Succession of Birba

19 So. 575, 48 La. Ann. 655, 1896 La. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 12, 1896
DocketNo. 11,872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 So. 575 (Succession of Birba) 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
Succession of Birba, 19 So. 575, 48 La. Ann. 655, 1896 La. LEXIS 476 (La. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

The succession of Peter Birba was opened and James Birba, his only heir, qualified as administrator.

After the property of the succession had been sold the administrator filed an account. The account is opposed by a number of creditors.

The opponent, Angelina Barti, avers that the fee of the attorney for the administrator should be reduced to three hundred dollars and claims three thousand and ten dollars as an ordinary creditor 'and thirteen dollars and eighty-five cents as privileged creditor.

E. Carreras and others also oppose the account, claiming as creditors-and opposing certain items of indebtedness carried on the account.

After trial the plea of prescription entered against Miss Barti was overruled and she was placed on the account as a creditor in the sum of three thousand and ten dollars.

The opposition of F. Orfilla and others was sustained in so far as to place them on the account as creditors in the sum of seven hundred and eight dollars, and the opposition of E. Carreras was sustained in so far as to place him upon the account as a creditor in the full sum of seven hudred and ninety two dollars.

The fee of the attorney was reduced to the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars.

The account was homologated as amended.

The administrator appeals from the judgment.

The opponent, Miss Birba, was a wage earner during many years, [657]*657and in addition to her wages, she, part of the time, collected rent on property she owned.

The evidence shows that she worked at different places for good wages; that she was always strictly economical.

The following is a copy of her account:

Debits 1. During the year 1888. $300

2. February 10, 1890. 406

3. February 10, 1891... 434

4. April 2,1891. 1000

5. February 2, 1892... 160

6. January 1 or 5,1893 . 940

7. January 31, 1893... 200

Total . $3440

Credits, January 9, 1890-1893, paid by Mr. LeBreton. $400

Balance due. $3040

A witness, entirely reputable, testifies that in 1898 Peter Birba said to him that opponent entrusted all her money to him, and that he felt bound to look after and protect her interest; he then had thirty-two hundred dollars to her credit, subject to a credit of four hundred dollars.

This credit appears on the account. The witnesses and the facts and circumstances, taken as a whole, sustain the correctness of this account. The contradictory statements of witnesses touching points, not material, in regard to this account, are not of such a character as to defeat the claim. Something was said, for instance, about her signing notes and other documents. While as a witness she testified that she could not read and write. No question was raised in this regard and no explanation sought. It was a matter of no importance, in the case, and was only an incidental statement of the witness which probably could have been explained. The other statements charged by the administrator with being contradictory and improbable are not any more damaging to the claim, and do not have any bearing upon the question at issue; while the claim itself is amply sustained by evidence worthy of weight.

While this witness was testifying that an amount claimed,was due in answer to a question, counsel for administrator objected.

Counsel for administrator objects to counsel reading from a memorandum not made by the witness.”

The court overruled the objection, and the administrator had a note made in the note of evidence in lieu of a bill.

The objections are general in character. The bill is not sufficiently [658]*658full and certain; the supposed error is not pointed out in the manner required to disclose the objectionable ruling.

We are not informed that the counsel by reading intended to prompt the witness in answering, or that the memorandum related to any fact in regard.to which the witness was testifying.

In Warner vs. Clark & Co., 45 An. 863, 870, this court directed attention to the importance of clearly and specifically pointing out the asserted error. Under the rule supported by that case we do not think we would be justified in remanding this ease for another trial. There is less reason' for excluding the answer of a witness entirely negative in character. If excluded it would not affect the issues of the case in any particular. It is entirely negative.

The debtor was an agent, and he received these different amounts as deposits in his hands for account of his principal. It was not an account, as generally understood between creditor and debtor, and subject to the prescription of three years; it was a personal claim founded upon the obligation under which the agent was placed of returning the amount received, to his principal. The personal action is subject only to the prescription of ten years. It is not subject to the prescription of three years pleaded.

The fee of the attorney for the succession was reduced by the District Judge.

We do not understand that further reduction is claimed.

The fee was reduced to an amount which we think is entirely reasonable and proper. There were a number of oppositions filed, and the estate was in such a condition as to render the services of importance and of value equal to the amount charged.

This brings us to the oppositions filed by a number of opponents, in which it is charged that the late Peter Birba forged the name of E. Carreras to various checks, and collected them from the People’s Bank.

They pray for judgment against the succession of Birba for sums collected by Birba on these forged checks.

The administrator urges that the court erred in setting aside an order dismissing these oppositions, and reinstating these oppositions.

The administrator, through counsel, prayed oyer of the checks alleged to have been forged; the order of the court to produce checks not having been obeyed, the oppositions were dismissed, and subsequently these oppositions were reinstated as just stated.

[659]*659Whatever merit there may have been in the objection, it can not avail the administrator, for the reason that no exception was taken to the court’s action, and no attempt of any sort to obtain from the court an order rescinding the reinstatement of these oppositions.

The point was not contested below and the trial was proceeded with without objection. A ground of exception waived in the District Oourt can not be revived here.

Granted for a moment that the foregoing are not reasons sufficient, it remains that the litigant who desires to have a point of law reviewed on appeal must see that the facts upon which the point is based are made evident by the record; thus, if oyer is granted by the court’s order, of alleged forged checks, and it does not appear that the time had elapsed within which they were ordered to be produced, the court will not hold that the evidence of the alleged forgery, in so far as relates to the checks, must be excluded and enter up a judgment for the amount of checks alleged forged.

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Bluebook (online)
19 So. 575, 48 La. Ann. 655, 1896 La. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-birba-la-1896.