Seeger v. Seeger

125 So. 732, 169 La. 611, 1929 La. LEXIS 2029
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 2, 1929
DocketNo. 30111.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 So. 732 (Seeger v. Seeger) 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
Seeger v. Seeger, 125 So. 732, 169 La. 611, 1929 La. LEXIS 2029 (La. 1929).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

This proceeding constitutes one phase of an apparently interminable litigation among the three daughters of the late Gustave Seeger and the late Mrs. Henrietta Seeger, his wife. The three daughters are Mrs. Doretta Bickmann, Mrs. Marie Man-zella, and Mrs. Henrietta Carbajal. G-ustave Seeger died intestate in the year 1922. A little over three years thereafter his widow, Mrs. Henrietta Seeger, died testate. The will of Mrs. Seeger was probated and Mrs. Manzella qualified as testamentary executrix. The heirs immediately became involved in litigation over the bequests made by the tes: tatrix to Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella, the bequests being attacked by Mrs. Carbajal as being null. These legal proceedings engendered considerable ill-feeling among the parties litigant.

Subsequently, the parties, evidently wearying of the litigation and desiring to obtain their respective shares of the property inherited by them in indivisión, entered into two written agreements. These agreements provided for a settlement by compromise of the disputed legacies, and stipulated that Mrs. Manzella would withdraw as testamentary executrix; that the three heirs would be placed in possession of the succession property, which was to be promptly sold at public auction to effect a partition among them. An auctioneer was selected to make the sale, and a notary was designated 'to make the partition. It was further provided that the notary, in lieu of the legacies, was to pay to the legatees certain agreed amounts “out of the proceeds of the sale of all properties of the estate” and “out of the mass of this estate.”

In pursuance of the agreements, all the property of the succession, consisting of real estate, was sold at public auction for a total price of, approximately, $2,500,009. The first piece of real estate sold was a large tract of land fronting on Gentilly Road, and commonly known as the “Gus Seeger Orange Grove.” This particular piece of property was adjudicated to Charles A. Tessier, Jr., for the sum of $1,437,690. Thereafter Mrs. Carbajal bid for and was adjudicated four parcels at a total price of $763,000, and Mrs. Manzella bid for and was adjudicated two parcels for a total price of $19,600.

Since the proceeding was one in partition, both Mrs. Carbajal and Mrs. Manzella declined to put up the 10 per cent, deposit called for in the advertisement of sale, claiming the right under the codal articles to settle for ■their respective purchases in the partition of the proceeds of the sales, by taking less or by having the amount of their purchases charged against them in the adjustment inter sese of the rights of the heirs before the notary selected for the purpose.

While the title to the “Orange Grove” tract was being examined, the three co-owners appeared before the notary designated and executed acts of sale, conveying certain pieces of real estate to various adjudicatees. Two of these acts of sale were signed by Mrs. Bick-mann and Mrs. Carbajal, and purported to ■transfer for cash the two-thirds interest of the vendors in the property described to Mrs. Manzella. Four of the acts of sale were signed by Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella, and purported to transfer in three of the instruments for cásh and-in the other instrument for part cash and part credit, represented by a vendor’s lien note for $300,000, the two-thirds interest of the vendors in the property described to Mrs. Carbajal. It appears, however, that no cash was actually paid at the execution of the deeds, and the *615 vendor’s lien note was delivered to the notary, who addressed a letter to Mrs. Bick-mann and Mrs. Manzella, setting forth that he held the note for account of the heirs until the final settlement should be had among them, with the understanding that Mrs. Car-bajal owed an amount above her interest in the succession, which balance was to be accounted for as soon as the Gentilly tract was transferred to the purchaser. Subsequently the notary surrendered the vendor’s lien note to the husband of Mrs. Carbajal, who executed ¿nd delivered to him in lieu thereof a counter letter, complete in form, signed by him for account of his wife.

In this situation, as stated by the trial judge, “the parties were met, to their- astonishment and dismay, with the refusal of Mr. Tessier to accept title to the 479 acres, which he had purchased, on the ground that the sale was by the acre and the difference In acreage was in excess of that permitted by law.”

Mrs. Carbajal, acting on the advice of her' husband, who is a lawyer, insisted that there was no force in the objection of Mr. Tessier, and that in a suit for specific performance he could and would be made to take title and pay the purchase price. Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella, however, refused to join Mrs. Carbajal in such a suit, and, over her protest, privately sold their two-thirds interest in the tract of land to a corporation designated by Mr. Tessier to take title, and of which he was the president. Mr. Tessier joined in the sale and assigned to the corporation in question the adjudication to him to the extent of the two-thirds interest therein of Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella.

Mrs. Carbajal -then sued Mr. Tessier to enforce specific performance, and, pending this litigation, Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Man-zella sued Mrs. Carbajal, upon allegations justifying, if true, the annulment of the sales made by them to Mrs. Carbajal, although the relief they sought was the payment of the purchase price. Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella, the plaintiffs in the suit, refused to elect, upon being called upon to do so, which of their inconsistent demands they would stand on, and the court below thereupon maintained an exception of no cause of action and rejected their demands in toto. On appeal, this court annulled the judgment and dismissed the suit as in case of nonsuit Bickmann v. Carbajal, 166 La. 618, 117 So. 73S.

The present suit was filed by Mrs. Bick-mann against Mrs. Carbajal and Mrs. Man-zella pending the appeal and was held in abeyance until, a decision was rendered thereon. After the decree of this court became final, this suit was tried and decided.

The suit is one to enforce specific performance of the partition agreement. Mrs. Man-zella, although impleaded as a defendant, joined Mrs. Bickmann, the plaintiff, in her demand against Mrs. Carbajal. By way of defense, Mrs. Carbajal set up that Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella had breached the agreement, thus rendering specific performance impossible. Mrs. Carbajal denied, in her answer, that she wás claiming ownership of the property, and, at the inception of the trial, filed, apparently as a supplement to her answer, certified copies of two notarial acts in which she had appeared a few days prior thereto and expressly disclaimed such ownership and authorized the cancellation from the conveyance records of the inscription of the purported sales.

The court below annulled, on the ground of simulation, the purported sales made by Mrs. Bickmann and Mrs. Manzella to Mrs. Carbajal, but rejected in all other respects the demands of Mrs. Bickmann. The costs *617 of the proceedings were assessed against Mrs. Carbajal. Mrs. Bickmann, the plaintiff, and Mrs. Manzella, a nominal defendant, have appealed from the judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 So. 732, 169 La. 611, 1929 La. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeger-v-seeger-la-1929.