Widow & Heirs of Brigot v. Brigot

22 So. 641, 49 La. Ann. 1428, 1897 La. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 26, 1897
DocketNo. 12,384
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 22 So. 641 (Widow & Heirs of Brigot v. Brigot) 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
Widow & Heirs of Brigot v. Brigot, 22 So. 641, 49 La. Ann. 1428, 1897 La. LEXIS 460 (La. 1897).

Opinion

[1429]*1429The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, . J.

The action referred to in plaintiffs’ petition, in which this court dismissed their demand as of now-suit, will be found (with the facts of the case stated) reported in the 47th An. 1805, entitled Heirs of Brigot vs. Brigot. The proceedings in France which are referred to were instituted by the widow of Fiore Nicolas Brigot against defendant and her deceased sister and Anne Meul-lanotte, in a suit in which she claimed for herself and her children the nullity of a transaction or compromise between AnneMeullanotte and Flore Nicolas Brigot, the husband and father of the present plaintiffs. Under the terms of that compromise Flore Nicolas Brigot had become the usufructuary during life of the properties involved in this litigation and the present defendant and her sister (of whom she is the legatee) were given the naked ownership of the same by Anne Meullanotte.

The proceedings in France resulted in a judgment which, while decreeing said act null and void in so far as the same conferred upon defendant and her sister any right in the properties in New Orleans therein mentioned, and while decreeing them to belong in their entirety to the succession' of Flore Nicolas Brigot, none the less recognized the rights of the defendant and her sister which the law of France vested in them in said properties (as natural children of Flore Nicolas Brigot) as joint owners with his widow and legitimate children (the plaintiffs in this case), and ordering a partition of the same to be made between the said owners.

Basing themselves upon this French judgment, the present plaintiffs asked in the former suits that the rights of parties be held fixed by that judgment, and that the properties be partitioned according to its terms among the owners. The present defendant (under her original rights and as legatee of her deceased sister) was made defendant in the ease. The latter pleaded as res judicata a judgment which she declared had been rendered in the Fourth District Court in 1876, and in which she and her sister were plaintiffs and the present plaintiffs were defendants, and in which it was decreed that she and her sister were the sole owners of the said properties. The court sustained this exception and dismissed plaintiffs’ suit, and they appealed. It was upon this appeal that this court rendered the judgment reported in the 47 An. 1305. Our decision altered the judgment of the District Court from a final judgment to one of non-[1430]*1430suit. The court held that the plaintiff could not ignore the State judgment which had been rendered in 1876; that that judgment could not be impeached collaterally, but that it would have to be attacked by direct action. The present action is the result of that decree.

The first attack made by the plaintiffs upon the judgment of the-Fourth District Court is based upon the claim that Fergus Fuselier, who signed the pleading in that case on their behalf, was without authority to represent them. We find in the record a letter from Mrs. Brigot (the widow of Flore Nicolas Brigot), dated Bordeaux, 28th November, 1874, to the French Consul, New Orleans, in which she used the following language:

“ Permettez-nous de recourir á votre haute bienveillance et protection pour un service á rendre á une famille infortunée ayant en Louisiane de grand intéréts. .11 s’agit de renseigments précis et exacts áfournir sur l’état de Paffaire Brigot en litis pendance a New Orleans, affaire dont la conduite avait été remise aux soins généreux de MM. Oavaroc & Son, et la défence confiée á M. Fuselier, de New York, leur avocat ordinaire, et en cette circonstance, le nfitre.”

The writer then entered into an explanation of the proceedings in New Orleans and complained that her letters, written from France to Cavaroc & Son, and (evidently) to her attorney, had not yet been answered, and that it was all important that she should be advised of the situation in Louisiana. In view of that fact she thus wrote to the consul:

“ Ne pourriez-nous pas, en conséquence, Monsieur le Consul, nous assurer: (1) Si aucun jugement. n’a été rendu pour ou contre nous á la Nouvelle Orleans; (2) si M. Fuselier, de New York (croyons nous), a re<ju et porté á la connaissance de la cour de la Nouvelle Orléans la lettre de l’avoué Chassaing, de Bordeaux, notifiant & la dite cour la résolution prise par lui et les raisons qui ont fait appeler la méme cause en France; (3) si le tribunal Américain, prenant en considération la dite piece et les raisons invoquées, a prononcé, comme il devait, le suspension de tout jugement, vu l’intervention légitime et motivée du tribunal Franpais,” etc.

We find in the record a second letter to the consul, dated the 20th of May, 1875, in which was enclosed a letter to Mr. Fuselier, for in it she said:

“ Je vous prie, Monsieur le Consul, de vouloir faire passer a M. [1431]*1431Fuselier, avocat de votre ville, ce billet, et lui demander s’il reste toujours mon défenseur, ou s’il se décharge de la conduite de mes intérets. JDans ce dernier cas je compte sur votre sympathie pour me faire représenter par une personne digne de. votre conñance.”

¥e presume the letter to Mr. Fuselier referred to was that which is copied in the record, and was as follows:

“Bordeaux, 20 Mai, 1875.
Monsieur Fuselier, Avoeat a la Nouvelle Orléans, Etats XJnis d’Amérique:
“ Monsieur — Je ne sais que penser de votre long silence, car on n’a pas seulement répondu a l’assignation que M. Ohassaing, mon avoué, vous a envoyée. J’ai écrit moi-méme a différentes reprises, et toujours le méme silence; j’aime a croire que mes lettres ne vous sent pas parvenúes, et je repousse l’idée que vous ne vous oecupez plus de moi.
“ Quoiqu’il en soit, monsieur, s’il en était ainsi je vous prierais de donner a Monsieur le Consul une prompte réponse.
Je vous annonce que mon procés, plaidé devant le tribunal de Bordeaux, a eu un jugement en notre faveur, etdés qu’on m’en auru délivré une expédition je vous le ferai parvenir.”

What occurred subsequent to the date of these letters we do not know, but they certainly show that Mr. Fuselier had, prior to that time, represented the parties in New Orleans.

The second ground of nullity assigned was “ that Widow Flore Nicolas Brigot, as French administratrix of her husband’s succession and natural tutrix of her minor children, never qualified as such in Louisiana and could not have acted extra-territorially, hence was without power or authority to have appointed any agent or attorney to defend the interests of said minors in said suit, which purported to involve the status of heirship and rights in and to said aforesaid described properties.”

The defendants raised no objections of that kind in the suit, on the contrary they voluntariiy answered through their attorney — putting at issue plaintiff’s title and defending their own. They were directly interested in defeating the demand of the plaintiff in that suit, and they can not now object that they were without power or authority to stand in judgment to that effect. We think, however, they were authorized to do so (Succession of McCan, ante, p. 600). The third [1432]*1432ground of nullity is that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 641, 49 La. Ann. 1428, 1897 La. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/widow-heirs-of-brigot-v-brigot-la-1897.