Shields v. Lafon

7 La. Ann. 135
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 La. Ann. 135 (Shields v. Lafon) 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
Shields v. Lafon, 7 La. Ann. 135 (La. 1852).

Opinion

By the court:

Rost, J.

During the existence of the community between the plaintiffs’ father and mother, their father purchased from Francis Nephler, several lots and the improvements thereon, for the pribe of'$4Ú48, for which the purchaser gave his four prommissory notes of $1012 each, secured by mortgage, and payable respectively in 1, 2, 3 and 4 years, froni the 9th day of J anuary, 1830.

The plaintiffs’ mother died in 1833. No steps were taken to open or settle her succession, and on the 17th April, 1834, their father having disposed of some of the lots and accounted for the proceeds thereof to Nephler, and the remaining lots being still entirely unpaid, he went befpre a notary, and, in consideration of the notes he had given, and of the interest which had accrued upon them, made to his vendor, who accepted it, a retrocession of the property. The defendant holds the lot in controversy under this retrocession.

The plaintiffs, in right of their mothef, set up title to one undivided half of the lot, on the ground that the title vested in them at the death of their mother, and that they have never been legally divested of it.

It is in evidence that, at the death of the wife, the community owed many debts, and the plaintiffs have failed to show property to a sufficient amount to satisfy them. This forces upon us the conclusion, that the retrocession to Nephler was not a voluntary act, but was made ex causa necessaria, and on account of the utter inability of the commuuity to pay the price. Under the rule laid down in the case of Chretien v. Richardson, such a retrocession, when made between proper parties, has all the effects of a judgment decreeing a resolution of the sale for the non-payment of the price. 6th Ann. 2.

The property in this case would have returned to Nephler free from any mortgage or claim of the wife, if the retrocession had been made in her life time, the retrocession being inevitable if the vendor required it. The plaintiffs sustained no injury in consequence of the form in which it was made. If the father had been confirmed as natural tutor, and had made it, in that capacity, for the minor’s share, with a view to avoid the expense of litigation, we would undoubtedly have sustained it as an advantageous compromise, involving no [136]*136alienation of the minor’s property. And as he who, without being a tutor, undertakes to manage the property of minors, subjects himqelf to all the liabilities of the tutorship, there seems to be no reason why acts done by him while thus acting, of which the minors have derived the full benefit, should not also be binding upon them, when third persons have acquired rights under those acts ; however this may be, the plaintiffs have not tendered the price of the land, and the interest due on it, up to the day of the retrocession. This is sufficient to defeat their claim.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

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Related

Ward v. Hayes-Ewell Co.
120 So. 585 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1929)
Simpson v. Bulkley
73 So. 691 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
7 La. Ann. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-lafon-la-1852.