11 Rob. 77 | La. | 1845
This case, which was a claim on a building contract, and for extra work, was before us in July of last year, upon an appeal taken by the defendants, and the judgment of the lower court was amended so as to reduce the plaintiff’s demand to $1,818 40. Pending the appeal, Hiligsberg died in the parish of St. Bernard, and his estate fell under the administration of three testamentary executors, Louis Pilié, Joseph Pifié, and Léon Bernard. It appears that the plaintiff, who was largely indebted at the- time of the institution of his suit, made
The appellant, and the two executors above named, have asked of this court to annul the judgment appealed from, for want of jurisdiction in the District Court; and they rely on articles 983 and 924 of the Code of Practice. The first provides that all debts in money which are due from successions administered by curators appointed by courts, and by testamentary executors, shall be liquidated, and their payment enforced by the Court of Probates of the place where the succession was opened. Article 924, sec. 13, declares, that the Courts of Probate have exclusive power to decide on claims for money which are brought against successions administered by curators, testamentary executors, or administrators, and to establish the order of privileges and mode of payment. The amount deposited by the executors in the District Court was a debt in money due from the succession of Hiligsberg to Fleming, or rather to those who acquired his rights by assignment, or seizure. The latter must be considered as the real creditors of the estate. Hil-igsberg, from the moment the transfers were notified to him, or the seizures were levied in his hands, could not have safely or legally paid the debt to Fleming, whom he could no longer consider as his creditor. Had the rule not been taken, and had the amount of the judgment not been deposited with the clerk of the District Court, it is clear that the transferrees and seizing creditors of Fleming would have been compelled to present their claims to the Probate Court of St. Bernard, which alone would have been competent to determine on their respective rights and privileges on the sum originally due by the estate to their common debtor, and to order its payment to them. If, for these purposes, the jurisdiction of the Court of Probates of St.
It is, therefore, ordered, that the judgment of the. District Court be avoided and annulled ; and it is further ordered, that the rule taken on the 20th of July, 1844, be dismissed, with costs in both courts.
M ARTIN, J., being interested in the question, did not sit on the trial of this case.