Succession of Devereux

13 La. Ann. 33
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 13 La. Ann. 33 (Succession of Devereux) 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 Devereux, 13 La. Ann. 33 (La. 1858).

Opinion

Merrick, C. J.

The partition made on the 10th-day of July, 1852, cannot be disturbed in this proceeding on account of the causes alleged.

In 1843, Mao-tin H. Devereux applied to the Probate Court to be confirmed as tutor to his minor daughter, the present opponent'in this case. In 1845, he rendered his tutor’s account in the same court, contradictorily with the under-tutor, wherein he showed a balance due his daughter from her deceased mother’s estate and the community of $17,370 57. This account was homologated November 14th, 1845.

Devereux having contracted a second marriage, died in 1851, leaving two minor children by such second marriage. His second wife also survived him, George Allen was appointed his testamentary executor.

The opponent arrived at the age of majority on the 6th day of January, 1852.

The executor, in May, 1852, on presenting his final account wherein he had set forth the indebtedness of the estate to the opponent and the amount coming to her, the widow and minor heirs, proposed a plan of distribution or division, and in order to facilitate the payment of opponent and to effect a partition between the' parties, and avoid a sale, prayed that the heirs be notified of the filing of the account and alleged that a family meeting would be called to deliberate, and prayed that petitioner be discharged. In this account he placed the opponent’s claim against her father’s succession a£ the same sum as mentioned by her father in his account, .and added thereto her share of the residue of his estate after making deduction of her debt. - The account (which had been shown to her and explained previous to -its being filed) was duly notified to her after the same was filed, and she expressly approved of the proposed giving in pcnjment and partition on the basis set forth in the account on the 16th day of June, and" it was homologated on the 19th day of June, 1852.

The family meeting was convoked and was assisted by experts who appraised the property proposed to be set apart to pay opponent her debt and allot to her her portion of the estate to bo divided, and also the portions proposed by the executor to be set off to the widow and the minor heirs. The family meeting advised that the proposed partition and' giving in payment should be carried into effect, and recommended that the samo be done as soon as practicable. The under-tutor concurring, the Judge homologated the deliberations of the family meeting and ordered “ a final settlement and partition among the widow and heirs of the late Martin II. Devereux, as well of the community as of the separate property belonging to the succession of the deceased, and [34]*34tho payment of the debts and legacies of the succession, by giving in payment, sotting apart and conveying certain property equivalent in value to tho claims and rights of the respective parties against and in the succession of tho deceased, (be) made before H. B. Cenas, Notary Public of this city, in accordance with the account herein of the testamentary executor and of the advico of the family meeting.” This decree was signed July 7th, 1852.

On the tenth day of tho same month, the partition took place, and precisely the same property was set off to the opponent in payment of her claim against her father’s estate, as well as her interest in it as was proposed by the executor and recommended by the family meeting and ordered by the Judge. And in like manner was the property set apart to the widow and the minor heirs.

The opponent was a party to the act of partition and signed the same with the widow and tutrix, the experts, the notary and the witnesses.

One clause of the act reads thus: “ And the said Miss Manp Han't Devereux (i. e. the opponent) and Mrs. Mary C. Dev&reux do by these presents transfer, convey, assign and set over unto the said minors Anna M. Devereux and Catherine Devereux all their right, title and interest in and to the property hei’ein allotted and given in payment to the said minors.”

The widow and under-tutor in like manner recognize the rights of the opponent, and all parties acknowledge the receipt from the executor and possession of the property “set apart, conveyed and given in payment of their respectivo claims and rights against and in ” the succession.

The opponent as well as the widow and heirs have been in the possession and enjoyment of their respective portions ever since.

The act of partition not having been homologated by the decree of tho court, the opponent filed an opposition to the partition on the 19th day of January, 1856, which was amended in May of the same year, and citation served upon the widow individually and as tutrix the 28th day of May.

As to so much of the opposition as attacks the tutor’s account and the judgment homologating the same, the Judge of the Fifth District Court correctly decided that he had no jurisdiction.

The question, therefore, to be decided by this court, is whether or not the partition signed by the opponent is binding upon her ?

It is contended that the partition is informal because special tutors were not appointed to represent the two minors as required by Article 1291 of the Civil Code, and because the allotment of the shares to the minors was made conjointly.

At the time the opponent signed the act of partition, she was of full ago, and the instrument required no homologation to make it obligatory upon her-It was an act which, if all the parties had been majors, would not have required the decree of the Judge to give it validity as to any one. The decree of the Judge was only required to bind the minors. The widow and major heirs had the right, if they had so chosen, to withhold their signatures and approbation from the act. If they had done so, they would have been at liberty at any time before ratifying it by taking possession of the property, to oppose tho partition and show irregularities in it. But' having approved the act, having conveyed to the minors the interests allotted them by the act, they are in the condition of parties who have voluntarily confessed judgment. They cannot afterwards be permitted to attack the proceedings for want of form at least. O. C. 1785,'1438. All that they now can do, is to present the partition for [35]*35homologation and cito the proper parties who hayo the right to oppose the same, and if the appellee shall deem the advice of a family meeting necessary to confirm the act of partition, she has the right to pall such family meeting. O. O. 1788.

Those views have been repeatedly recognized by our predecessors.

In the case of Coocey's Heirs v. Claris, 7 L. R. 160, it is said: “The principal objections to it (the partition) are its informalities in the proceedings and want of homologation in due time. It is true that the proceedings did not appear to be clothed with all the formalities which probably are required by law to give absolute and conclusive effect to them as a final partition.' It was made in judicial form between co-heirs, some of whom were minors represented by their mother and tutrix, and if the property really belonged to the estate of their father, the partition gave to each heir a separate title to the property by him partaken, good and valid until annulled or changed by the application of those interested in the succession. See La. Code, Arts. 1219 and 1438.”

In the case of Dufau et al. v. Latour et al., 8 L. R.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 La. Ann. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-devereux-la-1858.