39 La. Ann. 579 | La. | 1887
Tlie opinion of t-lie Court was delivered by
Motion to Dismiss.
Tlie grounds of the motion are that the prayer, tlie order, and the-bond of appeal were for a suspensive appeal and that the bond was not filed witliin the time required for such an appeal; and that there was no prayer, and there is no order, for a devolutive appeal.
Appellees rely on tlie decision in Reed vs. Creditors, 37 Ann. 907, in which tlie appeal was dismissed on similar grounds.
In that case it was held that under a prayer and an order for a suspensive appeal, a bond not filed witliin the prescribed delays would not sustain a devolutive appeal, because the order was exclusively for a suspensive appeal.
At the earnest request of appellant's counsel in the instant ease, we have made a thorough examination of our jurisprudence on this point, and we leave the investigation with the conclusion that the weight of authority conflicts with tlie rule in Reed’s case, and that the latter must, therefore, not be followed.
The preponderance of the decisions, turning upon this contention, is to the effect that the nature or character of the appeal is not determined by the prayer for, or tlie order of, appeal, but by the amount of tlie bond and by the time at which it is furnished.
If the prayer and the order contemplate a suspensive appeal, and tlie bond, in tlie amount fixed by tlie order, is furnished within the delay prescribed bj' law, the appeal is. suspensive.
But where both the prayer and the order are for a suspensive appeal, if the amount of the bond furnished, in compliance with the order of tlie court, is insufficient in amount for a suspensive appeal, or if it be not filed witliin tlie prescribed delay for such an a-ppeal, but is filed within the year, the appeal will be sustained as devolutive only.
Under the views which prevail in these cases, the present appeal must be sustained as devolutive.
It is therefore ordered that the motion to dismiss herein made be overruled.
On Ri;i,h to Connor, the Ad.judicatee of Succession Profeetv to Accept Title.
The adjudicatee at the succession sale of a piece of immovable property depending upon these successions lias taken this appeal from a judgment condemning him to comply with the terms of the bid made by him at that sale.
1-Iis resistance is grounded on the alleged illegal composition of the family meeting which deliberated in behalf of the minor heirs of said successions, for the purpose of recommending and of fixing the terms and conditions of the sale.
That illegality is attributed to the fact that the undertutor of the minors participated in the proceedings of the family meeting as a member thereof, instead of presiding over the same and approving its deliberations as required by law.
The facts, as shown by the record, arc : that at the death of his wife John Keller was qualified as natural tutor of the minor children issue of the marriage, with Louis Imholte as nndertutor.
At the death o’f John Keller, in July, 1886, the two successions were consolidated, and A. G. Ricks took charge of the same, as testamentary executor of the husband and as testamentary tutor of the minors, of whom Joseph Yoegtle was appointed and qualified as undertutor. At the family meeting which recommended the sale under discussion, Joseph Yoegtle acted as undertutor, and Joseph Imholte acted as a member, with seven other relatives and friends of the minors.
Appellant makes the point that, as the functions of the undertutor, Imholte, who had been appointed in September, 1883, did not terminate with the natural tutorship at the death of John Keller, the subse
But the record shows, and appellant does not deny, that the court which appointed Voegtle was fully competent, and hence his proposition involves him in a collateral attack of the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, making the appointment of an undertutor.
Now, one of the most familiar rules of our jurisprudence is to the effect that the correctness or regularity of a judgment of a competent court appointing a tutor cannot be collaterally reviewed or questioned, even by the court which has made the appointment.
Out of numerous decisions to be found on the subject in our reports, we have culled the following as bearing more directly on the point: Succession of Winn, 3 Rob. 305; Hoover vs. Sellers, 5 Ann. 182; Thibodeaux vs. Thibodeaux, 5 Ann. 598; Martin vs. Jones, 12 Ann. 168; Tutorship of Hughes, 13 Ann. 380; Caillebeau vs. Ingrouff, 14 Ann. 623.
The rule has been applied to the case of a foreign tutor or guardian, (12 Ann. 168), and it has been extended to the presumption that the-tutor, shown to have been appointed bj a competent court, had been qualified, in the absence of direct proof of that important fact. (5 Ann. 182.)
It requires no argument to show that the same rule must govern in the case of the appointment of an undertutor, whose functions are not less sacred, important and indispensable in the interests of minors than those of the tutor.
It may be, as suggested by appellant, that the appointment of Voegtle as undertutor* of the Keller minors was unauthorized and illegal, but that is the question which cannot be investigated in a collateral manner. His appointment by a court of competent jurisdiction is full proof of his capacity, and has effect against third persons until set aside by appeal or in an action of nullity.
As this alleged illegality was the sole defect urged against the proceedings which are the foundation of the adjudication herein resisted by appellant, it is clear to our minds that the sale was correctly sustained by the district court.
Judgment affirmed.