Tobin v. United States Safe Deposit & Savings Bank

39 So. 33, 115 La. 366, 1905 La. LEXIS 665, 115 La. 376
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 5, 1905
DocketNo. 15,568
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 So. 33 (Tobin v. United States Safe Deposit & Savings Bank) 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
Tobin v. United States Safe Deposit & Savings Bank, 39 So. 33, 115 La. 366, 1905 La. LEXIS 665, 115 La. 376 (La. 1905).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

NIOHOLLS, J.

Plaintiffs sue to compel the specific performance by the defendant of its obligations as the adjudicatee at an auction sale made in a partition suit.

„ The district court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and defendant appealed. The plaintiffs prayed in the Supreme Court that the judgment be amended by granting, in conformity with the prayer of the petition, 6 per cent, interest upon the cash part of price, to wit, $15,333.33% from date of adjudication (March 17, 1904) until paid.

Appellant has submitted his side of the case on brief, and from it we copy the following statement as to the issues upon which it relies for a reversal:

“On January 5, 1903, in the suit entitled ‘Mrs. Fannie T. McCan Tobin et al. v. M. T. Stempel, Guardian,’ No. 69,737, Civil District Court (Division D), the plaintiff in that suit, who is the same plaintiff in this suit, alleged substantially that her father, Charles P. McCan, married Mary Tobin; that he died, and his sole heirs are his four surviving children of said marriage, viz.:
J‘(l) Kate Elizabeth McCan, born February 25, 1882, now the wife of Courtland Young;
“(2) The petitioner, Fannie Tobin McCan, wife of Leonard M. Tobin, born April 14, 1883;
“(3) David C. McCan, bom July 9, 1884; and
“(4) Charles P. McCan.
“That their mother, Mary Tobin, widow of Charles P. McCan, married Edward Stempel, and removed to New York, where she was appointed guardian of her four minor children. *
“That petitioner’s grandfather, David C. McCan, and his wife, Hester C. McCan, died, leaving as sole and only heirs the four children of their predeceased son, Charles P. McCan, above named, and considerable real estate.
“That petitioner is unwilling to remain in indivisión of said property, and in view of the partition she prays for an inventory.
“There was an order rendered for an inventory, which is copied.
“Mrs. Fannie Tobin McCan then filed a petition praying for a partition. She averred that the property could not he divided in kind and must be sold. She prayed for a family meeting for the following purposes, viz.:
“(1) To authorize her to institute and prosecute the partition proceedings ; and
“(2) To determine on a partition in kind or by sale, and to fix the terms of sale.
“The family meeting was held, and recommended that the petitioner be authorized to ‘institute the partition proceedings and conclude the same to final determination,’ advised a sale of some properties, and fixed the terms and conditions of sale.
“There was judgment rendered in accordance with said family meeting, authorizing the plaintiff to institute the partition proceedings and decreeing a sale.
“The sale was made, and certain property was adjudicated to the defendant. The adjudi[198]*198catee refused to comply, when this suit was brought against it.
“There was judgment in favor. of plaintiff, and defendant appealed.
“Defendant avers that it cannot take the title for the following reasons, to wit:
“ ‘(1) That no family meeting authorized the ■said Fannie M. Tobin to sell said property.’
“Our contention is that the plaintiff could neither sue for a partition nor sell the property without a family meeting; that the family meeting which attempted to authorize the plaintiff to do all these things was without an under-tutor to the plaintiff, and therefore illegal as to her.
“The Civil Code (article 1313) provides:
“ ‘Minors who are emancipated to enable them to administer their estate can, with the same authorization [authorized by the judge on the advice of the family meeting] and with the assistance of their curators ad lites, sue for the partition of property in which they are intorGstsd *
“Civ. Code, art. 276: ‘The under tutor cannot be a member of family meetings, but he must be present for the purpose of advising, etc.’
“The absence of an undertutor from a family meeting renders its deliberations null. Stafford v. Villain, 10 La. 328.
“Plaintiffs petition for a family meeting avers:
“ ‘Now your petitioners aver that special tutors ad hoc and curators ad hoc should be appointed to represent each of her co-heirs who are absent from the state, and that an under-tutor ad hoc should be appointed,’ etc.
“The prayer is ‘that Charles J. McMurdo, Jr., be appointed undertutor ad hoc herein.’ .
“The order is: ‘Let C. J. McMurdo, Jr., be
appointed undertutor ad hoc to the minors herein named.’
“In the family meeting the notary recites : ■“And also came and appeared Charles G. Mc-Murdo, Jr., the undertutor ad hoc of the minors, David Chambers McCan and Charles Patterson McCan, appointed and sworn as such by the court.’
“As there was no undertutor appointed to said minor, Fannie Tobin McCan, wife of Leonard M. Tobin, plaintiff herein, and as none appeared in her behalf before said family meeting, it follows that said family meeting was absolutely null and void as regards her right to sue or sell.
“ ‘(2) That neither the tutrix of the minors, David Chambers McCan and Charles Patterson McCan, nor the agent of the tutrix of said minors, ever called any family meeting in behalf of said minors, nor asked the homologation of any family meeting held, by reason of which the family meeting held in behalf of said minors and the judgment homologating the same are null and void.’
“When minors are defendants in a partition suit, it is necessary that a family meeting be held to fix the terms and conditions of sale. Civ. Code, art. 1341 (1263).
“This family meeting must be called by the tutor, or the tutor must join in the prayer for the homologation of its deliberations.
“There can be no valid family meeting without the suggestion or approval of the tutor.
“ ‘(3) That neither Charles P. McCan nor his children were the sole heirs of David C. McCan and his wife, Hester C. McCan; that they had another son, named John McCan, whose death has never been proved.’
“This is established by the affidavit of David C. McCan.
•‘John McCan was 21 in 1867. He is therefore now only 59 years of age The Civil Code (article 70) provides that it is only after 1U0 years after the birth of the absentee that the heirs can cause themselves to be put in possession of his estate. Until the lapse of that time the heirs cannot sell his property. Civ. Code, art. 69 (70).
“(4) That there is a mortgage on said property, resulting from a judgment rendered by the United States Circuit Court against Mrs. M. G. T.

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Bluebook (online)
39 So. 33, 115 La. 366, 1905 La. LEXIS 665, 115 La. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobin-v-united-states-safe-deposit-savings-bank-la-1905.