Sun Oil Company v. Roger

118 So. 2d 446, 239 La. 379, 1960 La. LEXIS 934
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1960
Docket43937
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 118 So. 2d 446 (Sun Oil Company v. Roger) 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
Sun Oil Company v. Roger, 118 So. 2d 446, 239 La. 379, 1960 La. LEXIS 934 (La. 1960).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

The plaintiffs Sun Oil Company and Humble Oil & Refining Company, producers of minerals under leases covering certain lands in Lafourche Parish claimed by opposing groups, in order to determine the ownership of the royalties accruing from the said production, 1 provoked the instant concursus proceeding and deposited the funds in the Registry of Court, naming as defendants the various claimants— who, because of their number, agreed to divide themselves into two groups by which they have been known throughout these proceedings, i. e. Group A and Group B; and from a judgment in favor of the former, the latter have appealed.

The land affected by the mineral leases was acquired by Eugene Guillot during his marriage to Honorine Thibodaux; of the union there were eight surviving children. Eugene Guillot died in May, 1903, and his wife died in March, 1917, both intestate. On April 4, 1917, one of the children, Estillina Guillot, and her husband, Joseph Vendóme Roger, opened the successions of her father and mother and filed joint application to be appointed administrators of their successions. Following publication of notice of application, and certification that no opposition thereto had been filed, on April 17, 1917, the-applicants were appointed by the District Judge -joint administrators of the said successions. On the same date an inventory was made, showing movable property (a bed, chair and armoire) appraised at $5, and immovable property (the tract of land the ownership of which is in dispute) appraised at $500; and the required bond having been filed, Letters of Administration were issued. On April 23, 1917, pur *383 suant to the Administrators’ petition representing that the Successions owed debts exceeding in amount the value of the movable property, an Order was signed by the Judge directing that the movable and immovable property of the Successions be sold at public auction on the premises, for cash, to pay debts; and pursuant thereto the Sheriff, after publication of legal notices, conducted the sale on the premises on June 2, 1917, and sold and adjudicated the movable and immovable property to “Estillina Guillot, wife of Joseph Vendóme Roger.” The validity of this sale is the main issue- in this case.

The descendants of Estillina Guillot Roger and her husband, Joseph Vendóme Roger, and/or their assigns, designated Group A, claim title under the above mentioned sale. The remaining seven children of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Guillot, their heirs and assigns, designated' Group B, attack the validity of the succession proceedings, contending that the sale thereunder was an absolute nullity and that consequently the successions of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Guillot were never divested of the property, so that all of their heirs are entitled to respective fractional interests, and urge five reasons for the asserted nullity, i. e. (a) the succession proceedings were ex parte and the forced heirs of the decedents were neither notified, cited, nor made parties, and were not called upon to pay the purported debts; (b) there was no filing of a list of debts, and therefore no way for the Court to determine the necessity for a sale to pay debts; (c) the Administrators failed to wait thirty days from their appointment and thirty days from the taking of inventory before applying for an order to sell, as required by law; (d) the sale was based on debts which were prescribed; 2 and (e) the purchase was made by the wife, Estellina Guillot Roger, for the benefit of the community while both she and her husband were joint administrators of the successions, at a time when the husband did not fall within any of the exceptions set forth in Article 1146 of the Civil Code. 3

*385 The Trial Judge, in a very able and well considered opinion, we think properly disposed of the irregularities relied on in (a), (b), (c) and (d), holding that they were relative nullities and. prescribed against, under the express provisions of Article 3543 of the Revised Civil Code. 4 See Phoenix Building & Homestead Ass’n v. Meraux, 189 La. 819, 180 So. 648; Arceneaux v. Cormier, 175 La. 941, 144 So. 722; cf. Thibodaux v. Barrow, 129 La. 395, 56 So. 339; Hibernia Bank & Trust Co. v. Whitney, 130 La. 817, 58 So. 583; Wright v. Calhoun, 151 La. 998, 92 So. 589; Milburn v. Proctor Trust Co., 5 Cir., 122 F.2d 569, certiorari denied 314 U.S. 698, 62 S.Ct. 479, 86 L.Ed. 559. It is apt to observe that there is no allegation of fraud, and after a perusal of the record we are in accord with the observation of the Trial Judge that there is no evidence of misfeasance except such as might be inferred, and his further remarks that “It seems to us that if the administrators had intended to divest Group B of their interest in the succession property by subterfuge and to that end considered attempting to perpetrate a simulation and a sham by instituting an ex parte proceeding without notice to the interested heirs, it is hardly reasonable to suppose that they would have made provision for a public auction on the premises in the very vicinity in which the alleged unnotified heirs resided. We believe that by the published advertisement, general notice was given to the world, that by the overt act of a sale on the premises, particular notice was intended to be given to friends, neighbors and relatives, and that the administrators may thereby be judged by their deeds. If any inference is to be drawn from the succession record, it is that the record evidences the intention of the administrators to reveal, rather than to conceal, their actions.”

We think it appropriate at this point to quote approvingly 5 the philosophy of this Court as announced in the case of Lafitte, Dufilho & Co. v. Godchaux, 35 La. Ann. 1161: “The genius of our law does not favor the claims of those who have long slept on their rights and who, after years of inertia, conveying an assurance of acquiescence in a given state of things, sud *387 denly wake up at the welcome vision of an unexpected advantage and invoke' the aid of the courts for relief, under the effect of a newly discovered technical error in some ancient transaction or settlement.” 35 La. Ann. at page 1163.

This brings us to the main question presented for our determination on this appeal, i. e., whether the acquisition by “Estillina Guillot, wife of Joseph Vendóme Roger,” one of the children of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Guillot, was an absolute nullity in that such acquisition was for the benefit of the community which existed between her and her husband, Joseph Vendóme Roger, a co-administrator of the successions who was neither an heir, a legatee, a mortgage creditor nor holder of a vendor’s lien on succession property, and therefore the sale must fall under the prohibition of Revised Civil Code Article 1146. 6 In disposing of this phase of the case adversely to Group B, the Trial Judge commented with logic and clarity: “Group B’s contention raises the highly technical objection that, since Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 2d 446, 239 La. 379, 1960 La. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-oil-company-v-roger-la-1960.