39 La. Ann. 312 | La. | 1887
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action brought by one heir against her coheirs of common ancestors, praying the following relief, viz:
1. To declare the simulation of a sale of certain immovable property made by the common ancestors to two of the heirs and to have said property decreed to belong to the successions of said ancestors.
2. To have the two heirs, who were the alleged simulated vendees, pay into the mass of said successions the amount of the revenues collected by them during their possessions.
3. For a decree of partition of the aforesaid property and funds amongst all the heirs.
One of the heirs, Christopher Stephen Oroutt, being a resident of the State of Illinois, a curator ad hoe was appointed to represent him, who filed a peremptory exception to the effect that said absentee could not validly he brought into court as a party to such au action by service on a curator ad hoc.
From a judgment sustaining the exception and .dismissing the suit as to said absentee, the present appeal is takeu.
We think there was error in this judgment.
The invalidity of substituted service through a curator ad hoe as a means of bringing an absentee into court when not attended by direct process against his property in the State, is restricted to merely personal actions, and does not extend to proceedings “ partaking of the character of proceedings in rem.”
By this is meant, not a proceeding which is strictly and technically a proceeding in rem, but one partaking of that character.
In a more recent case we have held that a suit for dissolution oí a sale of an immovable and for possession thereof partakes of the nature of a proceeding in rem iu this sense, and that non-resident defendants may be cited through a curator ad hoc. McKenzie vs. Bacon, 38 Ann.764.
It is very clear from our preliminary statement of the issues, that this case falls within the principles above stated, except possibly as to the demand for revenues, as to which we need express no opinion, because the absentee herein is not one of the heiis against whom the revenues are claimed, and has no interest therein except as a beneficiary.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from sustaining the exception of the curator ad hoe he avoided and reversed; and it is now ordered and decreed that said exception be overruled, and that the case be remanded to be proceeded with according to law.