Schrock v. Bolding

132 So. 504, 171 La. 929, 1931 La. LEXIS 1612
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 30846.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 132 So. 504 (Schrock v. Bolding) 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
Schrock v. Bolding, 132 So. 504, 171 La. 929, 1931 La. LEXIS 1612 (La. 1931).

Opinion

*931 O’NIELL, C. J.

This is a suit to annul two transactions, by one of which the plaintiffs’ interest in their mother’s succession was transferred to the defendants, and by the other of which the plaintiffs’ interest in their grandfather’s succession was transferred to the defendants. The plaintiffs prayed also for an order compelling the defendants to account for the rents and revenues and assets of the tw,o estates. The district court gave judgment for the plaintiffs as prayed for. The defendants have appealed from the decision.

The plaintiffs’ grandparents, being the defendants’ parents, were William R. Bolding and Mrs. Canzada Seamons Bolding. They were married in West Carroll parish on the 5th of January, 1877. She was granted a separation of property by a decree of court on the 7th of October, 1892. She died, intestate, in West Carroll parish on the 12th of January, 1895, leaving an estate, being her separate property, consisting of about 400 acres of land in West Carroll parish, and leaving as her heirs four sons and a daughter, issue of her marriage to William R. Bolding. The daughter was Martha Bolding, who married I-Ienry Schrock. The plaintiffs, Clarence and Curtis Schrock, are the only issue of that marriage. The four sons of Mrs. Canzada Seamons Bolding were Wilton, Linal, Enoch W., and Benson H. Bolding. Enoch W. Bolding and Benson H. Bolding are the only survivors of the four sons, and are the defendants in this suit.

Wilton Bolding died intestate, and without descendant heirs, on the 30th of March, 1899, leaving as his heirs at law his father and his three brothers and their sister, and leaving as his estate only his fifth interest in his mother’s estate. His father, William R. Bolding, therefore, inherited 14 of Wilton’s fifth interest in the estate of Wilton’s mother, and his sister and three brothers each inherited % of 94 of Wilton’s fifth interest in the estate. Rev. Civ. Code, arts. 904 and 911. The father, William R. Bolding, then owned 1/20, and the sister and three brothers of Wilton Bolding each owned % plus % of 94 of Vs, or i%0, of the estate of the deceased, Mrs. Canzada Seamons Bolding.

Linal Bolding died, intestate, and without descendant heirs, on the 21st of May, 1909, leaving an estate consisting of his i%0 of his mother’s estate besides two small tracts of land in West Carroll parish and several town lots in Oak Grove, in that parish. Linal’s father, William R. Bolding, therefore, inherited from Linal % of his i%0, or Rfeo» Linal’s mother’s estate; and his sister and two brothers each inherited % of 94 of Linal’s i%0, or !%20> their mother’s estate; and the father and the two brothers and the sister of Linal each inherited also % of his two small tracts of land and of his town lots. The father, William R. Bolding, then owned y20 plus i-feo» or Veái and Enoch W. Bolding and Benson H. Bolding and Mrs. Martha Bolding Schrock each owned of the estate of Mrs. Canzada Seamons Bolding; and each of them owned also ty, of the two small tracts of land and of the town lots, inherited from Linal Bolding.

Mrs. Canzada Bolding Schrock died, intestate, on the 15th of January, 1910; and the. plaintiffs, Clarence and Curtis Schrock, inherited her of the estate of their grandmother and the % of the two small tracts of land and the town lots, formerly belonging to Linal Bolding. Clarence Schrock was then only three years of age and Curtis only four months. Their father, Henry Schrock, qualified and was confirmed as their natural tutor on the 15th of March, 1910; and on the next day he presented a petition to the district judge, alleging that the property which his *933 two children had inherited from their mother was an undivided interest in property owned jointly by the two children and their grandfather, W. R. Bolding, and their uncles, Enoch W. Bolding (whom he called Jim Bolding) and Benson H. Bolding, and alleging that he, as tutor of the children, was no longer willing that they should remain coproprietors or joint owners with the major co-owners; that the property was not divisible in kind; that he desired that it should be sold at private sale to effect a partition; that two of the co-owners, Enoch W. and Benson H. Bolding, had offered to buy the interest of the minors for $2,250; and that a sale of the children’s interest at that price would be advantageous to them. He prayed that a family meeting should be convened to advise as to whether the sale should be made to effect a partition of the property. He alleged that the children owned %6 of the land which had formerly belonged to their grandmother, and of tlls two small tracts of land and the town lots which had belonged formerly to Linal Bolding'; and that William R. Bolding owned i/io and that Enoch W. Bolding and Benson H. Bolding each owned %6 of the land which had belonged to their mother, and 14 oi the two small tracts and the town lots which had belonged to their brother, Linal Bolding. On the inventory of the estate of Mrs. Martha Bolding Schrock, the minor children’s interest in the land which had belonged to their grandmother was said to be %6 interest, and was appraised at $1,275; whereas, according to our calculation, their interest in the land was i%4; and, as it is apparent that the whole estate was valued at $4,080, the i%4 should have been appraised at $1,211.25, which is y20 less, or $63.75 less, than the supposed %8 was appraised at. On the recommendation of the family meeting, approved by the judge, the interest of the two minor children, said to be %6 of the property which had belonged to their grandmother and of the two small tracts and town lots which Linal Bolding had bought, was sold to Enoch W.’ Bolding and Benson H. Bolding for $2,250 cash; which was $395 more than the appraisement of the interest of the minor children in all of the property. The sale was made on the 18th of May, 1910. We mention the error in the calculation of the interest of the minor children in the property formerly belonging to their grandmother, because it is said in the brief filed in their behalf that the error in the calculation of their interest in the property was detrimental to them. As a matter of fact it was advantageous to them, because it gave them a better price than they were entitled to.

The grounds on which the plaintiffs seek to annul the sale dated the 18th of May, 1910, were twofold, viz.: First, that all of the property should have been sold to effect the partition, and, second, that the sale was made, not to effect a partition, but merely to transfer the title to Enoch W. Bolding and Benson H. Bolding, and, ostensibly, to support and educate the minor children. It is true that, in the proces verbal of the proceedings of the family meeting, it was said that the sale of the interest of the minor children to Enoch W. Bolding and Benson H. Bolding should be made “for the better support and education of said minors, and for the purpose of effecting a partition.” But, in the petition for the calling of a family meeting, it was alleged that the tutor representing the minor children was not willing that they should continue to hold the property jointly with the coproprietors, and that the purpose of the proposed sale was to effect a partition. The ease is therefore very similar to Hand v. Harper, 171 La. 47, 129 So. 664. In that case, the natural tutor of two minor children filed a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 So. 504, 171 La. 929, 1931 La. LEXIS 1612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrock-v-bolding-la-1931.