 1934 (La. 1926).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This is a suit to partition in kind a certain lot or parcel of ground in square 6 of Hart’s addition to the city of Monroe, La.

The plaintiffs in the action are J. Drew Prichard, Mrs. Ruth Prichard, -wife of Norton Myatt, and Mrs. Charlotte Prichard Breard, wife of John M. Breard, Jr.

The defendants are George W. MeCranie, Jr., and Don M. MeCranie.

The judgment of the court below recognized plaintiffs as owners in indivisión, each of an undivided 169/1728 interest, and defendants as owners in indivisión, each of an undivided 169/576 interest, in the property sought to be partitioned, and ordered the property sold at public auction to effect a partition by licitation.

The judgment decreed also that the mortgage indebtedness which the defendant Don M. MeCranie has against the interest of George W. MeCranie, Jr., be transferred to the proceeds of the sale, and that the defendant Don M. MeCranie pay all costs of this suit.

The defendant Don M. MeCranie has taken a suspensive appeal from this judgment.

Exception of No Cause of Action.

1. Defendant filed an exception of no cause of action to plaintiff’s petition, which was overruled by the trial judge.

Defendant contends that the petition in this case does not disclose a cause of action, as it fails to .allege the death of all persons through or from whom plaintiffs inherit, and that, in the absence of such allegations, proof of ownership cannot be introduced. Defendant further contends that the petition is lacking in material allegations, as it fails to state that plaintiffs have been recognized as heirs and sent into possession, and that inheritance taxes have been paid, or are not owing, as required by Act 109 of 1906.

Plaintiffs allege that they acquired an undivided 48/576 interest each in the property described in the petition by inheritance from their mother, Mrs. Olive MeCranie Prichard, and that defendants George W. MeCranie, Jr., acquired an undivided 48/192 interest, and Don M. MeCranie an undivided 71/192 interest in said property by inheritance from their father, George W. MeCranie, Sr., their brother, Malcolm A. MeCranie, their mother, Mrs. C. A. MeCranie, and that petitioners acquired an undivided 25/1728 interest each, George W. MeCranie, Jr., an undivided 25/576, and Don M. MeCranie an undivided 25/576 interest by purchase of the interest of J. D. MeCranie in the succession of his late mother, Mrs. C. A. MeCranie.

Plaintiffs further allege that they are unwilling to remain any longer as owners in indivisión of the property, that the defendant Don M. MeCranie will not agree to a partition or the manner of making it, and that .said property is divisible in kind, and they desire a partition of it.

It is provided in article 1289 of the Civil Code that—

“No one can be compelled to hold property with another, unless the contrary has been agreed upon; any one has a right to demand the division of a thing held in common, by the action of partition.”

The allegations of the petition comply with the requirements of article 1289 of the Civil Code, and are sufficiently definite.

*609 Bill of Particulars.

2. Defendant also demanded a bill of particulars, alleging that the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition are too vague and indefinite to admit of proof or to put defendant upon his guard, and that, before answering, defendant is entitled to a bill of particulars setting forth with particularity the chain of title relied upon by plaintiffs and the facts upon which plaintiffs base their alleged rights.

To the answer to defendants’ rule for a bill of particulars herein, plaintiffs have attached the 'judgment and the entire record in the Succession of Mrs. E. A. MeCranie, No. 1911 on the probate docket of the Sixth district court. This judgment fully establishes the heirship and respective interests of plaintiffs and defendants in the property to be partitioned, and orders that they be sent into possession, without the payment of any inheritance taxes.

The bill of particulars is practically a mere repetition of the grounds of objection urged under the exception of no cause of action, and the rule was properly discharged.

Answer and Demand in Reconvention.

3. In the answer filed to the suit for partition in this case, the defendant Don M. MeCranie denies that plaintiffs have any interest whatever in the property herein sought to be partitioned.

While admitting, as a legal proposition, that Mrs. Olive MeCranie Prichard, deceased, the mother of the plaintiffs, Mrs. Charlotte Prichard Breard, Mrs. Ruth Prichard, and J. Drew Prichard, and the daughter of George W. MeCranie and of Mrs. Charlotte A. MeCranie, both deceased, was entitled to inherit an undivided 1/12 interest in the property belonging to her deceased father and mother, and was entitled to inherit an undivided 1/20 interest in the property on the death of Malcolm A. MeCranie, a brother of Mrs. Charlotte Prichard Breard, yet defendant charges that Mrs. Olive MeCranie Prichard, mother of plaintiffs, through a donation of a certain lot in the city of Monroe, La., made by her father in his lifetime, and through certain simulated sales from her mother, pretended to acquire more than 25 per centum of the property belonging to the community of Mrs. Charlotte A. MeCranie and George W". MeCranie, deceased father and mother of the defendant Don M. MeCranie and of Mrs. Olive MeCranie Prichard, mother of plaintiffs herein.

Defendant attacks the sales made by Mrs. Charlotte A. MeCranie to Mrs. Olive MeCranie Prichard, mother of plaintiffs, as null and v'oid, for the reason that G. W. MeCranie, the father of respondent, was at the time living, that same was community property belonging to the community existing between him and the pretended donor, and that he neither participated or joined therein, nor consented thereto, and that said sales were intended by Mrs. Charlotte A. MeCranie, the mother of defendant and of Mrs. Olive MeCranie Prichard, mother of plaintiffs, as a donation utterly without consideration, and to the prejudice of defendant’s rights as forced heir.

Defendant avers that there has been no settlement among the heirs of Mrs. Charlotte A. MeCranie and George W. MeCranie, and that it is the duty of plaintiffs before being entitled to receive any portion of the property now belonging to said estate, to collate the value of the property heretofore received by their mother.

Defendant also claims in reconvention certain taxes alleged to have been paid by him on the property, and a certain sum alleged to have been advanced by him for the support of plaintiffs during their minority, and that he is entitled to receive the amount of a certain mortgage note out of the interest of his codefendant G. W. MeCranie.

Defendant prays that said pretended sales by Mrs. A. MeCranie to Mrs. Olive Prichard *611

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 461, 160 La. 605, 1926 La. LEXIS 1934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prichard-v-mccranie-la-1926.