Vuillemot v. Gonsulin

134 So. 419, 17 La. App. 661, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 184
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 1931
DocketNo. 737
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 134 So. 419 (Vuillemot v. Gonsulin) 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
Vuillemot v. Gonsulin, 134 So. 419, 17 La. App. 661, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 184 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

LidBLANC, J.

In stating the case, we deem it proper to recount briefly, as it appears from the record, some of the history connected with this litigation:

In December, 1917, Adrien Gonsulin, one of the defendants herein, .petitioned the then Nineteenth Judicial District Court, sitting in and for the parish of Iberia, for letters of administration on the estate of his deceased grandparents, Francois Gonsulin and Marie Louise Celesie de la Goutrais. In his application he alleged that they had left property consisting of real estate situated in the state of Louisiana; that there were debts both privileged and ordinary due by their estate which rendered ah administration of the joint succession necessary. The petition also contains a recital that on December 30, 1906, he had presented a similar application to the court; that it had been duly published; that he had been appointed administrator and qualified as such,' furnishing the required bond, etc., but that the file containing all the papers and documents referred to had been lost or mislaid and that nothing had ever been recorded except the bond which he had furnished. Because Of the loss of the papers and as no action whatever having been taken under the appointment, he asks that those proceedings be ignored and that his present applica[663]*663tion be considered. It may be timely here to remark that in this last application, the dates of the respective deaths of his grandparents appear in blank.

There was no opposition filed to his application which was duly advertised, and after the expiration of the delays he was appointed administrator. An inventory had been taken as ordered and he furnished the bond fixed by law. An attorney at law was appointed to represent the absent heirs and he qualified by taking the prescribed oath. The only property inventoried as belonging to the joint succession was the undivided two-thirds of a tract of land described as “all that portion of irregular Section 19, Township 17 South Range 11, East, known as the Belle Isle grant or concession, and containing 1218.75 acres.” The interest of the succession was appraised at $1,626.67.

Upon the administrator’s application, an order was issued by the court for the sale of the property in order to realize funds with which to pay debts. The sale was properly advertised and took place according to law, and the property was purchased thereat by the administrator, Adrien Gonsulin, and Mrs. Branch K. Miller in the proportion of an undivided one-half each, for the sum of $1,900. The administrator then filed his account, which showed that the succession was indebted to him in an amount in excess of $2,600. The account was published and homologated and in due course he was discharged and bis bond -was ordered canceled.

About five years afterwards, to be exact on January 12, 1922, Adrien Gonsulin and Mrs. Branch K. Miller instituted monition proceedings in the same court in Iberia parish to have their title to the property they had acquired at the succession sale, confirmed. Public notice of these proceedings was given by publication for more than thirty days in the official journals of both Iberia and St. Mary parishes. Approximately sixty-five persons appeared to oppose the monition, mostly on the ground that the property had been sold to satisfy post mortem debts, some of which had been created by the administrator himself, and that the sale was illegal further because the administrator who was acting in a fiduciary capacity was precluded from .purchasing the property at the sale. They all attacked the legality of the sale and reconvened asking that Gonsulin and Mrs. Miller be ordered to turn over to them their lawful interest in the property. Trial was had on an agreed statement of facts and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs confirming and homologating their title to the property and making the same perfect and complete, and rejecting the reconventional demands presented by the various defendants. An appeal was taken by most of the defendants to this court. The appellants perfected their appeal but made no appearance and the judgment of the lower court was affirmed. That was on December 12, 1923.

Some time during the year 1928, Mrs. Dorcienne Gonsulin Gravet, wife of Jules Gravet, claiming to. be an heir of Jean Francois Gonsulin, and as such an owner of an undivided interest in the property involved in his succession above referred to, brought suit in the district court in which she attacked the whole of those proceedings as well as the monition proceeding had subsequently. Her contentions were that the succession of her ancestor, Francois Gonsulin, had been duly administered in the court in the parish of St. Martin where he had died in the year 1819, and that as all proceedings therein had long since terminated, the district court of Iberia parish was without jurisdiction [664]*664ratione materiae to again or further administer the same. From an adverse judgment in the lower court, an appeal was taken to this court where it was held that because the plaintiff’s father, together with numerous heirs of Francois Gonsulin, had asked Adrien Gonsulin to look after and administer the lands of their ancestor, and had contributed funds at his request in meeting the necessary expenses involved, and that the plaintiff herself had acquiesced in those acts after her father’s death and had also made similar contributions, she was estopped from attacking the acts of her agent. The exception to the jurisdiction which the plaintiff in her petition had styled an exception to the jurisdiction ratione materiae was said to be' in reality an exception to the jurisdiction ratione personae which, it was stated, could be waived, and in fact had been waived by the plaintiff by her conduct and inaction, who moreover was held to have ratified the defendant Gonsulin’s action.

It thus appears that these defendants have been called upon twice already to defend their title to the property they purchased in .1917 at the succession sale of Francois Gonsulin and his wife, and that defendant Adrien Gonsulin has been put to severe legal test to retain his interest therein which he had to take in satisfaction of an indebtedness he claimed to have incurred in behalf of his very numerous co-heirs. In view of the apparent honesty with which he rendered his accounting to to the court, which not having been opposed was approved and homologated, and of the opportunity given the heirs, which many availed themselves of by resisting him in the monition suit, and in view also of the length of time that has again intervened before this suit, truly the interminable deláys of the law so often spoken of, must appear to him to be an existing fact.

It seems that as to a number of the plaintiffs in this suit, the issue might be readily disposed of on the basis of our decision in the case of Gravet v. Gonsulin, 10 La. App. 553, 119 So. 785,120 So. 643, as their ancestors had also, like the father of the plaintiff in that case, joined in an authorization to Adrien Gonsulin to administer . the property and contributed funds to that end, all of which acts had been ratified by those of the plaintiffs referred to. Indeed, the force given to the monition proceedings in the Gravet suit in sustaining a plea of res adjudicata might again be used with regard to all the plaintiffs in this case without much further consideration, were it not for the earnest effort of their counsel in presenting a case of fraud before the court.

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Bluebook (online)
134 So. 419, 17 La. App. 661, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vuillemot-v-gonsulin-lactapp-1931.