50 So. 771 | La. | 1909
Joshua Pearce was twice married. 1-Ie had issue only with his first wife. These were B. M., William, Joseph, and Eliza Pearce. Not knowing that the law strikes with nullity any settlement attempted to be made of the succession of a living person, he made what he thought was a legal settlement of his own succession with his children and grandchildren. He then gave by will to his second wife the property in controversy, a 100-acre plantation in the parish of Rap-ides, on which he lived. He died in 1879. In 1882 his will was set aside, at the suit of B. M. and Eliza Pearce. Although the effect was to cause the property to revert to his succession, Eliza Pearce, then married to Horace Marshall, took possession of it as if belonging to herself alone, and continued so to hold it until her death in 1893. In 1896 her children made a partition of the property of her succession and of that of her husband, their father, and the property in controversy fell to her daughter Esther, wife of I. C. Johnson, and to the children of her predeceased daughter, Alzin, first wife of I. C. Johqson. ■ The language of the act of partition is that the heirs respectively sell to each other the portion's falling to them in the partition; but the consideration of the sale is stated to be “the amount of the said purchasers’ interest in the estates of their deceased father and mother,” and therefore the act'is manifestly a mere partition. The present pdtitory action is brought by B. M. Pearce 'arid the children and grandchildren of William
The main reliance of the defendants is on the prescription of 10 shears, based on the partition which they made with their coheirs; the contention being that said partition was not a partition, but a sale. But, as already stated, it is manifestly a partition, and, of course, a partition, being merely declaratory, and not translative, of ownership, cannot serve as a basis for prescription. Kernan v. Baham, 45 La. Ann. 811, 13 South. 155.
The other contention is that the coheirs of Eliza Pearce Marshall consented to her taking the property, and abandoned their rights to it, as is shown by their silence and inaction from 1882 to the filing of this suit, in April, 1907; but we know of no law by which silence and inaction will bring about the loss of title to real estate, unless in connection with the prescriptions established by law.
The trial court gave plaintiffs judgment for the interest claimed in the property, but offset the revenues with the taxes and useful improvements. "VVe have to set aside this judgment in so far as it finds that the taxes and improvements are equal to the revenues; but we think that the proper time and place for the settlement to be had between parties for these revenues and taxes is when the heirs of Joshua Pearce have a general settlement among themselves of his succession. Non constat that the plaintiffs will not then be found to he indebted to the heirs of Eliza Pearce, instead of the latter to them.
The judgment appealed from is therefore set aside; and' it is now ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiffs be decreed to have an interest of three-fourths, undivided, in the property described in the petition; that their demand for fruits and revenues, and the defendants’ demand for taxes and useful improvements, be dismissed, as in case of non-suit ; that the defendants pay the costs of the lower court; and that the plaintiffs pay one-half, and the defendants one-half, of the costs of this appeal.