35 La. Ann. 288 | La. | 1883
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for partition, in which plaintiffs allege that they are undivided owners with defendants of a certain tract of land measuring an arpent and a half front on the Mississippi river, by the usual depth, and forming part of a larger tract measuring three arpents front on said river, which other half of said tract is owned by another set of proprietors, known as Similien Sheldon & Co.
After this judicial admission of the state of indivisión of the ownership of the three arpent tract, plaintiff’s petition contains the averment that a division by extra-judicial act had been effected, of the original tract in two equal portions, the upper half of which was allotted to S. Sheldon & Co., and the lower half became the property of the parties, plaintiffs and defendants, in this suit.
It is next alleged that this partition, which was made by a surveyor, and was not evidenced by any other act, but is shown exclusively by the surveyor’s return and plat, dated March 9th, 1878, was followed by
The record shows that, among such co-owners, two shares were partially owned by two different sets of minors, and that such minors were represented in the act by their respective mothers, who were not authorized thereto by any judicial mandate or proceedings. The record shows further, that none of the owners of the tract alleged to have been allotted to Similien Sheldon & Co. have been made parties in the present suit for partition.
From the foregoing statement of the pleadings, and of the facts of the case, it appears clearly to our minds:
1. That there has been no legal partition of the original three arpent tract between the parties to this suit and their co-owners, Similien Sheldon & Co.
The plat or survey made by the surveyor on March 9th, 1878, has none of the elements of a legal partition between co-owners, even if they are all of age, a fortiori, it can have no legal or binding effect on minors interested iu the immovable property to be affected thereby.
2. That the ratification alleged to have been made of such pretended partition by the act of partition between S. Sheldon & Co. in April, 1881, cannot be invoked as operating a legal partition, for the reason that minors were interested as owners, and quoad them no legal partition could be made extra-judicially. C. C. 1323. Hence, it follows, that the original three arpent tract is yet owned and held in indivisión by the parties to this suit ou the one hand, and by Similien Sbeldon and his co-owners on the other. •
But as the latter set of owners have not been made parties in the present proceeding, it is clear that no legal partition can be decreed and enforced in the present action.
. Hence, the judgment of the lower court, which ordered a partition in kind of the one-lialf of said tract of land, which is shown by the record to be yet undivided, is manifestly and glaringly erroneous 5 and its execution would make confusion worst’eonfounded, and would have fostered for the future very complicated aud crushing litigation.
The judgment appealed from is, therefore, annulled, avoided and reversed, and plaintiffs’ action is therefore dismissed at their costs in both Courts.