Sicard v. Schwab

36 So. 500, 112 La. 475, 1904 La. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 29, 1904
DocketNo. 14,887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 So. 500 (Sicard v. Schwab) 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
Sicard v. Schwab, 36 So. 500, 112 La. 475, 1904 La. LEXIS 420 (La. 1904).

Opinion

BREAUX, J.

Plaintiffs claim to be owners of an undivided six-sevenths of certain lands described in their petition.

The land was acquired by F. M. Sicard, father of plaintiffs, on the 30th day of June, 1856.

It was owned by him at the date of his death on the 20th day of February, 1885. His widow went into possession of this property (after her husband’s death) as widow in community, and as usufructuary of his interest in the property, and remained in possession to the date of her death. The succession of the father was never opened for settlement. Plaintiffs, in the proportion of six-sevenths, and Mrs. Schwab, defendant’s wife, of one-seventh, fell heirs to the whole property after the death of their mother.

The property had been sold for taxes assessed in the name of F. M. Sicard. In due time the purchasers at this tax sale were paid, and signed a deed in which it was declared that the property was returned to the possession of Mrs. Sicard, plaintiff’s mother. The defendant Nicholas Schwab acted as the agent of his mother-in-law in redeeming the property which had been sold for taxes.

After the death of the mother of plaintiffs and of Mrs. Schwab, the property was all inventoried in her succession, and no mention was made of the father as owner of one-half of the property.

[477]*477Aaron Baum became the administrator of the succession. On his application an order was obtained, after notice had been given to the heirs, to sell the property to pay debts.

The property was sold a,t public auction, and at this sale Nicholas Schwab became the adjudicatee. Not only the half formerly owned by Mrs. Sicard was sold at this sale, but also the half of the late Mr. Sicard. As relates to the latter half of Mr. Sicard, his ownership was passed over without any mention whatever, and it was sold as if it had been owned by the late Mrs. Sicard in her own right.

Some time after the sale, Baum, administrator, filed a final account, which was advertised, and in due time it was approved by a judgment of the court, and the administrator was discharged, and his bond canceled.

Plaintiffs have, in general terms, attacked the proceedings in matter of the settlement of the succession of Mrs. Sicard. They aver that they are null; that the sale did not divest them of their ownership; that Mrs. Sicard never owned over one undivided half of the property; that the interest of their father, IP. M. Sicard, could not pass to defendant Schwab in proceedings instituted to settle the succession of their mother.

Plaintiffs charge that, even if the succession proceedings had been regular, and the sale legal, the adjudication was null by reason of the fact that Nicholas Schwab, adjudicatee, prevented persons from bidding on the property when it was offered for sale.

Defendants, in their defense, contend that plaintiffs’ petition disclosed no cause of action; that the judicial proceedings could not be collaterally attacked; and pleaded want of tender of the purchase price, and also pleaded the prescription of five, and ten years. This exception was overruled, save the plea of prescription, which was maintained to the extent that the property of the late Mrs. Sicard was involved, and this plea, as relates to the half of the late F. M. Sicard, was referred to the merits.

On the merits the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs to the extent of their interest as heirs in succession of their father, which is six-fourteenths of the whole property, and condemned defendants to pay rent for timber taken off the land. The court rendered judgment in favor of defendant for a portion of the amount sued for in his re-conventional demand. '

Defendant appeals, and plaintiffs filed an answer to the appeal, and asked for judgment recognizing them as owners of the whole property, and for an increase of the amount allowed in his reconventional demand.

We take up,, in the first place, for decision, the claim of plaintiffs to the portion of the land in question inherited from their mother, Mrs. Sicard.

The sale as to this half is valid.

With reference to defendant’s plea of prescription as to Mrs. Sicard’s interest, the said half, we think it should be sustained.

Five years in matter of sale of property as probate sale covers a multitude of informalities. These here, although great, are formalities, and, as such, fall within the grasp of that prescription.

There was a decree ordering the sale. A probate sale was made to pay debts. An accounting was given, and the administrator discharged. The court had jurisdiction, and the proceedings were brought home to the heirs by .sufficient notice, considering the number of years which have elapsed since the sale.

The sale as to the remaining half is null for the following reasons:

The administrator’s account as administrator of the succession of Mrs. Sicard shows that the creditors were creditors of her succession, and not of the succession of P. M. Sicard.

They, as creditors, and the administrator, who was primarily their representative, were [479]*479without right to bring about the sale of the succession property of Mr. Sicard, deceased, to pay the debts of the late Mrs. Sicard. No proceedings could thus divest plaintiffs of their half of their father’s succession.

It was the sale of the property of another than that of the one whose succession was in course of settlement, and therefore null.

The sale of a thing belonging to another is null. It does not operate as a transfer of the property to the prejudice of the owner. The purchaser cannot be-considered in good faith. He knew to whom the property belonged.

The sale of property of another is null. 24 Laurent, No. 100 et seq.

This court has said:

“It does not seem to us that the purchasers of the property in dispute can, under any circumstances, have acquired any greater right or any better title to it than their vendor herself had. She was only the owner of one undivided fourth of the lots, and she could not validly transfer to them any part thereof beyond her said fourth. Toullier, vol. 7, No. 31, says: ‘Quant aux actes d’aliénation, de constitution d’hypothSque, de servitudes, etc., faits par le propriétaire apparent, ils ne nuisent point au vrai propristaire reintegré dans ses droits; ils sont résolus, ils s’6vanouissent avec le droit de celui que les a faits, et qui n’a pu transferer & autrui plus de droits qu’il n’en avait lui m@me.’ * * * We agree with Toullier, loco citato, that all that the law has done in favor of a purchaser in good faith is to give him the benefit of the prescription .of ten and twenty years, though the property so pm-chased may belong to another person. Oiv. Code, arts. 3442, 3450, and 3451. ‘Hors ce cas,’ says Toullier, vol. 4, No. 288, ‘la bonne foi de l’acquéreur doit ceder au droit de propriété du parent plus proche, du cohéritier, du légataire, &c.’ Thus we conclude that Teresa Moriña, in selling the real property of the succession to her codefendants, has transferred to them no title beyond her fourth undivided portion.” Balot y Ripoll v. Moriña and Others, 12 Rob. 560.

The same rule governs when the property of a third person is sold by a succession without right. Beckham v. Henderson, 23 La. Ann. 446; French v. Bach et al., 26 La. Ann. 731; Manning’s Unreported Cases, 333.

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Bluebook (online)
36 So. 500, 112 La. 475, 1904 La. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sicard-v-schwab-la-1904.