Successions of Webre

164 So. 2d 49, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1638
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1964
DocketNo. 1429
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 164 So. 2d 49 (Successions of Webre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Successions of Webre, 164 So. 2d 49, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1638 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

CHRIS T. BARNETTE, Judge pro tern.

This is a suit to have two purported deeds •to real property declared null and void and dhe property returned to the successions of •the purported vendors for division among .all heirs according to law. In the alternative plaintiffs pray for collation. They also pray for an accounting of proceeds from the property; for an inventory and for letters of administration. The defendants are two ■children of Louis Robert and Ulyssia Landry Webre and the plaintiffs, the other children •or their representatives.

A supplemental and amended petition was filed but disallowed and defendants’ plea •of prescription as to one of the deeds in question was sustained, from which judg■ment plaintiffs have appealed. The defendants have answered the appeal pleading for affirmation, or in the alternative if the plea of five years prescription under LSA-C.C. art. 3542 cannot be maintained, that it be maintained under LSA-C.C. art. 3544 which provides ten years prescription for personal actions.

On February 15, 1938, Louis Robert Webre executed a purported sale of certain property in St. John the Baptist Parish to defendants Septime Raymond Webre and Ada Webre, wife of Henry Boudreaux, for the stated consideration of $1,200.00, payable $600.00 cash and the balance represented by note of $600.00 payable in one year, secured by vendor’s lien and mortgage. Plaintiffs allege the value of the property at the time of sale to have been over $20,000.00

On the same date, February 15, 1938, Mrs. Maria Ulyssia Landry, wife of Louis Robert Webre, executed a purported sale of certain other property in St. John the Baptist Parish to defendants Septime Raymond Webre and Ada Webre, wife of Henry Boudreaux, for the stated consideration of $2,600.00, payable $1,600.00 cash and the balance represented by note of $1,000.00 payable in one year, secured by vendor’s lien and mortgage. Plaintiffs have alleged this property to have been worth more than $12,000.00.

Louis Robert Webre died September 25, 1940, and Ulyssia Landry Webre died November 10, 1947. This suit was filed November 6, 1950, and a notice of lis pendens recorded. After much delay, joinder and substitution of parties plaintiff and a change of attorneys for plaintiffs, the defendants filed a plea of prescription September 21, 1962, having previously filed an answer in 1960. On September 26, 1962, plaintiffs filed a supplemental and amended petition in which they sought to allege:

“In the alternative, and only in the event that it should be found that the vendors of the two sales, dated February 15, 1938, referred to in Paragraphs 6 and 8 of the original petition herein, received the recited consideration, or other valuable consideration of an equivalent amount, then in such event petitioners aver that said transfers constitute a prohibited advantage bestowed at a very low price in contravention of the provisions of Article 1248 of the Revised Civil Code of Louisiana, which transfers are nevertheless subject to collation.”

[51]*51The issue of prescription and objection to the supplemental petition were heard and judgment was rendered and filed March 28, 1963, sustaining the plea of prescription of five years under Article 3542 of the Civil Code of Louisiana insofar only as the action applied to the conveyance from Louis Robert Webre. The plea was overruled as it applied to the property conveyed by Mrs. Webre. The supplemental and amended petition was disallowed.

The plaintiffs argue that the purported deeds are simulated conveyances and were in fact donations in disguise, null and void, and that the right of action to have them set aside is not prescriptible.

Plaintiffs stress that their suit is not primarily an action for collation, but an action to annul the two disputed transfers and to have themselves recognized as heirs of decedents and co-owners with defendants of the property in question. It is only in the alternative that they seek collation of the value of the property.

In support of their primary contention, plaintiffs assert that absolute nullities are not subject to prescription and that the deeds in question fall within that category. There are abundant authorities in our jurisprudence that absolute nullities are impre-scriptible, Byrd v. Byrd, 230 La. 260, 88 So.2d 214; Labarre v. Rateau, 210 La. 34, 26 So.2d 279; Litton v. Stephens, 187 La. 918, 175 So. 619 and Heirs of Provost v. Provost, 13 La.Ann. 574. Plaintiffs rely strongly on the Labarre case.

We find no fault with the principle enunciated in the above-cited cases, but we do not agree with plaintiffs’ assertion that the instruments under attack fall within the category of absolute nullities. The Labarre case, upon which plaintiffs rely for support of their primary action, upon a casual reading, would seem to settle the issue here, but it is clearly distinguishable from the instant case.

In the Labarre case we find coheirs attacking an 1891 purported deed to two favored heirs more than thirty years after its. execution and more than ten years after the deaths of the grantors. The facts there are strikingly similar to those in the present case. Plaintiffs alleged in the Labarre case-“that the act of sale of January 16, 1891, was an absolute nullity for the following reasons : (1) It was a donation in disguise, intended to prefer Gustave and Nelson La-barre over the other children. (2) No-consideration was given by the vendees.. (3) If there was consideration for the act it was not of a serious nature nor equivalent to the value of the property. (4) The act was an attempted donation omnium bono-rum.” Only in the failure of plaintiffs in-the instant case to allege substantially as in (4) above that the deed was an attempted donation omnium bonorum, do the two cases differ. But this is a vital difference and requires us to disregard the Labarre case as authority for support of plaintiffs’ contention.

None of the first three causes of action alleged in the Labarre case are absolute nullities, LSA-C.C. art. 1502. The decision of the Supreme Court rested upon the fourth alleged cause. Donations om-nium bonorum are absolute nullities and imprescriptible. LSA-C.C. art. 1497 provides :

“The donation inter vivos shall in no case divest the donor of all his property; he must reserve to himself enough for subsistence; if he does not do it, the donation is null for the whole.”

The term omnium bonorum is not used in the foregoing article of the Code, but its meaning is clear. The term means “of all goods and effects.” It “is applied to describe a donation which divests the donor of all his property and does not leave him with enough for his subsistence.” 67 C.J.S., p. 492, citing Maxwell v. Maxwell, 180 La. 35, 156 So. 166 and Snowden v. Cruse, 152 La. 144, 92 So. 764.

We have searched the pleadings in this case in vain to find some allegation [52]*52which might he interpreted as pleading the nullity of omnium bonorum (LSA-C.C. art. 1497) which would bring this case under the authority of the Labarre case. Finding no such allegation, we have no right to assume that the deeds in question, alleged to be donations in disguise, were stricken with such nullity.

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164 So. 2d 49, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/successions-of-webre-lactapp-1964.