Case Name: Bettie Scott vs. Mary E. Briscoe et als.
Court: Louisiana Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Louisiana
Decision Date: 1885-03
Citations: 37 La. Ann. 178
Docket Number: No. 9117
Parties: Bettie Scott vs. Mary E. Briscoe et als.
Judges: 
Reporter: Louisiana Annual Reports
Volume: 37
Pages: 178–182

Head Matter:
No. 9117.
Bettie Scott vs. Mary E. Briscoe et als.
None but creditors and forced heirs can attack the acts of an owner of property fraudulently alienating it.
Article 1754, Civil Code, is applicable only to spouses who have forced heirs; and though the nullioy of donations, disguised or macte to persons interposed, is absolute, in the sense that they are not reducible merely, but wholly null, it is only relative to forced heirs, and cannot be invoked by mere simple collateral heirs.
APPEAL from the Ninth District Court, Parish of Tensas, Hough, J.
Julius Aroni for Plaintiff and Appellant.
1Ü, I). White, J. W. Montgomery and Steele & fíwrreU for Defendants and Appellees.

Opinion:
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Manning, J.
The plaintiff is one of the nieces and legal heirs of William J. Briscoe, and sues his widow to annul her title to the Mound plantation in Tensas for die causes set in Mrs. Upshur's suit just decided. Two other nieces of Briscoe, co-heirs with Mrs. Scott, refused to join her in the suit and are made defendants.
The sales and conveyances attacked in this suit have been annulled at the instance of Mrs. Upshur, a creditor of Briscoe. Nevertheless we liave to pass upon the question raised here, whether the plaintiff, being a simple and not forced heir, can attack the acts of Briscoe by and through which his wife acquired her title. Numerous decisions confine the right of this attack to creditors and forced heirs. Druman v. Klemnan, 31 Ann. 124; Stewart v. Mix, 30 Ann. 1036; Compton v. Maxwell, 33 Ann. 688; Brown v. Stroud, 34 Ann. 374; Kerwin v. Ins Co., 35 Ann. 33.
The judgment below recognised this settled rule and was in favour of the defendant, Mrs. Briscoe, rejecting the demand for annulment of her title at plaintiff's instance, but recognised Mrs. Scott as one of the legal heirs of Briscoe with right to open his succession in form.
Judgment affirmed.