Succession of Pena

173 So. 310, 186 La. 771
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 1, 1937
DocketNo. 34171.
StatusPublished

This text of 173 So. 310 (Succession of Pena) 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 Pena, 173 So. 310, 186 La. 771 (La. 1937).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The succession of Manuel Gutierrez Pena was opened in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, in January, 1929, when Manuel E. Gutierrez, a son of the deceased, was appointed and qualified as administrator. The other survivors of the deceased were the widow, and a son named Norwin H. Gutierrez, and three daughters. On the 16th day of September, 1936, Manuel E. Gutierrez, administrator, filed his final account, on which he charged Nor-win H. Gutierrez with the sum of $15,-000, which the administrator said he had advanced to Norwin H. Gutierrez in cash and securities, and which, the administrator said, exceeded the value of the interest of Norwin H. Gutierrez in the succession. *773 The administrator, therefore, in his petition to have his account homologated, proposed to leave out Norwin H. Gutierrez, in the distribution of the estate, and to deliver one-half of the estate to his mother as owner, and one-half to her as usufructuary, and to recognize himself and his three sisters to be the owners of the half of the estate subject to the usufruct in favor of their mother. Norwin H. Gutierrez gave his approval of the final account of the administrator, and of the proposed distribution of the estate. Notice of the filing of the account was duly published, and on the 29th day of September, 1936, the account was homologated by a judgment of court. On the next day, the widow and the son, Manuel, and the three daughters, of the deceased, petitioned the judge to render a decree in conformity with the suggestion of the administrator, sending the widow into possession of one-half of the estate as owner and of the other half as usufructuary, and declaring Manuel E. Gutierrez and his three sisters to be the owners of the half of the estate subject to the usufruct in favor of their mother. Norwin H. Gutierrez gave his approval of the petition, and an ex parte judgment was rendered as prayed for, on the same day on which the petition was filed.

Meanwhile, that is, on the 24th day of May, 1934, Dalton J. Barranger obtained a judgment against Norwin H. Gutierrez, on a promissory note, for $10,590.17, plus interest at 6 per cent, per annum from May 1, 1931, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fee; and, on the 19th day of September, 1934, Barranger obtained a writ of fieri facias, under which the sheriff seized the right, title, and interest of Norwin H. Gutierrez in the succession of his father, to satisfy Barranger’s judgment. Barranger, therefore, on the 10th day of October, 1936, took a suspensive appeal from the judgment homologating the account of the administrator, and took a suspensive appeal also from the judgment declaring the widow and her son, Manuel, and her three daughters, to be the exclusive owners of the estate of Manuel Gutierrez Pena, and sending them into possession of the estate, to the exclusion of Norwin H. Gutierrez. The widow and her son, Manuel, and her three daughters, have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, on several grounds, viz.: (1) That Barranger has no interest in the matter that was decided, and hence cannot be aggrieved by either of the judgments appealed from; (2) that Barranger was informed by judicial proceedings more than a year before the judgments appealed from were rendered, and made no denial and tendered no issue as to the truth of the information, that Norwin H. Gutierrez had no interest in the succession of his father; (3) that there is no showing in the record that either of the judgments appealed from is erroneous, as between the parties to the proceeding, or that Barranger is aggrieved by either of the judgments; and (4) that it is obvious from the appellant’s petition of appeal that he intends to refer to and rely upon evidence which is not before the court, and which is not admitted to exist.

The appellees, in their briefs, subdivide the first ground for asking for a dismissal of the appeals into two propositions: First, they contend that the record shows that Norwin H. Gutierrez had no interest in the *775 succession of his father when Barranger’s judgment against him was rendered; and, second, they contend that, even if Norwin H. Gutierrez had an interest in the estate, Barranger did not hold Norwin H. Gutierrez’s interest in the estate under a valid seizure. The first of these contentions presents an issue which must be determined after a hearing of the appeal on its merits. It would be begging the question for an appellate court to dismiss an appeal, instead of affirming the judgment appealed from, on the ground that the judgment is correct, or is supported by the law and the evidence.

The third and the fourth grounds for the motion to dismiss this appeal are, in effect, repetitions of the proposition that the judgments appealed from are sustained by the evidence in the record, and are therefore correct, as far as Norwin H. Gutierrez is concerned. It does not appear to us that the appellant, Barranger, intends to rely upon evidence not in the record. On the contrary, he contends that the judgments appealed from, which exclude Nor-win H. Gutierrez from a share in the estate of his father, are not sustained by the evidence in the record. If that is the case, Barranger is aggrieved by the judgments ; hence he has the right to prosecute an appeal from the judgments. The amount of Barranger’s judgment against Norwin IT. Gutierrez, with the accrued interest and the attorney’s fee, at the time when the judgments which Barranger appealed from were rendered, exceeded the sum of $15,-000. Barranger, therefore, is very much concerned with the question whether Manuel E. Gutierrez, administrator, advanced to Norwin IT. Gutierrez $15,000, more than his interest in the succession of his father, before the sheriff levied the seizure upon the interest of Norwin H. Gutierrez.

Article 571 of the Code of Practice declares that the right of appeal is given not only to the parties to the proceeding in which the judgment is rendered, but also to any person, .not a party to the proceeding, who is aggrieved by the judgment. In the Succession of Bothick, 110 La. 109, 34 So. 163, 164, it was held that, under article 571 of the Code of Practice, one, Mrs. Hodding, had the right to appeal from two judgments rendered in relation to the settlement and partition of the estate of the deceased, Thomas W. Bothick, because Mrs. Hodding had obtained a judgment against the three sisters and heirs of Bothick’s widow, who had inherited an interest in his estate, and because Mrs. Hod-ding had seized the interest of the three sisters and of the widow of Bothick, in his estate. In overruling a motion to dismiss Mrs. Hodding’s appeal from the two judgments rendered in the Succession of Bothick, the court said:

“The present appeal of Mrs. Hodding is not from any decree directly determinative of her rights in the matter of her judgment against the sisters and heirs of Olivia T. Bothick [widow of Thomas W. Bothick], and the seizure made thereunder; but is from decrees relating to the settlement and partition of the succession of Thos. W. Bothick among his heirs, which decrees, if permitted to stand, will disastrously affect the proceedings taken by her to execute the said judgment [against *777 the three sisters and heirs of the widow of Bothick].

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Bluebook (online)
173 So. 310, 186 La. 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-pena-la-1937.