48 La. Ann. 301 | La. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case is here on an exception, which was maintained by the lower court, and plaintiffs appealed.
Louisa Aronstein died in 1878. The surviving husband, tutor of the minor children of the marriage, administered her succession. John F. Irvine, defendant, was under-tutor.
The natural tutor, as administrator, caused the property in the succession to be sold to pay debts. The only debt alleged to be due was one to L. Bloom for one thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, owned by the Metropolitan Bank, with eight per cent, interest from January, 1872. The principal immovable property was inventoried at one thousand dollars; the entire succession at one thousand eight hundred and thirty dollars. The note to L. Bloom, the final account shows, was subject to a credit of six hundred dollars, imputed to interest. The personal property brought seven hundred and fifty dollars. The immovable property was sold on twelve months’ credit, and bought by the tutor for the sum of five hundred and one dollars. Subsequent to this purchase by-the tutor he mortgaged the property to the defendant, Irvine, under-tutor, who foreclosed the mortgage and became the purchaser. The plaintiffs, heirs of Mrs. Aronstein, for their respective interests, instituted this suit for the annulment
The defendant, J. F. Irvine, excepted on the following grounds, viz.: The plaintiffs have not paid back nor tendered the purchase price of the Neville place, sold at succession sale to pay debts; nor of the two acres and improvements sold at the tax sale, which was used to extinguish their ancestor’s obligations.
That judicial or tax sales can not be annulled or disturbed unless the heirs previously return or offer to return the price of adjudication, which has not been done by plaintiffs.
That plaintiffs have not alleged any injury to them by the sales. The succession of their mother being insolvent, plaintiffs have no interest and had not been injured by the sales of which they complain.
That having claimed and received the widow’s homestead, one thousand dollars, plaintiffs necessarily renounce the succession of their mother, and can not recover the property without paying back the amount they received under the homestead.
That the adjudicators of said judicial and tax sales are necessary parties.
It is well settled that minors whose property has been illegally sold can not recover it without restoring all advantages they have received.
“He who seeks equity, must do equity.” Brown vs. Bouny et al., 30 An. 174; Beauregard vs. Leveau, 30 An. 302; Sharkey vs. Bankston, 30 An. 891.
But in a case like the instant one there is no requirement of antecedent legal tender, as “ there is no principle of equity requiring plaintiffs to tender to defendants before asserting their absolute title to property belonging to them and held by defendant as a mere possessor without title. All that equity could possibly require would be to permit him to set up his claim in reconvention, which would not be denied.” Heirs of Wood vs. Nicholls, 33 An. 749; Heirs of Self vs. Taylor, 33 An. 769; Heirs of Burney vs. Ludeling, 41 An. 627.
It is a correct principle to say that heirs have no interest in an insolvent succession, and have no right to claim restitution of prop
It can haye no application “where the nullity of defendants’ title is absolute, resulting from the active violation of a prohibitory law made to regulate defendants’ conduct in a fiduciary capacity.’ Heirs of Wood vs. Nicholls, cited above.
Minors have the undoubted right to a legal,, just and proper administration of a succession in which they are interested, and a legal and proper disposition of the property in the succession.
To hold that where property of the minors has been purchased by the tutor, on an order provoked by him, that the minors are estopped from questioning the same because of the insolvency of the succession, as shown by the final account, would be inducement to dishonest tutors to, wreck and spoliate the property in which the minors might have an eventual interest. The fact of his purchasing the minors’ property would raise a well grounded suspicion that the order to sell was procured for his special benefit, and as a consequence his interest would be to ward off bidders, to depreciate the valué of the property, and finally to present in his final account an insolvent succession, in order to protect his purchase. From the date of the adjudication of the property to the tutor his acts in relation theretq must be viewed with suspicion. His final account, in which figures the price paid for the property, can not be final and conclusive, and there is, with this badge of fraud resting against it, no reason to regard it as a final settlement with the minors, showing a complete, fair and just exhibit of his dealings with the succession in which they are interested.
The placing of the minors on the account as creditors for the homestead amount does not commit them into an absolute confession as to the insolvency of the succession. It was the tutor’s admission and not their admission. They are presumed to know nothing of the condition of the succession during their minority. It has been held that major heirs receiving the proceeds of the sale of the effects in their father’s succession, on the parcition of the same, are not estopped from revendicating-the property when they are kept in ignorance of facts connected therewith. Heirs of Self vs. Taylor, 33 An. 769.
It was stated in argument that the J. Aronstein who purchased the property at the provoked sale was not the tutor. There is nothing in the record to show this fact, and if such be the case it can be shown on the trial on the merits.
It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be annulled, avoided and reversed, and it is now ordered that this case be reinstated on the docket of the lower court and proceeded with according to law.