Woodward v. Thomas

38 La. Ann. 238 | La. | 1886

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

This is an action of revendication of certain real estate, claimed as the property of the succession, but in the adverse possession of a third person under a title derived from a tax sale, which is alleged to be null and void.

*240The action was brought in the name of the administrator alone and was met in limine by an exception that the plaintiff in his petition “has set forth no necessity or right to bring this suit -without joining the heirs as co-plaintiffs with him or that it is necessary that lie should recover the property in question in order to discharge the debts and charges of the succession,” and that “the heirs should have been joined as parties to the suit.”

This exception was overruled by the court and thereafter the defendants filed answer to the merits.

Subsequently the defendants filed the following peremptory exception : “ That this is a real action, and all the heirs ave present and represented in the State; said succession is solvent. Defendants except that, this being a real action, the right of property and the right to bring thisjsuifc rests alone in the heirs and not in the administrator.”

Plaintiff opposed to this exception the ruling on the former exception as res judicata; but the court overruled this plea on the ground that the subject matter of the two exceptions was not the same. This was not error. The first exception wont to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s allegations on the face of the petition, and the ruling on it merely decided that it -was not essential for an administratior, in bringing such an action, to allege the solvency of the estate or the absence of the heirs.

The second exception tendered an issue of fact and assumed the burden of proving the facts alleged as a basis for the legal right claimed. The issues were different and the judge rightly overruled the plea of res judicata.

On hearing, the proof showed that all the heirs were majors and present in the State. On the question of solvency, the evidence of a single witness was introduced showing, in substance, that the inventoried value of the succession property, consisting of lands, was about $16,000; that the succession owed debts of about $1,600 to persons outside of the family, besides a claim in favor of one of the heirs of $4,000 or $5,000, concluding with the statement: “The succession is solvent and is worth, at the inventoried value, some $6,000 or $8,000 over and above the amount of its indebtedness.”

Upon this evidence, the judge maintained the exception and dismissed the suit, basing his ruling on the legal proposition that the administator of a solvent succession, when the heirs are present or represented, cannot maintain a real action, in his own name, without joining the heirs as parties.

*241The question presented is, whether an administrator of a succession, which has never been accepted by the heirs, and which, though apparently solvent, owes large debts, can maintain a real action to recover property claimed to belong to the succession and held by adverse title, not derived from the decedent, and the attack on which involves no-assault upon the latter’s acts.

We have examined every case referred to by the judge a quo or by the defendant’s counsel, or which we have been able to find in the books, without discovering one applying the necessity of making the-heirs parties in such an action, to an administrator situated like the-plaintiff herein.

We shall now review them in their chronological order :

Executors of Hart vs. Boni, 6 La. 97, was an action by executors with seizin, to annul a donation int<¡rvivos of decedent, and it was held that such executors could maintain the real action, but that, if the heirs were interested and were present or represented, they should be made parties.

Scott vs. Key, 9 Ann. 213, was a case where the defendant was administrator of one who had died in possession of slaves and movables which had been duly inventoried as part of bis estate and were-held by the administrator in his capacity as such. Ho had paid all the debts of the succession. An action was brought against him individually, for the property, as a trespasser; and the court held that he-should have been sued as administrator and that the heirs should be-joined with him.

Cronan vs. Executors, 9 Ann. 302, simply enforced the letter of Article 123, C. P., that “all real actions must; be brought both against the-executor and the heirs present or represented.”

Succession of Weigle, 18 Ann. 49, involved the right of an administrator to attack authentic acts of his decedent on the ground of simulation, when not alleged to bo in fraud of creditors, and the court, doubting whether judgment in the case would bo binding-on the forced heirs who could alone attack such acts, remanded the caseto allow such heirs to become, or be made parties. To same effect, see 6 Ann. 494; 14 Ann. 610; 12 Ann. 684, 759.

The same case, 21 Ann. 150, simply held that, the heirs being necessary parties and having become parties, they should have been made-parties to the appeal which, in failure thereof, was dismissed.

Ledoux vs. Burton, 30 Ann. 576, was an action by the administrator of a succession which had no creditors attacking the validity and reality *242of sales made by the decedent, and the Court held that the heirs i>resent or rejiresented were necessary parties to such an action.

Bird, ex’r, vs. Generes, ex’r, 30 Ann. 576, simply enforced the letter of C. P. 128.

Giddens vs. Mobley, 37 Ann. 417, was the case of an executor of a foreign decedent whose debts, legacies and charges had all been jiaid, who qualified in this State solely for the purpose of suing for land situated here; and we held that, under such circumstances, the “land had devolved to the heirs, who alone could sue for it.”

It is obvious that none of the foregoing cases touch the question now before us. They all rest upon the peculiar powers of executors or upon the particular status of the administrators in the several cases, viz: when, in the absence of creditors, the administrator assumed to assail acts of the decedent which only forced heirs could be heard to attack.

On the other hand, in the case of Pauline vs. Hebert, 14 Ann. 150, which was a real action brought against the administrator alone, and where the latter’s capacity to stand in judgment was raised, the Court said: “We see no objection to the form of the action. The heirs may not have accepted the succession, and as the administrator must represent the creditors also, we see no objection to his standing in judgment for the protection of the rights of all parties in the effects of the succession entrusted to his administration. The article (123) of the Code of Practice relative to testamentary executors is not applicable. The powers of the testamentary executor weie very different from those of the administrator.”

Turning now to the textual provisions of our Codes, we find that there are four classes of persons to whom are confided the administration of successions, viz: 1st. Executors, when there is a will; 2d. Curators of vacant estates, when the heirs are unknown or reject the succession;' 3d, Curators of absent heirs, when the heirs are absent and not represented in the State; 4th. Administrators, when the heirs, though present or represented, do not accept or reject the succession, ■but avail themselves of the benefit of inventory.

With regard to executors, Art. 123 of the Code of Practice especially provides that real actions cannot be brought against, them without making the heirs parties; from which it is inferred that a like rule applies to real actions brought by them, though this is not settled as to .all cases. But if it had been intended that the same rule should apply to administrators, it is strange that it should not have been so expressly provided. On the contrary, Art. 122 provides that all kinds of actions maybe brought against curators of vacant successions, and that judg*243ineuts rendered against such curators shall be “as valid and efficacious -as if they had been rendered against the heirs themselves.”

We note the language employed in the first clause of the article, viz: When all the heirs are absent and not represented in the State,” but sncli language is surplusage as applied to curators of vacant estates, which are only vacant when the heirs are unknown or reject the succession. This and other clauses of the article apply to curators of absent heirs.

Besides, Art. 1113 of the Civil Codo liad already provided that all kinds of actions should be brought against the curators of vacant successions.

Now, when we read in Art. 1049 of the Civil Code that administrators. “ have the same powers and are subject to the same duties as the curators of vacant estates,” we naturally assimilate their rights to sue and he sued to those possessed by such curators rather than to those of executors.

Besides, Art. 1058 of the Civil Code requires administrators to settle -all the affairs of the succession and, after payment of the debts, to pay ■over the surplus to the heirs.

Tiiis implies the right and duty to recover the property, as much as to collect the debts, of the succession. Otherwise he cannot settle its affairs and ascertain the surplus. It is not for him, it is true, to assail the validity of acts done by the decedent, unless necessary for the protection of creditors; and it lie have already settled all the debts and charges of the succession, it is improper for him to institute new actions, because the objects of his agency have been fulfilled and be .should give way to the heirs who are the only persons interested and -may assert their own rights.

But certainly, so long as the debts are unpaid and the affairs of the succession are unsettled, if he discover property belonging to the succession held by adverse title not derived from the act of decedent, it is his duty to reclaim it, and lie has the right to sue for it without joining tlie heirs.

Such heirs are exercising their legal right of awaitiug the settlement •of the succession, in order to receive what may come to them without incurring liability for its debts; and for the preservation of this right it is essential they should do no act indicating an intention to accept or which they would have no right to do except in the quality of^heirs. C. C. 988. They could not join in a suit for succession property except dn the quality of heirs, though perhaps, under Art. 998 they might es■cape tlie effect of acceptance by proper “reservations and protesta*244tions.” But if they prefer to stand aside and let the administrator act in his own name, we see no reason why they should not be permitted to do so.

Under the circumstances of this case, we think the administrator had the right to stand in judgment and that defendants’ exception should have been overruled.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment appealed from be annulled, avoided and reversed; that the exception of defendants be overruled at their costs; and that the case he now remanded, to be proceeded with according to law, defendants and appellees to pay costs of this appeal.

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