Succession of Widow Tureaud v. Gex

21 La. Ann. 253
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1869
DocketNo. 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 La. Ann. 253 (Succession of Widow Tureaud v. Gex) 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 Widow Tureaud v. Gex, 21 La. Ann. 253 (La. 1869).

Opinion

Howell, J.

At tlie partition suit of tlie heirs of age, the District Judge ordered all the property (being immovable) of the succession, of the widow A. D. Tureaud, declared to he held in common by the legal heirs, to be sold in block, which brought $100,000 payable.according to the decree, $40,000 cash, and..the balance in three equal installments,, egcli payment divided into as many, notes as the administrator■ required for the purpose of making, a partition., thereof among the heirs. After the sale the administrator, one of the heirs, filed a final account of his administration, showing ajbalap.ee in. cash of $33,000, and notes amounting to $60,000 in his hands for. partition among the heirs, of which he made and -filed along w-ith. the- above account, what he termed a 4-tableau of partition,” allotting a sum of $18,600 to each heir, and he prayed that public notice of’ the filing of both, with his prayer for discharge he given ; that the heirs he severally cited, that after due proceedings the account and tableau ” he homologated; that he he authorized to settle with the heirs and all concerned agreeably thereto, and that upon filing evidence pf settlement with the, said heirs and all concerned, he he discharged.

The homologation • of said account and tableau was opposed 'by L. Gex, administrator of R. Many,, deceased, a.creditor by judgment duly recorded, of Emile Tureaud, one .of the said heirs, on the ground that the. recording of liis said, j udgmeiit, against, said Emile, Tureaud, prior to the saje for partition., operated- as, a judicial mortgage on all the property, of the said, debtor, and. entitled, him to be paid the amount thereof out of, the, portion accruing to-the latter; and. he prayed that the administrator, of the succession of widow Ture.aud h.e condemned to pay the amount of said judgment, interest and,costs accordingly.

Tlie administrator of this.- succession- excepted to the petition of opposition; that it. showedmo.cause. of action, and no, claim against the estate of widow Tpreaud-or theadministrateiyand answered that, upon receiving the price of the property, sold, and reserving the sum necessary to pay the debts, .then.outstanding .and- charges of the, estate, the amount of cash and notes. accruing to. said Emile Tureaud by said [254]*254tableau of partition was paid over to him long previous to the filing of this opposition; that as administrator he was not bound to take notice of the pretended judicial mortgage against said Emile Turead; that at the time of making the distribution among the heirs as aforesaid, the case of the said Gex, administrator, v. E. Tureaud, in which the alleged judgment was rendered, was on appeal in the Supreme Court, and that in no capacity had he the right to withhold from said E. Tureaud any sum to pay such judgment as might be rendered in said suit; and he called in warranty the said Emile Tureaud, who filed a general denial to the opposition, defended the administrator in his course of distributing the funds among the heirs without taking cognizance of- any proceeding or process instituted by the opponent, denied the right of the latter, being no creditor of this succession, to intervene in this cause, and prayed that the opposition be dismissed and the account be ho-mologated.

The exception was maintained, and the opponent appealed.

We would remark here that the fact of the partition being made by the administrator, and his call upon all persons' concerned to show cause why his account of administration and ‘‘-tableau of partition” should not be homologated, and the funds distributed and paid accordingly, may make this case one sid generis ; and the question we are called on by the parties to decide upon the exception is, does the opponent; under the law, disclose a right of action or a right to demand, in this form of proceeding, to be paid the amount of his judgment against one of the heirs, duly recorded before the sale for a partition, out of the portion of the proceeds of the immovable hereditary property in the hands of the administrator, and according to his said judgment debtor ?

The answer to this question depends on the solution of the primary question whether or not a judicial mortgage attaches to the undivided share of an heir in the mortgageable property of a succession.

Some doubt is cast upon this point in the opinion of two of the judges in giving the decision of the majority of the court, in the case of Voorhies v. DeBlanc, 12 A. 864; but an examination of that case will show that the point was not decided, nor was it directly presented.

The right of a coheir or coproprietor to create a conventional mortgage on his undivided share of immovable property has been frequently recognized and enforced. See 12 R. 450; 3 A. 542; 9 A. 212; 12 A. 236; 19 A. 167; C. C. 3268, 1434. This last article provides that the heir to whose share an immovable or other thing susceptible of mortgage has fallen, is not bound by the .mortgages which his coheirs may have given on their individual shares of the same previous to the partition, and these mortgages are dissolved of right, except upon the property which falls to the heirs who have given the mortgages, if the property is susceptible of being mortgaged. Article 3268 implies that one having a right that is suspended by a condition, or may be extinguished in certain cases, may agree to a mortgage subject to the same condition and liable to the same extinction.

[255]*255The lieir being considered seized of the succession from the moment of its being opened, the. right of possession, which the deceased had,. continues in the person of the heir, as if there had been no interruption and independent of the fact of possession; and each of several heirs becomes an undivided-proprietor of the effects of the succession for the part or portion coming to him, which forms among the heirs a community of property as long as it remains undivided. C. C. 936, 1214.

Now, article 3290 declares that the judicial mortgage takes effect from the day on which the judgment, is pronounced, if it lias been.duly recorded; and article 3296 says the j udicial mortgage may be enforced, against all the immovables which the debtor actually owns at the date-of -the recording, or may subsequently acquire.

When, therefore, an heir becomes the joint proprietor of mortgage-able hereditary property, the mortgage resulting from the recording of a judgment against him attaches to his part or portion thereof, subject, however, to the prior debts and mortgages of the succession, and its enforcement is dependent upon the final settlement of the succession. -

In this case the record shows, as to the point under consideration, that Emile 'Tureaud was a proprietor in common with his coheirs, of the hereditary property, which was all immovable, and according to the foregoing principles, the judgment in favor of the opponent having been recorded prior to the sale, operated as a judicial mortgage on his share. A similar principle is recognized in the case of the Union Bank v. Marin, 3 A. 34, 36, where it is distinctly announced that the legal mortgage of minors attaches on the undivided share of their tutor in the immovables oí a succession as soon as he accepts it, subject to the right of priority of the creditors of the succession. Article 3362 C. C. makes no distinction as to the kind of mortgage, whether conventional, legal or judicial, and it provides, that the mortgages shall bo paid out of the funds according to their rank.

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