Tabor v. Johnson

3 Mart. (N.S.) 674
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1825
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Mart. (N.S.) 674 (Tabor v. Johnson) 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
Tabor v. Johnson, 3 Mart. (N.S.) 674 (La. 1825).

Opinion

Mathews, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. This suit was instituted to enjoin proceedings in execution on twelve months bonds, given for the price of property which had previously been sold under execution, and to have said bonds decreed to be null and void. An injunction was granted by the court below, which was afterwards set aside, and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff appealed.

The facts of the case, as exhibited by the record, show that a judgment had been obtained against the tutor of minor children, was executed by seizing and selling property belonging to the succession of their father, [675]*675part of which was purchased by the plaintiff in the present suit at a credit of twelve months, and the payment of the price secured by bonds, which he now seeks to have annulled, on account of the alleged nullity of the judgment rendered against the tutor and minors, in consequence of incompetency in the court which rendered said judgment; the whole proceedings having taken place in the district court.

East'n. District. June 1825.

The counsel for the appellant insists.

1. That the district court was wholly without jurisdiction ratione materiœ in the case which was prosecuted against the tutor and minor heirs, &c.

2. The judgment pronounced in that case is absolutely null and void, in consequence of such want of jurisdiction.

3. That it is not necessary to appeal from judgments absolutely void, in order to have such nullities decreed, &c.

4. The judgment being thus void, all subsequent proceedings of execution, seizure and sale of property under it are also void and consequently, the appellant’s bond given for the price of the property, is a mere nullity. There are some other points relied on by the appellant, which, from the investigation, we are [676]*676about to give to the subject, need not be examined.

Notwithstanding the principle which seem to be established, by some of the expressions this court in the case of Vignaud vs. Tonnacourt's Curator; (as reported in 12 Martin, 291,) after much reflection on the present case, we are inclined to think that district courts are not wholly deprived of jurisdiction ratione materiae in suits which relate to the enforcement of payment of debts due from a succession, to creditors under contracts with the deceased.

It may be assumed, as undeniable, that the district courts are tribunals of general jurisdiction, that they have, by their constitution, power to decide on all disputes brought before them, which relate to the affairs of the citizens of the state; either as it regards their persons or property. This unlimited power to hear and determine in all cases, can be lessened, altered, and taken way, or rendered concurrent with other courts of the state, only by legislative authority in the enactment of laws, which deprive the courts of general jurisdiction, of part of their power, and transfer it to others, either in relation to the persons of suitors or the subject matter of litigation.

[677]*677We believe it may be safely asserted, that on the change of government, from its situation under the late territory, to that which it now holds under the power of the state, all the judicial authority which the old superior court had was transferred to the present district courts, with the exception, that judgments rendered by the latter are not final, but may be appealed from.

The power of the late superior court extended to every subject of litigation, except those which were exclusively transferred by the territorial legislature to inferior courts created by its authority. Amongst others thus created; in 1805, courts of probates were established by giving that species of jurisdiction to the judges of the different county courts; their authority was limited to “receiving and taking proof of wills, granting letters testamentary, and letters of administration, also directing and approving appraisements,” &c. The same powers were transferred to the parish courts after their institution in 4807. According to these grants of power, the jurisdiction of the superior court, in relation to claims against a succession arising out of contracts made by the testator or intestate, was not in any manner [678]*678lessened or impaired, either expressly or impliedly. Thus stood matters with regard to the jurisdiction of the courts of probates and those of common and general jurisdiction until the adoption of our civil code, in 1808.

We must now enquire how its provisions affected the powers of those two courts.

In the case cited from 12 Martin, an explicit opinion has been expressed that the court of probates is the proper tribunal to take cognizance of claims against a vacant succession. This opinion is founded on several articles of the code defining the powers and duty of that species of court, which by necessary implication confer that kind of jurisdiction. Admitting that in relation to a vacant succession, a court of probates has exclusive jurisdiction, it does not follow as a necessary conclusion that the district court are deprived of it absolutely ratione materiœ, but only on account of the peculiar situation of the thing, and of the persons who represent such successions. If inheritances accepted with the benefit of an inventory, whether the heirs be of full age or minors, must be administered in pursuance of the rules established for vacant successions, with the necessary exceptions consequent on the different [679]*679situations of these various species of estates; we are necessarily led to the same conclusion in relation to the court, which ought regularly to take cognizance of all matters appertaining to the settlement of successions which are inventoried, appraised and sold, and that is the court wherein all these things are ordered to be done, and to which the law has given the power of determining the manner in which the debts of the deceased are to be paid, and decreeing partition of property amongst the heirs. The provisions of the code on the subject of vacant estates, and those accepted by heirs of the age of majority, under an inventory, seem to require that they should be administered in a manner analogous to that ordered for the administration of the estates of insolvents. In cases of the latter description, all suits and claims against the bankrupt are required by law to be cumulated before the court which holds cognizance of the concurso, which may be any of ordinary and competent jurisdiction to the extent of the matter in dispute.

Pursuing the principle established by law for the settlement and distribution of an insolvent's property, our code impliedly requires all the creditors of a succession vacant or accept[680]*680ed with an inventory, to concur before that court which directs the inventory and sale of property, and possesses the power of classing and ordering payment of the debts. Civ. Code, 177, art. 108 & 168, art. 136 & 137.

In relation to the administration of the estates of minors by their tutors the code is silent, as to the manner in which the debts of successions are to be paid; according to its provisions, it was the duty of a tutor to cause the whole of the property to be sold, after inventory and appraisment.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mart. (N.S.) 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tabor-v-johnson-la-1825.