9 La. 281 | La. | 1836
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case must be considered as intimately connected with the one between the same parties, just decided, and the two were in fact tried together.
It appears, that the curator of the vacant estate of Nicholas Stein, at the expiration of the year of his curatorship, filed an account of his administration, and prayed for a renewal or continuation of his curatorship for another year. The account was approved by the court, contradictorily with the attorney of absent heirs, and the curatorship prolonged.
John F. Stein, the appellant, and whose suit to be recognised as heir, was still pending, several days after this order was given, came into court, and by his attorney filed a written motion to set aside the proceedings,- on the following grounds: 1st. That the order purports to be a judgment homo-logating the curator’s account, and reappointing him for another year, and as such is void, because rendered out of term time, and ex parte; 2d. That the appearer had already cited the curator to render an account, and to surrender the estate to him as heir at law of the deceased, and that said account should have been rendered in that suit, or at least he should have been cited or notified of the application for reappointment; 3d. That the account was homologated without proof of its - correctness, and the- charges are not supported by vouchers; 4th. That the allowance of one thousand five hundred dollars to the attorney of absent heirs, is extravagant and highly exorbitant, no services having been rendered by him to entitle him to such a sum, and
This motion was overruled, and the opponent appealed.
To the two first grounds of opposition, it appears to us a sufficient answer, that until the appellant had been admitted as heir of the deceased, he had no action to compel an account, and was not entitled to notice of any proceedings had in relation to the administration of the estate. The Louisiana Code provides, that until an heir has been recog-nised and admitted, the curator may be called to render an account by.the attorney of absent heirs. Louisiana Code, 1181, 1182, 1183.
With respect to the remaining objections, this court feels itself bound to remark, that although the appellant has not shown any right to interfere, and although we cannot adjudicate on the correctness of the account rendered by the curator, as the case is now presented to us ; yet we consider such provisional account as not conclusive on the heirs at law, who may afterwards appear and be recognised as such. The judge is to receive and approve such account on his official responsibility, contradictorily with the attorney of absent heirs, and to order the balance in the hands of the curator, whose term is prolonged, to be paid over to the state treasurer. Louisiana Code, 1197, 1198. The estate consists principally of money and stocks, and evidences of debts due the deceased, and we see no evidence accompanying the account, which justifies the allowance of one thousand five hundred dollars each, to the attorney of the curator, and the attorney of the absent heirs. It has long been a subject of just reproach, that extravagant allowances are made to counsel in relation to the administration of estates; it is an abuse which can only be corrected by the courts inflexibly adhering to the rule, to graduate the fee by the value of the services rendered.