Schneider v. Burns

13 So. 175, 45 La. Ann. 875
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1893
DocketNo. 11,236
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 So. 175 (Schneider v. Burns) 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
Schneider v. Burns, 13 So. 175, 45 La. Ann. 875 (La. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, C. J.

Plaintiffs allege that at a public sale made by Baumgarden & Fredericks, auctioneers, on the 25th of January, 1893, certain property described in their petition was adjudicated to James Burns for the price of $2200; that they are the owners of said property and that they tender a good unencumbered title to said adjudicatee, but that he refuses to accept the same and to comply with the adjudication. They pray that he be cited and that they have judgment ordering him to comply with the adjudication and pay the price thereof, and on his refusal to do so within ten days from judgment that they have execution against him for $2500, with interest from January 25, 1893, and costs.

[877]*877Defendant pleaded first the general issue — further answering he said “ that the property described was duly exposed at public auction and was adjudicated to him at the price and sum of $2200 as the last and highest bidder. That a title was offered him to said property, but he specially denied that the same was clear and unencumbered for the reason that Mrs. Elizabeth Schneider, one of the vendors, was married to one Andrew Schneider, who died on the 8th day of November, 1890, leaving separate and community property in the parish of Orleans, and leaving a minor child, Antonia Schneider, aged about eleven months, being the issue of the marriage between him and said Elizabeth Schneider. That the succession of said Schneider was opened in the Oivil District Oourt for the parish of Orleans; that an inventory was taken which showed the said minor’s interest to amount to the sum of $1440. That a certificate of said inventory was filed in the mortgage office of the parish of Orleans upon the application of Mrs. Schneider to be confirmed and qualified as natural tutrix of said minor, and said inscription became a general mortgage upon all the property of said Mrs. Schneider, and especially upon the piece referred to, for the amount shown by said certificate, thereto remain and act as such until the final settlement between Mrs. Schneider and her said pupil.”

That Mrs. Schneider has illegally and wrongfully caused said minor’s mortgage to be nominally canceled and erased from the books of the recorder of mortgages, and notwithstanding said illegal and wrongful cancellation said minor’s mortgage remains in full force and effect, and the property tendered to respondent is liable under said mortgage to secure and make good to said minor whatever sum. or sums which may be due to said minor upon final settlement with her tutrix. He therefore prayed that the demand of plaintiffs be rejected.”

The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which was as follows:

1. Mrs. Elizabeth Schneider filed an attested account which is signed by the under-tutor and which was duly homologated by the udgment of the court. This account shows that the tutrix owed the minor nothing, the succession of Andrew J. Schneider being insolvent.

2. Mrs. Elizabeth Schneider took a rule upon the under-tutor and the recorder of mortgages, alleging the fact as herein stated in No. [878]*8781 of this “ statement of facts ” to show cause why the inscription in the mortgage office resulting from the filing of the clerk’s certificate ■ of the amount of the inventory should not be canceled, and the rule was made absolute and the inscription canceled.

■3. The paternal grandmother of the minor is aged, and when she dies there will probably devolve upon the minor an inheritance amounting to about $ 1000.

The District Court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs against defendant as prayed for by them and defendant has appealed.

The proposition contended for by the plaintiffs is that if at any period between the appointment of a tutor and his discharge at the termination of his trust, he should file an account which after due proceedings would be homologated contradictorily with the under-tutor, by which it would appear that at the date of filing and homologation there was nothing due by the tutor to his pupil, and nothing for which he was then responsible, the tutor would be authorized to obtain a subsequent decree (on proceedings also taken contradictorily with the under-tator) for the erasure from the mortgage records of the inscriptions which up to that time evidenced a mortgage in favor of his ward, and a judgment declaring the non-existence of any mortgage on his property. That a decree to that effect would enable the tutor to sell his property, and a purchaser from him to acquire his property free from the minor’s mortgage.

The proposition is not sustainable in law. It rests upon false premises and false assumptions.

In the first place the account which is rendered by a tutor pending the tutorship, and which may be homologated contradictorily with the under-tutor, is not a final judgment and does not definitively fix the situation or condition of affairs even up to the date at which it is rendered. It is at best only prima facie correct, and is subject to be reopened by the minor when he becomes of age and is subject to amendment or correction to the full extent of error.

In Stafford vs. Villain, 10 La. 329, this court said: “Tutors under an order of the Court of Probates must, and without it may, exhibit an account of their administration and the court may make certain orders thereon, but nothing authorizes it to homologate such accounts so as to render them conclusive and binding on the minor, for the law gives to the latter the right until the expiration of a certain delay after he becomes of age to examine and contest all the ac[879]*879counts of his tutor. The court, therefore, can in no case relieve and discharge the tutor from his responsibility.”

The first error in plaintiff’s position is in ascribing to a provisional account homologated during the tutorship the effect of determining absolutely the relative position of tutor and ward at any given fixed period.

The next error is in assuming that the inscription of the certificate of the district clerk, furnished by him in compliance with Art. 3351 of the Oivil Code, showing the amount of the minor’s property according to the inventory on file in his office, operates a mortgage in favor of the minor for the amount therein stated, to secure the faith - ful administration of the tutor for the property therein stated, and that upon showing that that particular property or money has been legally expended or accounted for, the mortgage (being a secondary or accessory obligation for that particular sum or property), falls and disappears, leaving the future rights of the minor to be secured by a new inscription as to their existence and as they arise, to be made by the tutor or under-tutor.

It has been repeatedly held by this court that the legal mortgage of the minor was not for the accounting of any particular sum of money or property, but for his faithful administration during the whole period of the tutorship. Speaking of this general mortgage, the court, in Barnard vs. Erwin, 2 Rob. 407, said:' “A general mortgage, says the Code, is that which binds all the property present and future. A special mortgage is that which binds only certain specified property. A mortgage may be stipulated for the fulfilment of any obligation whatever, even for the completion of an act. It may be given for an obligation which has not yet risen into existence, as where a man grants a mortgage by way of security for endorsements which another promises to make for him.

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Bluebook (online)
13 So. 175, 45 La. Ann. 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-burns-la-1893.