33 La. Ann. 466 | La. | 1881
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
On the application of the administrator of these successions, the only piece of real estate belonging thereto was ordered to be sold.
It was mortgaged to secure $23,200. It had been appraised in the inventory at $15,000. Two days before the sale it was ordered to be reappraised, and it was valued at $12,000. With the consent of the mortgage creditors, who had pressed payment, it was ordered to be sold pare cash, part on credit. On the day of sale it was bid off to the highest and last bidder for $12,500; but the adjudicatee refused to accept the title. The deceased left minor children.
From a judgment ordering compliance with the sale, the adjudicatee has appealed.
The question presented for solution is:
Can the immovable property of a succession, in which minors ara interested, and which is ordered to be sold to pay debts at the instance of the administrator, be adjudicated at the first offering for less than the appraisement in the inventory, and on any other terms than cash ?
The question has long ago, and quite frequently since, been decided in the affirmative, the minors, who are beneficiary heirs, being considered as having a mere residuary interest. This has been held not only in eases in which the property was ordered to be sold on the demand of an administrator, but also of a tutor administering a doubtfully solvent succession. 7 L. 312; 8 L. 412; 5 B. 96; 10 R. 396, 457; 11 R. 508; 2 An. 966; 4 An. 578; 9 An. 107; 13 An. 383; 15 An. 641; 16 An. 420; 28 An. 175, 269.
In the first of the two last cases in 28 An., the jurisprudence on the subject had been emphatically announced as settled, although there was delivered a dissenting opinion on the occasion. But for the hypothetical ruling at first made in 29 An. 505, and next in 31 An. 414, particu
In the first of those cases, decided in June, 1877, at Opelousas, the Court well held that a sale of succession property to pay debts could not be made for less than two-thirds of the appraisement, but added that sales made for less than the appraised value will not be disturbed, if there be proof that the price at which it was adjudicated is its actual value, thus hypothetically sanctioning a sale at less than the appraisement.
•In another case, decided shortly .after, in the same volume, p. 536, as it were with a view to dispel the cloud apparently thus cast, the same Court, Spencer, J., said:
“We are aware that this Court has held that the sale of minors’ property to pay the ancestors’ debts, may, under certain circumstances, be made for less than its appraisement; but we think the property in those cases was rather that of a succession than that of a minor, and that the law, as laid down in articles 990,991,992 of the Code of Practice, governing sales of succession property, received a most liberal interpretation in the cases where this Court so held.”
“While upon the doctrine of stare decisis, we would be loth to depart from the rule that succession property sold to pay debts may, on first offering, be sold for less than its appraisement, we are not disposed to extend the rule to property belonging exclusively to minors. We prefer to adhere to the letter of the law, that it cannot be legally sold for less than the appraisement.” C. C. 342, et seq.
The most recent expression of the judicial mind on the subject was delivered in Tabary, 31 An. 411. The Court there distinctly said:
“At the pages of the Code to which we refer, what do we read? That, when sold for cash, the property of vacant estates, of all successions accepted with benefit of inventory, whether the heirs are minors or of age, and of all successions under administration, cannot, at the first offering, be sold for less than its appraised value; that, unless that value be bid and obtained, the property must be readvertised for sale and then sold on credit for what it will bring.”
The articles referred to are 990, 991, 992, 995 C. P.
It is worthy of note, that article R. C. C. 1170, relative to the sale of the property of a vacant succession, directs the judge to cause it “ to be estimated by experts, by him appointed and sworn, and if at the sale, two-thirds of the estimated value be not offered for it, the sale shall be suspended and the curator is bound to have it again exposed after the same time of notice,” &e., “ but then, the property must be sold at the price offered.” ’
It is. likewise to be borne in mind, that article 995 of the C. P., ex
. It is to be regretted that a principle which appeared to be deeply imbedded in our jurisprudence, and which had become a rule of practice and of property, was thus shaken, and that a question which had been considered forever set at rest, was thus again agitated.
After a thorough examination of all the authorities on the subject, we find that the question has been unnecessarily complicated, to the mistification of both Bench and Bar, by amalgamating with it the interest of mjnors concerned in the succession, and other considerations, which appear to us to have no affinity to it.
The error committed consists in the double fallacious assumption, that minors have greater rights than major heirs, in the settlement of an estate, and that the articles of the Code of Practice (990-2-5) have a general purpose, and therefore must receive an inflexible application to all cases of sales of succession real estate.
Minors' are invariably beneficiary heirs. Majors are, at their option, either beneficiary or unconditional heirs. In either case, when the succession is in the hands and under the control of an executor or of an administrator, and is in process of liquidation, the interest of the heirs, minors or majors, being merely contingent, deducto cere alieno, neither must be consulted, or heard, before an application is made by the succession representative, as an essential condition precedent, for the validity of an order of sale to pay debts. They are notified of it by the public advertisements during thirty days. 24 An. 530; 15 An. 675; 19 An. 528; 18 An. 496; 28 An. 269; 2 An. 966. If the order have been improperly granted, or if the heirs wish to prevent the sale, by tendering the amount required for the payment of the debts or the discharge of the legacies, if there be any, they are not left without adequate remedy. 23 An. 309, 633; 24 An. 530. On a proper showing they, or creditors, would be entitled, either to have the terms of sale changed or the sale itself arrested. What that showing should be, necessarily will have to depend upon contingencies. If the sale be riot arrested or the terms modified, and it take place, it will be treated as ratified by the implied consent of both creditors and heirs, and title will pass to the adjudicates, who is not bound to look for protection beyond the decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, and may safely comply with the terms of adjudication.
It is an indisputable proposition that the law allows that which it does not forbid.
The clear right of a creditor, whose claim is liquidated by a judgment, is to subject the property of his debtor, when any is found, to the
If the debtor live, the creditor, if he hold a judgment contradictorily obtained, or has a claim secured by an authentic mortgage, may issue a Ji. fa. against all and levy on any of the property of his debtor,'or executory process against the real estate specially affected, and have it sold at the first offering at two-thirds or more of its appraisement, or without appraisement, where the same is duly waived.
If the debtor have died, the creditor, if his claim be liquidated by judgment, or acknowledged, can insist upon a sale being ordered, in the mortuary proceeding. In such a base, the law requires that the appraisement be reached, and if it be not, that the property be afterwards ¡sold at any price at twelve months’ credit to the highest and last bidder.
If the creditor, however, be one whose claim is secured by mortgage, he has two remedies. It is optional with him, either to insist for an order of sale in the mortuaria, or to proceed via executiva in different and distinct proceedings. In the former case, the property could not be sold for less than the appraisement at the first offering. 5 R. 96; 10 R. 457; 3 An. 607; 10 An. 238. In the latter case, he would be entitled to have the property sold at the first offering at two-thirds or more of the appraisement and, in both instances, if there were no adjudication at the first crying, he could have it subsequently sold for any price at twelve months’ credit., 12 An. 69; 19 An. 528.
But now, if the creditor does not insist on an order of sale in the mortuaria, or does not proceed via executiva, being a mortgage creditor, and the administrator is prevailed upon, or considers that the creditors should be paid, he may, as the representative of all the creditors, ut universi, as their mouth-piece, speak in the name of all, and apply for a sale of sufficient property to pay them. In such a case, there is no law that requires that the property should bring the inventory appraisement.
In the absence of any express provision of law on the subject, the case being one of expropriation of the legal successors of the deceased debtor to pay his debts or those of his succession, the court must be guided by laws in pari materia, which are alike in instances in which writs are issued and in which an order is made for the sale of the property of insolvents, or of vacant estates, that is, at two-thirds of the appraisement. R. O. C. 21, 2184,1170; C. P. 995.
Article 1167 R. C. C. is to the effect that the sale in the case of a vacant succession can be made to the last and highest bidder and does not impose any lower limit for an adjudication.
■ Article 1170, in the instance stated, fixes that limit at two-thirds of the appraisement.
Article 680 C. P. authorizes an adjudication if the price offered by the highest and last bidder reach or exceed two-thirds of the appraise-, ment.
Article 995 C. P. assimilates all succession sales, whether the estates are administered by curators or other persons appointed by a court, or by testamentary executors.
In Carter vs. McManus, 15 An. 642, the Court well said through Mr. Justice Land as its organ:
“ It has been repeatedly held, that the rules which regulate the sale of the property of minors, do not apply to sales of succession property made at the instance of administrators for the payment of debts. And, as a consequence of this ruling, it has been held, that the sale of succession property for the payment of debts may be made for less than the appraised value in the inventory. And, as a further consequence of the same ruling, such sales must be held valid and binding upon minor heirs as well as upon heirs of full age; for, in estates accepted with the benefit of inventory, no law requires that the property shall produce its appraised value, nor that a reappraisement be made in case the first estimation shall not be obtained.” See authorities quoted.
In the succession of Weber, 16 An. 420, the Court, Mr. Justice Yoorhies delivering the opinion, said:
" The payment of the debts must be effected without regard to the appraisement, when-the sale is ordered at the instance of the administrator; but, if ordered at the instance of the creditors, then recourse must be had to articles 990, 991 and 992 of the Code of Practice.”
See, also, 2 An. 968; 19 An. 528; 28 An. 175, 269; 13 An. 383; 9 An. 107.
We think that those opinions are a sound exposition of the doctrine on the subject, and as the ruling in 31 An. 414 is solitary and cannot be considered as representing previous adjudications, which were, in 29 An. 536, formally recognized as stare decisis, it should not be invoked as authority on the question there decided in other similar cases. 13 L. 445; 6 R. 225; 11 R. 302; 13 An. 345.
The reason for which the law requires (.0. P. 999-2) that property ordered to be sold, at the demand of a creditor, shall not be adjudicated for less than the appraisement, is that it will not permit one or a few to force a sale and have the property sold for less than the appraisement, possibly sacrificed, when all others concerned remaining silent, apparently consent by their tacit acquiescence, that matters continue in statu quo until they otherwise determine.
It was discretionary with the District Judge, on the application of the administrator, to cause the property ordered to be sold to be re-examined and reappraised, as it may well be that the property may have been appraised too high at first, or shrunk from the original evaluation put upon it. The report of the experts appraising it at $12,000 is indicative of that hypothesis.
The objection that the order to value again was made two days before the sale, is unwholesome. A judicial sale to pay debts has for its objects a forced expropriation. Had the mortgage creditors proceeded via executivá as they might have done, the property securing their claim could have been appraised, as is usual, shortly before, possibly on the very day of sale. The appraisement is intended as a guide for the officer or succession representative making the sale. It is sufficient if it be made in time for the sale. 2 An. 206.
We hear no complaint from any creditor or heir in this case. The mortgage creditors, who could have required the sale for cash, have consented to its being made on terms, deeming it to their advantage.
It is only where the creditors require, when they demand a sale, that it be made for cash, that the court must so order. As a rule, it is preferable, where no objection is made, that the sale be ordered on more advantageous terms. The practice has been to ask, and the courts have sanctioned sales, part cash part on credit, the notes after-wards to be reduced to cash with proper authority. 2 An. 966; 19 An. 355; 15 An. 264.
Had the property in question brought the inventory appraisement, the surplus over the'adjudication actually made and under consideration Would have wholly enured to and been completely absorbed by the mortgage creditors.
We take the rule to be, that the property left by deceased persons, when ordered to be sold to pay debts on the application of a succession representative, executor, administrator, or other, in any succession, legal, testamentary, or irregular, vacant or not, accepted with benefit of inventory or unconditionally, whether the heirs be of age or minors, or both, present or absent, or both, can be legally sold for less than the appraisement thereof, but not for less than two-thirds thereof at the first offering; and that the only case, in which the law requires that the appraisement be reached, is when one or more creditors require a sale under the provisions of articles O. P. 990-2.
We have taken much pain to review the whole subjeet. We have given it our full and diligent attention, and after a patient and thorough
We And no error in the judgment appealed from. It is, therefore, affirmed with' costs.