Thomson v. Mylne

11 Rob. 349
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 Rob. 349 (Thomson v. Mylne) 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
Thomson v. Mylne, 11 Rob. 349 (La. 1845).

Opinion

Simon, J.

The object of this action, which is instituted by the testamentary executor of the late George B. Milligan, is threefold : He seeks, first, to obtain the partition, in kind or otherwise, [354]*354of a sugar plantation, slaves, &c. which, he alleges, belong for one third to the succession of the deceased, the other two thirds belonging to the defendant. 2d. To compel said defendant to account for the crops of sugar and molasses made on the said plantation since the decease of the testator, and also for'the nett proceeds of the crop on hand at the time of said decease, received by defendant, and never accounted for. 3d. To obtain a settlement and liquidation of the partnership concerns, and of all the transactions growing out of the same, and a judgment against the defendant for the portion thereof due to the succession, &c.

The defendant, after pleading the general issue, admitted the existence of the agreement alluded to, and set up in the plaintiff’s petition as the basis and origin of his title, as executor, to the one third by him claimed, bearing date the 16th of March, 1828, but denied that the deceased derived any right under, or by virtue of the same, except that of calling for its completion by an act of sale, on the terms, and on the fulfilment of the conditions therein contained. He further averred that those conditions have never been complied with by the testator; that the latter acquiesced in the sale of the premises to the respondent; and that it was well understood that his said rights should be perfected on the fulfillment of his part of the said agreement. That said deceased is indebted to him, defendant, as vendee of Alexander Dennistoun, assignee of Dennistoun & Co., on this account, in the sum of $37,650 29, with interest; that he never disputed the testator’s right to call for title to his portion of the plantation, &c, on the payment of the balance due on the price, but, on the contrary, is ready, on such payment, to- make the necessary conveyance. He, therefore, prays for judgment against the succession for the balance due; for a partition of the property, by a sale thereof, &c.; and for satisfaction of his claim out of the proceeds of such sales, &c.

The widow and heirs of David Urquhart, deceased, stating themselves to be creditors to a large amount of Milligan’s succession, intervened in the action for the protection of their rights, alleging that the plaintiff, who sues as executor, has, in his own personal name, an adverse interest in the issue of the cause, he [355]*355being a partner of the defendant. They assert: 1st. That the agreement of the 16th of March, 1828, was a perfect and complete sale, binding on the vendors and on the defendant, who acquired subsequently, having been duly recorded in the office of the judge of the parish of Plaquemines, on the 24th of June, 1830. 2d. That the deceased has been in the open and undisturbed possession, as owner, of his undivided third of the property, ever since the date of the contract; that he always complied with the conditions of the agreement, resided on the place, and devoted his attention to its cultivation and improvement; and that the sixteen hands, referred to in the second article of the contract, were constantly kept on the plantation, and still remain there, to assist in its cultivation, &c. 3d. and 4th. That the matters in controversy relative to any claim set up by the defendant, or his vendor, against the estate of the deceased, as also to the settlement of the balance alleged to be due by the deceased on the price of the sale, are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Probates of the parish of Plaquemines, which court alone has the right to settle and liquidate such claims, to enquire into their validity, and to order their classification on the tableau of distribution of the assets of the estate according to their rank. 5th. That the defendant, for his own benefit, has incumbered the property with three several mortgages in favor of the Union Bank of Louisiana, amounting together to $81,420, with interest; and is bound to clear, at his own expense, the succession’s third part of the said property from the incumbrances by which it may be affected. The intervenors further say, that they join in the averments of the plaintiff’s petition, and pray that a partition of the whole property may be made by a sale thereof, &c.; that by the same judgment the defendant be ordered to account to the succession for its interest in the crops; and that the defendant’s claims set up against said succession be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, reserving to the defendant the right of having his said claims settled and liquidated by the Court of Probates, contradictorily with the other creditors of the deceased, &c.

This intervention was answered by the defendant, pretty much on the same grounds as those set forth in his original answer, but further alleging that the agreement referred to was intend[356]*356ed for the contracting of a partnership between the parties thereto; that said partnership was dissolved by the death of the deceased; that the mortgages with which the estate is incumbered, were given with the knowledge and consent of Milligan; and that, by the terms of the agreement, the deceased had a right, at the expiration of seven years, to call for specifíc performance on securing, by mortgage of the partnership premises, any amount which might be still due, or to dissolve the partnership itself. He admits his liability to account for the profits up to the period of the testator’s death, but denies his being bound for profits subsequently accrued; and, finally, avers that he is still willing to make title to the succession, on being paid the amount which, at the time the partnership was dissolved, was to be contributed by the deceased.

Under these pleadings, the case was tried contradictorily with the intervenors, and the judge a quo being of opinion that one third of the premises in partnership belonged to Milligan’s succession, but that the defendant must be referred to the Probate Court of Plaquemines for a settlement of his claims against said succession, declaring, however, in the mean time, that they constitute no lien upon the property, ordered a division thereof to be made between the parties, in proportion to their respective interests, the mode of partition to be subject of an ulterior decree; and from this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The intervenors have prayed in their answer to this appeal, that the judgment appealed from may be so amended as to allow to the succession of the deceased, its proportion of the crop existing' at the time of the death of the testator, as per inventory made at the time of its opening; as also its proportion of all the subsequent crops raised on the plantation since the decease of Milligan until the present time.

The facts exhibited by the record, are mainly these: In a letter addressed by the deceased to Alexander Dennistoun, bearing date 27th December, 1826, after the death of one Hill, the former partner of the firm of Dennistoun, Hill & Co., the deceased communicates his ideas upon the nature and extent of an arrangement which had been contemplated by the parties, but which had never been executed; and he expresses his readiness [357]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Rob. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-mylne-la-1845.