Succession of Rabasse

25 So. 326, 51 La. Ann. 590, 1899 La. LEXIS 438
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 23, 1899
DocketNo. 12,928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 25 So. 326 (Succession of Rabasse) 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 Rabasse, 25 So. 326, 51 La. Ann. 590, 1899 La. LEXIS 438 (La. 1899).

Opinion

'The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

The collateral heirs of the deceased, opposed the final account filed by the testamentary executor on several grounds, and, on the trial of the oppositions, the district judge approved and homologated same, after having modified it in a few minor particulars; and from that judgment, the opponents have appealed — the executor having acquiesced in the amendments and modifications made.

As many of the items of the oppositions have been withdrawn, and only a few of them are now insisted upon, attention will be directed to those only.

The approximate amount of the estimated value of the estate as it is exhibited by the original inventory, is one hundred and fourteen thousand dollars ($114,000), and it is upon that basis that the discussion must primarily proceed, notwithstanding the opponent’s counsel contend that the appraisements were excessive and inflated, and in consequence thereof the amount charged for attorney’s fees is likewise excessive, and ought to be greatly reduced.

Counsel say in their brief, “if the items of the account are to remain, then we have the following charges of administration, viz.:

“Commission, Executor ....................>............$ 2,855.40

Charbonnet, Notary ................................... 550.00

Appraisers........................................... 325.00

Clerk Terrebonne ..................................... 50.00

DePoorter, Attorney ................................... 650.00

Auctioneer........................................... 2,129.37

Chretien & Suthon ..................................... 200.00

Buisson, Attorney, absent heirs.................••....... 350.00

Commission on rents................................... 170.00

Costs of Court........................................ 200.00

Stenographer ........................................ 400.00

Experts ......................................'....... 275.00

• Chiapella’s briefs...................................... 272.00

Attorney for Succession ............................... 11,421.63

Charbonnet, Notary ................................... 339.00

Keepers of Seals...................................... 100.00

Appraisers........................................... 50.00

Surety’s Commission ......................■............ 1,200.00

Total $21,527.40

[592]*592“Equal to almost one-third of the total value of the property abandoned to the lieirs.”

The following is the list of items which are opposed, and with regard to which we are called upon to pass judgment, viz.:

1. The Executor’s commission.

2. A charge he made against the succession, which he agreed to pay to a third party for procuring him a bond or for signing his bond.

8. The auctioneer’s commission and lrs charges for advertisement.

4 Penalties on laxes paid by Ihe Executor, and

5. Fees charged by the attorney of the succession.

We will take them up and dispose of them seriatim, in the order stated above.

I.

The item of executor’s commissions of two and one-half per cent on the amount of the inventory, is disposed of by the following statement in the principal brief of opponent’s counsel, viz.:

“We have to submit to the executor’s commission of two and onelialf per cent upon the amount of the inventories, one hundred and fourteen thousand dollars, say two thousand, eight hundred and fifty-five dollars.”

This confession closes the controversy, in so far as that question is concerned, and leaves the account in statu quo, pro hac.

II.

With regard to the commissions of two and one-half per cent which the auctioneer charged, counsel for the opponents make the statement, that same was made upon each separate adjudication, as a distinct and separate sale, and that the judge a quo allowed them — only reducing the rate from two and one-half to two per cent.

We extract the following from the brief of opponent’s counsel, viz.:

“The commission allowed by the lower court in bills A and C, the sales being below ten thousand dollars, is correctly fixed at two per cent. But as regards bill B the sales aggregating twenty-five-thousand and thirty dollars, should be reduced as follows:

[593]*593Two per cent, on $10,000 ............................. 200.00

One per cent on $15,030 ............................. 150.30

350.00-

The auctioneer charged .............................. 625.75-

An overcharge of..................................... 275.45.”

And the following is an extract from the opinion of the judge a quo) on this subject, viz.:

“The heirs oppose the auctioneer’s commission. Act 104 of 1896', provides the tariff of charges at two per cent on the first ten thousand, dollars, and one per cent on the excess. There is much in the rule settled in Van Hogan Succn., 42 An. 620, to support the claims of the auctioneer for two and one-half per cent, as virtually consented to by some of the heirs, and acquiesced in by all, in the matter of some of" the sales accounted for in a former account.

“But, as there was no express agreement by all, I fix the rute established by the set of 1894.

“I think the auction-eer is entitled to two per cent, on each adjudica- ■ tion made by him, none of them reaching ten thousand dollars.

“There were some twenty properties sold, situated, some in this city, - but most of them in the country. There were about twenty separate' adjudications to as many different purchasers; almost to each purchaser, there was a separate adjudication, a separate act of sale, a separate price paid, and for each adjudication the delay for a separate title examination.

‘“All the properties were not sold on the same day, or at the same lime.

“There was all the trouble of obtaining exact information as to each property, and its derivative title.

“They were separate sales.

“That some of them may have been grouped under one advertisement, with a separate item of description, as to each, does not make of all the adjudications one adjudication.

“As none of them exceeded ten thousand dollars, the law gives the auctioneer his two per cent on each adjudication.

“Suppose two-thirds of the appraised value was required to effect' the sale, and such was and is the law; and suppose that some of the-properties brought more than two-thirds, and some of them less than-[594]*594two-thirds of the appraised value, aud that combining all the prices an average of iwo-ihirds had been realized, it seems to me, that there would be a legal adjudication of such properties

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Bluebook (online)
25 So. 326, 51 La. Ann. 590, 1899 La. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-rabasse-la-1899.