26 La. Ann. 230 | La. | 1874
This is an injunction suit. The Crescent City Bank and G. W. West having each a judgment against Whetty M. Sasser, issued executions and caused the undivided half of certain lands in the parish of Eapides to be seized by the sheriff. The public administrator injoined the sale on the ground that the lands seized
The counsel for the defendants in injunction took a bill of exceptions to the permission granted by the court for an amended petition to be filed by the plaintiffs, the suit being an injunction suit, and all the matters of law or fact that can justify the issuing such process •could and should be alleged and pleaded in the original petition. The amended petition was admitted. It contained only the plea of prescription, which maybe pleaded at any stage of the proceedings. We think the ruling of the court correct. Civil Code art. 3464.
The facts of this case are that the community of acquets between Whetty M. Sasser and his wife Drucilla, was dissolved by the death of the latter in 1864. Their property was all community property. Mrs. Sasser, as it appears, did not bring anything into the marriage, and never acquired anything by inheritance or donation during the long existence of the community of thirty years. A large amount of property seems to have been accumulated by the community, and against It there was a large amount of debts. It appears that other judgment •creditors of Sasser had, prior to the seizures made by the present defendants, seized under executions the lands belonging to the community, and their seizures were injoined by the administrator to the extent of an undivided half, on the ground that it was the property of the succession of Drucilla Sasser; the other half was sold and the proceeds satisfied the executions. The undivided half seized by the defendants in this suit, the plaintiff alleges, as before stated, is the property of Drucilla Sasser’s estate, under his administration as the public administrator of the parish.
The position assumed by the plaintiff’s counsel is, that the husband does not represent the community after its dissolution, and the heirs ■must be joined with him in a suit to affect their interest, and cites 1 Rob. 378, where it is laid down that “ the creditor who wishes to hold the heirs of the wife responsible for a community debt must join them in his suit against the husband, for the latter no longer represents a. community which is at an end.” The suit of the Crescent City Bank against Sasser was brought in 1867, four years after the death of his wife. The note sued on was due first of March, 1862, and petition and citation were served on the twenty-second of April, 1867. Sasser on
It is argued that the husband has no power to create obligations against the community after its dissolution, and therefore his confession of judgment in the case of the Crescent City Bank has no effect against the heirs of Mrs. Sasser, for the authority to acknowledge a debt prescribed is equal to the authority to create a debt, referring to 1 An. 331. It is further contended that every debt of the community is a debt against the heirs of the wife, and these debts can not be fixed and adjudicated upon, without their being parties to the judicial proceedings which decree them; that the administrator of Mrs. Sasserhaving accepted her succession, it is bound for one-half the debts of the succession, and stands in relation to the bank claim as a joint debtor. Therefore it is held, her administrator has the right to plead prescription against it; that without citation or notice the judgment, of the bank against Sasser is not res adjudicata as to her.
These views of the relations that exist between the heirs of a deceased wife in community and the creditors of that community are not, we apprehend, in consonance with the laws and the general jurisprudence on tbe subject. The debts of the community during its existence are the debts of the husband. The property of the community is liable for the payment of them. Even more, the community property may be taken to pay debts of the husband contracted before the. marriage. 13 An. 396; 2 An. 226; 3 An. 615.
Upon the dissolution of the community by the death of the wife, the responsibility of the husband in regard to the community debts, is not changed. He is absolutely and personally bound for their payment; and his separate property may be seized and sold for their acquittal. This being his position, he has under his control the community property which by law is expressly subjected to the payment, of the community debts; and he has, so far as the final settlement and liquidation of the community after its dissolution is concerned, the same rights he had during its existence; because he is, after the dissolution, under the same responsibilities for the community debts that-he was before the dissolution. It is but just that he should have those powers. The community property continues under his control until the debts are paid. Until their final settlement and discharge, the heirs have no absolute rights to the property of the community that can be legally recognized. Their interest in it continues contingent and uncertain, until by the result of the final discharge of all the obligations of the community, it is known whether or not there are assets remaining for partition between the survivor and the heirs of the de
In the case under consideration, Sasser, before the dissolution of the community, would have had the undoubted right to waive prescription and confess judgment, in the case of the debt against the community held by the Crescent City Bank. His right to do so after the dissolution, we think continued.
If, through fraud used by a surviving husband in community to injure the heirs of the wife, he should sell or otherwise dispose of the community property, it would seem that they would have a remedy by the provisions of article 2404 of the Civil Code.
The proceedings in this case, we think, rather anomalous. When they were commenced, Sasser, the survivor in community, was living and unmarried. He had by law the usufruct of the wife’s half of the community property, which consisted then of the undivided half of the lands seized by the judgment creditors, no partition of the community property ever having been made. Nevertheless, without opposition on the part of Sasser, the public administrator came forth and administers upon what he styles the estate of Drucilla Sasser, and injoins the sale of the community property seized by judgment creditors of the community and which is subjected to the payment of their judgments.
We think the proceedings irregular and illegal. The defendants, in their answer, prayed a dissolution of the injunction and for damages. We conclude, from the character of this case, the judgment of the lower court should be amended by decreeing damages.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be amended by decreeing that O. K. Hawley, administrator, plaintiff in this case, pay the defendants the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars as damages for the wrongful suing out of the injunction and all costs of suit, and as thus amended that the judgment be affirmed.