26 La. Ann. 442 | La. | 1874
This action is brought to annul a mortgage executed by the plaintiff, as she alleges, through error on her part and fraud on the part of the defendant, to secure an amount of indebtedness pretended by him to have arisen from his administration of the succession of the plaintiff’s mother, and presented by the defendant’s account of that administration, homologated by judgment of the Second District Court of New Orleans. The plaintiff prays also the annulment of said account of administration, and the judgment homolo
The plaintiff was left at an early age, by the death of her father and mother, without any known relatives. At the instance of a priest who had been the spiritual adviser of her mother, and by a promise made to her father by the defendant, he took upon himself the administration of the estate of Mary Thacker. It seems that a man named Finch had been appointed tutor to the minor, and that she lived a year or two in his house; but beyond signing his name a few times to instruments presented to him, we do not find that he ever did any act in the capacity of tutor.
The entire control and management of all the property of the succession of Mary Thacker, the residuum of which belonged to the minor, was in the hands of the defendant as administrator; that the minor went to live with him; it appears that he had the personal care of her and superintended her education; that he settled the debts of the succession, paying some of them out of his own means, and preserving for the minor a house and lot in the oity of New Orleans, worth some five or six thousand dollars, the rent of which he collected. In the year 1865, the minor, at the age of about fourteen years, was upon advice of her friends sent by the defendant to a convent school in Kentucky, where she remained until she graduated in 1869, and returned to New Orleans in July of that year. In 1870 she was emancipated, and in February following the defendant filed his final account of administration, which was presented to the plaintiff, and after citation to her was homologated. It showed a balance against the plaintiff of $3107 81. For this sum she executed the mortgage which she now seeks to annul in this action.
It is announced on the part of the defendant that he has no other account to render than the one at first presented, and on the part of the plaintiff it is suggested that a final judgment may properly be rendered by this court upon the evidence and data before it.
We incline to think the litigation may be terminated here, and proceed to examine the evidence with that view. The account of the administrator gives with precision the various items of expenses incurred for the minor’s education and a detailed statement of her
The court below, we think, should have overruled the exception to its jurisdiction in regard to the annulment of the mortgage. The defendant filed an account as administrator. That instrument has also the character of a tutorship account. The account shows a considerable balance against the minor, the present plaintiff, who, at the instance of defendant, executed a mortgage on her property to secure the payment of that balance. The administrator’s account was homologated by order of the judge a quo. The mortgage has for its basis the account so homologated. That the judge a quo has jurisdiction of the suit to annul the account and the order homologating it, there can be no doubt. The annulment of the account and judgment of homologation carries with it necessarily the annulment of the mortgage, because it expunges the amount of the assumed indebtedness for which the mortgage was given, thereby sweeping away the basis upon which it rested. Subíalo fundamento cadit opus.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be annulled and avoided. It is further ordered that the account rendered by the administrator be amended, so as to reduce the indebtedness thereupon shown in favor of the defendant from $3107 84 to $918, the amount now fixed as due by the plaintiff to the defendant; that the
Rehearing refused.