Case Name: Succession of WIEMANN
Court: Louisiana Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Louisiana
Decision Date: 1904-03-03
Citations: 112 La. 293
Docket Number: No. 14,795
Parties: Succession of WIEMANN.
Judges: 
Reporter: Louisiana Reports
Volume: 112
Pages: 293–303

Head Matter:
(36 South. 354.)
No. 14,795.
Succession of WIEMANN.
(March 3, 1904.)
JUDGMENT — AMENDMENT.
1. Where a creditor issues a writ of fieri facias, and partially executes a judgment obtained by him, he has no standing, in answer to a devolutive appeal taken by the debtor, to ask for an amendment of such judgment.
2. Where only one of several heirs opposes the account filed by an administrator, and such account in due time is homologated so far as not opposed, judgment should not be rendered against the administrator in favor of the heirs who have filed no oppositions.
3. Where an administrator, with the concurrence of the heirs of a succession in which a minor is interested, but with no better authority, continues a commercial business of which his decedent was proprietor, the minor is not bound by his action; and, as to him, the administrator is entitled to be credited on his account with only such disbursements and expenses as should have been made and incurred if he had settled the succession in conformity to law.
(Syllabus by the Court.)
Appeal from Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans; Walter Byers Sommerville, Judge.
In the matter of the succession of John M. Wiemann. Edna R. Wiemann interposed an opposition. From the judgment, certain of the parties appeal.
Modified.
See 106 La. 387, 30 South. 893.
Dinkelspiel & Hart, Buck, Walshe & Buck, John B. Fisher, and James Barkley Rosser, Jr., for appellants R. J. Mainegra, Henry Bensel, H. P. Walter, and Mrs. Charlotte H. Leidlich, testamentary executrix of the estate of George Leidlich. William Stirling Parkerson, for appellee Edna R. Wiemann.

Opinion:
Statement of the Case.
MONROE, J.
John Moritz Wiemann, then a widower residing in New Orleans, died in the parish of St. Tammany July 1, 1894, leaving property in this city consisting in part of a going commercial business, carried on in two stores, the one on Tchoupitoulas and the other on Magazine street, and leaving also seven major and two minor children, issue of his marriage, to wit, Charles F., Thomas J., Isabella (wife of W. F. Sturke), Elizabeth (wife of Philip Peter), Annie (wife of W. J. Shriever), Alice (wife of W. T. Pate), Agnes (wife of Henry Samuel), majors, and Mary and Edna Roberta, minors. Upon July 5th the parties thus named, including the minors, signed an instrument in writing whereby they agreed that Charles F. Wiemann and Philip Peter should continue the commercial business of the succession for the common benefit; that Peter should apply for the administration, and that thereafter they should meet and consider the propriety of organizing a limited liability company. The business was accordingly continued as agreed upon. Peter applied for the administration of the succession, and, having caused an inventory to be made, took the oath, gave bond, and received his letters; and upon April 5, 1895, a corporation called the John M. Wiemann Hardware Company, Limited, was organized to carry on the commercial business, with a capital of $9,000, divided into 90 shares, of $100 each, of which Charles F. Wiemann took 20 shares; Philip Peter, 10 shares; Mrs. Peter, 10 shares; W. T. Pate, 2 shares; Mrs. Pate, 8 shares; Mrs. Sturke, 10 shares; and Mrs. Samuel, 10 shares. No money was paid by any of these parties, who, to the exclusion of the minors and other heirs, seem to have assumed the ownership of the stock in trade and business of the two stores, and to have turned the same over, in lieu of cash subscriptions, to the corporation thus organized, which then entered upon its business career under the management of Charles F. Wiemann and Philip Peter.
In May, 1895, a judgment was obtained, upon the petition of all the children (Charles F. Wiemann professing to represent the minors), recognizing them as the heirs entitled to inherit the estate of their deceased parents, and later in the same month Charles F. Wiemann was appointed tutor, and R. J. Mainegra undertutor, of the minors. In September a suit for partition was filed by some of tbe major heirs, which was, however, abandoned. In February, 1896, Peter, as administrator, obtained an order to sell certain stocks belonging to tbe succession, and made the sales as authorized. With the money thus obtained, and other funds which came into his hands either as administrator or through his management of the Wiemann Hardware Company, he bought from Thomas J. Wiemann, Mrs. Shriever, Mrs. Pate, and Mrs. Samuel their respective interests in the succession and corporation, paying theretor the sum of $1,800 to each of them, and for some unexplained reason taking the transfers in his own name. He also appears to have taken a transfer of the interest of Charles F. Wiemann in the real estate of the succession, but in connection therewith executed a counter letter saying that he had done so as a matter of convenience, and that the title rehiained in Wiemann. The corporation continued in business until March, 1900, when, being insolvent, Peter, upon the petition of two of the creditors, was appointed receiver, and its affairs were wound up and its property sold. In July, 1900, Edna Roberta Wiemann attained majority, and in October' of that year ruled Peter into court to give an account of his administration. He excepted to the rule, and his exceptions were sustained. Upon appeal to this court the judgment so rendered was reversed. Succession of Wiemann, 106 La. 387, 30 South. 893. And in January, 1902, he filed his account, which was opposed by Edna Roberta Wiemann alone, and in due time was homologated so far as not opposed.
The inventory of the succession shows the following assets;
Cash . $ 1,974 00
Contents of store on Magazine street....... 4,280 67
Accounts of store on Magazine street classed as good.................................. 1,867 46
Accounts of store on Magazine street classed as doubtful.............................. 517 06
Contents of store on Tchoupitoulas street.. 7,367 66
Accounts of store on Tchoupitoulas street
classed as good............................ 1,567 37
Accounts of store on Tchoupitoulas street
classed as doubtful......................... 438 56
Contents of warehouse....................... 287 87
Real estate, Tchoupitoulas street........... 1,400 00
Real estate, Philip street................... 1,300 00
Life insurance .'..... 1,560 00
stock Teutonia Insurance Co................ 960 00
Stock Am. W. L. & C. Works............... 1,200 00
Stock Cosmopolitan Building & Loan Association . 420 00
Stock Pythian Hall Association............. 10 00
Mortgage note . 400 00
Mules, harness, and wagons................. 250 00
Household effects . 79 00
Gas deposit . 6 00
Total .'................... $26,155 75
The account shows that, from collections, sales, and otherwise, there have come into the hands of the administrator the following amounts, to wit:
Cash .$ 1,974 00
Reed, from sales of merchandise at stores 837 Magazine street and 769 Tchoupitoulas street from July 1, 1894, to April 5, 1895.. 24,456 60 Merchandise in stores Magazine and
Tchoupitoulas streets . 10,718 31
Accounts Magazine street store classed as
good . 1,532 03
Accounts Magazine street store classed as
doubtful . 462 49
Accounts Tchoupitoulas street store classed as good................................. 1,153 17
Accounts Tchoupitoulas street store classed as doubtful . 371 00
Stock Teutonia Insurance Company........ 1,032 00
Stock Am. W. L. & C. Works............... 1,335 00
Stock Cosmopolitan Building & Loan Association . 180 37
Mortgage note................................ 400 00
Jefferson Lodge K. of P., relief............. 75 00
Orient Grove, U. A. O. D.................... 40 00
La Circle No. 1, U. A. O. D................. 22 50
Teutonia Insurance Company, dividends... 160 00
Am. W. L. & C. Works...................... 90 00
New Orleans Paint & Oil Club.............. 20 00
Rents collected from Philip street house... 958 00
Total .$44,980 57
The account also shows disbursements and unpaid obligations amounting to $37,760.47, and an apparent balance of $7,220.10, though it appears, as a matter of fact, that the administrator has no money whatever in his hands. There is annexed to this general account a special account against the minor (now a major) Edna, wherein she is chárged with $1,151.55, so that, crediting her with one-ninth of the apparent balance of $7,220.-10, or, say, $802.23, she appears to be a debt- or, instead of a creditor, of the succession.
The aggregate of $37,700.47 mentioned above is made up in part of the following items, to wit:
Law charges, including notary, $400; appraisers, $250; future costs, $100; administrator's commission, $653.81.........$ 2,465 19
Interest on mortgage, Philip street property, July, 1894, to July, 1899.............. 312 00
Taxes, Insurance, and repairs, Philip
street property, 1894 to 1899................ 289 66
Insurance on stock, Tchoupitoulas street
store, 1895 . 287 50
License for business, 1895.................... 70 00
Note, J. M. Wiemann favor Chas. T. Wiemann . 300 00
Bills for purchases, Magazine street store,
7/1/94 to 4/5/95............................ 19,408 54
Accounts owing for purchases of goods after 7/1/94 . 4,244 52
Freight on goods from 7/1/94 to 4/5/95.... 887 65
Salaries to employes Tchoupitoulas street
store . 2,252 12
Salaries to employes Magazine street store 1,712 00
The special account against the minor Edna consists of two large items, the one, for $000, for one-third of the rental value (including the use of gas) of a portion of the Magazine street store used by her as a residence from 1884 to 1900, and the other for $551.55, made up of smaller items, mainly for board, clothing, medical and dental service, and instruction, but including one item, of $235, for a piano, and covering the period from November. 22, 1897, to March 7, 1900.
The opponent, in general terms, objects to all the items on the administrator's main account, and, in special terms, to the items upon the credit side of that account which are given above, as also to the item of $600 charged in the account against her; and she especially alleges that the administrator was without authority to carry on a commercial business for account of the succession, and repudiates all liability on her own behalf and on behalf of the succession with respect to disbursements made and bills contracted in connection therewith. Upon the trial of her opposition, she admitted the correctness of the charges aggregating $511.55, and it was shown without contradiction that she occupied the premises and used the gas as stated. It ivas also shown that she was employed for several years in the Magazine street store, and was paid for her services. There was considerable testimony given by the administrator in support or explanation of the items on the credit side of his account, and checks and stubs of checks were exhibited, which, it was admitted, showed the payment of those items, to the amount of $23,425.08. It was also admitted that cash payments had been made to the amount of $606.66, and that salaries had been paid as appears on the account. Eventually there was judgment maintaining the opposition of Edna Roberta Wiemann, directing the administrator to so amend his account as to show a balance of $15,861.30, and condemning him to pay the same to five of the heirs as follows: To Edna Roberta Wiemann, $2,621.26; to Mary Wiemann (now Mrs. Simpson), $2,621.26; to Mrs. Sturke, $2,172.26; to the estate of Charles F. Wiemann, $1,172.26; and to Mrs. Philip Peter (bis wife), $2,172.26. This judgment was signed April 3, 1902, and some ten days later, no appeal having been taken, a writ of fieri facias issued, under which the property of the defendant in the writ was' seized and sold, and there was realized by the seizing creditors the sum of $251.85. Edna Roberta Wiemann and Mrs. Simpson then brought suit against the sureties of the administrator for the balance due upon the judgment so rendered and partially executed, and whilst their suit was pending, to wit, in February, 1897, the administrator presented to the district court a petition alleging that R. J. Mainegra, one of his sureties, desired to withdraw from his bond; and, upon his furnishing other sureties, an order was made purporting to release Mainegra from all liability on said bond. Thereafter the judgment which had been obtained against the principal was offered in evidence in the suit against the sureties, who, lest they be concluded, appealed therefrom devolutively, as did also the administrator. Edna Roberta Wiemann and her sister Mrs. Simpson have answered the appeal, praying that interest be allowed upon the amounts awarded them from April 5, 1895.
Opinion.
The parties in whose favor the judgment appealed from was rendered, having partially executed the same, must be considered as having acquiesced therein, and cannot now, whether by appeal, answer to appeal, or otherwise, ask that it be amended. Upon the other hand, Edna Roberta Wiemann alone ox>posed the account; she alone appeared in court and prayed for a judgment against the administrator, and, save as to her opposition, the aecount was homologated by a final judgment, which has never been and is not now-attacked. It seems evident, therefore, that the judgment subsequently rendered and now appealed from is erroneous, in that it condemns the administrator in favor of persons who did not appear in court to ask such relief, and who, for the purposes of the account as filed, were shut out by the judgment of homologation. Succ'n of Moise, 107 La. 717, 31 South. 990.
Considering the claim of Edna Roberta Wiemann, the only litigant in whose favor the judgment now before us for review could properly have been rendered, it is clear that she was not bound by the acts of the administrator and of her coheirs in carrying on a .commercial business and in converting the property of the succession to their own use. Nor is she bound, with respect to those transactions, by anything which has since occurred. It is true that she prays for judgment against the administrator for $4,997.84, "being one-ninth of the assets which came into his hands, as shown by his account, saving and reserving her rights against the real estate, subject to such credits, if any there should be, .shown to be due on the trial of the cause"; and the learned judge a quo, in the calculation by which he arrives at the sum of $15,861.30 as the amount for which he holds the administrator liable to the five heirs in whose favor he gives judgment, starts with the gross amount ($44,980.57) with which the administrator debits himself, and credits that officer with a portion of the expenditures made for the purposes of the commercial business from which that fund was in part derived, but he rejects other items of the same character — as, for instance, those representing licenses and insurance and unpaid obligations for goods purchased. If, however, the whole fund should be dealt with as a succession asset, the whole of the expenditures and obligations made and incurred in its obtention should be taken into account. Thus if the administrator had, without authority, borrowed a sum of money, instead of acquiring it in a commercial business conducted without' authority, and had included the sum so borrowed in the gross amount with which he debits himself, it is clear that such gross amount could not be distributed among the heirs without regard to the obligation incurred to the lender of the sum so borrowed and included. But whilst the opponent cannot be heard to insist upon participating in the distribution of money, as being the proceeds of succession property, whilst denying that the succession ever owned the property or is liable for the price, she is nevertheless entitled to her share of so much of the fund with which the administrator debits himself as represents property of which the succession was the undisputed owner. The account itself shows how much cash belonging to the succession was received by the administrator, and how much was realized by him from collections, and from sales, for account of the succession, of property included in the inventory, save with respect to the merchandise, and those items go to make up the total of $44,980.57 with which he is debited. According- to the inventory, there also went into his hands merchandise belonging' to the succession to the value of $12,206.20, and as his account fails to distinguish the proceeds of that merchandise from other merchandise handled by him, he is to be held liable for its value as thus shown. For the purposes of the present inquiry, the debit side of the account may therefore be considered as making the following showing, to wit:
Total amount received for account of the succession in cash,* and from collections
and sales, as specifically set forth........$ 9,806 06
Value of merchandise belonging to the succession, as per inventory, included in sum total of receipts....................... 12,206 20
Total amount accounted for.............$22,012 26
The difference between the total thus arrived at and that ($26,155.75) shown by the inventory is represented by the value of the real estate ($2,700), the life insurance ($1-560), loss in collection of book accounts and in sale of stock of Cosmopolitan Building & Loan Association, and in the apparent failure of the administrator to account for the household furniture, mules, wagons, and harness, and gas deposit concerning which matters there is no issue presented by the opposition.
The opponent is therefore entitled to recover in this proceeding one-ninth of $22,-012.26, after deducting the debts due by the succession and by the decedent and after deducting the amounts which were received by or disbursed for her during her minority, and for which she may properly be chargeable. Some difficulty presents itself in determining how far the charges which the administrator makes against the succession should be allowed. So far as the major heirs are concerned, it may well be that they are bound by all that was done, since it appears that the administrator acted with their concurrence and co-operation; but the opponent was a minor, who was incapable of consenting that any other course should be pursued than that prescribed by law, and, as to her, it not appearing that the administrator was authorized by the court to pay out any money whatever, he can be allowed credit for such disbursements only as under the law he would have been bound to make if the succession had been regularly administered, to which may be added those which clearly appear to have been necessary or to have inured to the benefit of the heirs. Inasmuch as the decedent left two going stores, it might have been to the interest of the heirs, if proper authority could have been obtained, to continue the business, at least until the stock could be sold to advantage; but, so far as the opponent, who was then a minor, was concerned, such authority was not, and perhaps could not have been, obtained, and, as no advantage resulted to her from the continuance of the business after the death of her father, so she cannot be burdened with the charges incident thereto. If, however, the business had not been continued, the stock in trade could not have been disposed of instantly, and certain expenses must needs have been incurred in the interest of the opponent as well as of her coheirs; and as the Magazine street store and the lot used as a warehouse were occupied under leases which presumably did not expire before the 1st of October, and some delay must, in any event, have ensued before the merchandise could have been sold, during which it must have required some attention, we are of opinion that the administrator may fairly be credited with a portion of the disbursements made by him up to that date. In the ease of the Philip street property, it perhaps should have been sold earlier; but, as the administrator collected $958 of rents whilst the title remained in the succession, and expended considerably less than that on the property, there can be no reason why he should not be charged with the rents and credited with the expenses.
With this explanation, we conclude that the following deductions should be made from the gross amount of $22,012.26 with which, as between him and the opponent, the administrator is to he charged,.to wit:
(April 11, 1904.)
Funeral charges .$ 188 35
Law . 1,506 31
Expenses of last illness...................... 9 00
Assessment on stock, Interstate Fire Insurance Company............................ 127 00
Interest on mortgage, Philip street property . 312 0Q
Taxes, insurance, and repairs, Philip street
property . 289 67
Taxes of 1S94 on stock in trade, 837 Magazine . 21 70
Rent of store, July 1 to October 1, 1894...... 165 00
Taxes of 1894 on stock in trade and building 769 Tchoupitoulas...................... 123 00
Incidental expenses, July 1 to October 1,
1894, 769 Tchoupitoulas...................... 32 43
Rent of lot Tchoupitoulas street, July 1 to u
October 1, 1894............................... 30 00
Pro rata (three-ninths) of bills of Grasser & Reinhard, Schindler, Cahill, Kuhn, Young,
Smith & Meyer, covering 9 months,
from July 5, 1894, to April 5, 1895........... 117 48
Bills due by decedent........................ 3,710 94
Repairs to building on Tchoupitoulas street 64 52
Gas bill, 837 Magazine street, August and
September, 1894 . 15 20
Allowance for employés for handling merchandise to October 1, 1894................. 300 00
Total .$7,012 60
For the purposes of this opposition, therefore, the administrator's account should be held to stand as follows:
Total amount to Ms debit.........$22,012 26
Deductions as above................ 7,012 60
Balance due . $11,999 66
Share oi opponent therein, being one-ninth $1,666 62 Prom which is to be deducted the amount already received by her..................... 511 55
Balance due opponent..................... $1,155 07
It may be thought that the opponent should be charged with her proportion of the rental value of the premises occupied by her, and of the .cost of the gas there consumed; hut it does not appear that it'was at any time understood that such a charge was to be made, and the administrator had no right to encourage an expense which, for aught that we know, she might have saved.
For the reasons thus assigned, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from he annulled and avoided in so far as it makes awards in favor of Mary B. Wiemann (wife of John Simpson), Isabella Wiemann (wife of W. F. Sturke), estate of Charles F. Wiemann, and Elizabeth Wiemann (wife of Philip Peter), and that it be amended by reducing the amount awarded to the opponent, Edna Roberta Wiemann, from $2,621.26 to $1,155.07, and that in all other respects it he affirmed; the appellees to pay the costs of the appeal.
The Chief Justice absent on account of sickness.