166 So. 488 | La. | 1936
Ned Christian, during his marriage to his second wife, Harriet Watson, acquired 145 acres of land in Caddo parish, La.
Harriet Watson died intestate in 1895 or 1896. At her death she left, as issue of her marriage, three daughters, Julia, Eliza, and Sallie, each of whom inherited, by *525 mere operation of law, an undivided one-sixth interest in this property.
Sallie Christian never married. She died intestate, and was survived by her father and two sisters, and also by Coleman Wells, a natural child, who died intestate in the year, 1929, without heirs, and without causing himself to be put in possession of the estate of his natural mother by an order of court.
Alleging the succession of Coleman Wells to be vacant, John T. Guyton procured his appointment as administrator October 15, 1934, and sought to administer, as the vacant succession of Coleman Wells, the one-sixth interest in the 145 acres belonging to the estate of Sallie Christian.
An attempted administrator's sale was made to D.L. Perkins, and the state of Louisiana intervened to claim the proceeds.
Ned Christian, the father of Sallie Christian, and the children of her two deceased sisters, intervened, setting up their ownership of the property, by virtue of having acquired same from Sallie Christian, as her lawful heirs, in view of the fact that no judicial demand had been made against them for the estate of Sallie Christian by her natural child, Coleman Wells.
Trial in the district court resulted in a judgment sustaining the intervention and opposition of Ned Christian et al., setting aside the sale to Perkins, and decreeing interveners as the sole and only heirs of Sallie Christian, deceased, and, as such, owners, in their respective rights, of an undivided one-sixth interest in the property in dispute. *526
The curator, John T. Guyton; D.L. Perkins, the purchaser of the property at administrator's sale; and the state of Louisiana have appealed.
The interveners claiming the one-sixth interest of Sallie Christian, deceased, in the estate of her late mother are herlawful father, nephew, and nieces.
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By judicial proceedings entitled, Succession of Sallie and Harriet Christian, interveners accepted said succession and had themselves sent into possession. Tr. pp. 100 and 107.
It is clear, therefore, that the seizin of the estate of Sallie Christian is legally *527 vested in the interveners, her lawful heirs, subject only to be divested by the action of a natural child, judicially claiming possession of the estate contradictorily with them.
In the case of Taylor v. Allen,
"The mode of proceeding for obtaining from the court an order sending an acknowledged illegitimate child into possession of the succession of its mother is prescribed by articles 925 and 926, which read:
"`Art. 925. Children called to the succession of their natural father or mother, in the cases mentioned in the preceding articles, are permitted to take possession of the succession which has fallen to them only by the order of the judge of the parish in which the succession is opened.
"`Art. 926. If the succession be that of the natural mother deceased without legitimate children, the putting into possession of the natural children shall not be pronounced without calling the relations of the deceased, who would have inherited in the default of the natural children, if they are present or represented in the state; or without appointing a person to defend them, if they are absent.'" (Italics ours.)
In the succession of Veith v. Meyer,
It is again said in Glenn v. West,
"Homer Scott, therefore, was an irregular heir of Lona McGee, and as such he succeeded neither to the ownership nor to thepossession of this property at the date of her death, and plaintiff, as his legal heir, acquired no greater rights than deceased possessed at the opening of his succession.
"The petition fails to allege that Homer Scott was legally put into possession of the estate left him by Lona McGee. He, therefore, is not considered as having succeeded to the deceased from the instant of her death. As an irregular heir, he had only a right of action to cause himself to be put into possession of the succession falling to him, and this right of action, forming a part of his succession, was all that he transmitted at the moment of his death to the plaintiff. C.C. art. 949.
"Nor do we find in the petition in this case that plaintiff, prior to the institution of this suit, has at any time exercised her right of action as the legal heir of Homer *529 Scott, deceased, to be placed in possession of the estate of Lona McGee.
"The maxim, `Le mort saisit le vif,' does not apply to irregular successions. Succession of Allen, 44 La.Ann. 801, 11 So. 42; Succession of Barber, 52 La.Ann. 960, 963, 27 So. 363. * * *
"It follows, therefore, that an irregular heir, or his legalheir, has no standing in court in a petitory action, unless ajudgment has been first obtained putting him or his legal heirinto possession of an irregular succession; the allegation of themere right of action to be placed in possession of an irregular succession not being a sufficient profert in curia upon which to base an action in revendication." (Italics ours.)
There is no allegation or proof in the record that any judgment or order of court has ever been obtained putting Coleman Wells into possession of his natural mother's estate, much less contradictorily with the lawful relations of Sallie Christian, who inherited her property in default of the claim of any natural child.
The state is not the "legal heir" of Coleman Wells, deceased, the natural child of Sallie Christian, deceased. The admitted fact is that he died without "heirs."
Besides, it is said in Taylor v. Allen,
Under the decisions cited, supra, it is clear that when Coleman Wells died, before having made his demand to be put into possession of his natural mother's estate, he did not leave as a part of his succession the undivided one-sixth interest in the property which was owned by his natural mother, which has been inventoried as his property by the administrator or curator in these proceedings.
All that Coleman Wells could have possibly left as far as this property is concerned, was a right of action to "his heirs" to demand from the lawful heirs of Sallie Christian, deceased, that he be recognized as the acknowledged natural child of Sallie Christian and as the irregular heir of her succession.
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Coleman Wells left no "heirs" to exercise this right, and the state did not succeed to such right, as there were other lawful heirs of Sallie Christian, who claimed the property in her estate.
"A succession is called vacant when no one claims it, or when all the heirs are unknown, or when all the known heirs to it haverenounced it." Civ. Code, art.
The legal heirs of Sallie Christian, deceased, succeeded her at the instant of her death; they have not renounced her succession; they are all known; they are all present claiming it in this proceeding; and have already accepted and been sent into possession. There is no default of "lawful relations" to claim the succession in this case.
The state is entitled to the proceeds of successions, only when they are vacant, under the express provisions of articles 1196 and 1197 of the Civil Code.
We find no error in the judgment appealed from.
*532Judgment affirmed.