Court Opinion

ID: 7208526
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 17:18:27.346277+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:16:45.123488
License: Public Domain

Bullard, J.
The facts which gave rise to this controversy may be seen by referring to the case of the Succession of Gourgon — E. L. Bernard, Appellant, decided in April, 1844. 7 Rob.
It now appears that while Bernard was prosecuting his appeal from the judgment of the Probate Court refusing toj appoint him executor, on the ground that he had gone into bankruptcy, and O’Duhigg, his competitor, was before us as appellee, the latter renewed his application to be recognized as executor, and succeeded in the Court of Probates. From that judgment no appeal was prosecuted. The consequence was, that O’Duhigg was acting as executor, in virtue of a judgment having the force of the thing adjudged, and Bernard was appointed by the *542appellate court contradictorily -with O’Duhigg. This state of things was not a little embarrassing, and led to the question which this case now presents, to wit, which of the two is entitled to the legacy off 1500, given by the will to each of the two acting executors, Cavelier, the other executor, being incontestably entitled to one of the legacies.* The tableau, made out by Cavelier and O’Duhigg, awarded the legacy to O’Duhigg, but, on a rule afterwards taken by Bernard, the tableau was amended, and the legacy decreed to the latter, under the appointment of the Supreme Court. From that judgment O’Duhigg prosecutes this appeal.
It is clear that the merits of the original controversy cannot be gone into in this case. Each has a judgment of a competent tribunal in his favor, pronounced contradictorily with his adversary. It would, perhaps, have been more regular if Bernard had appealed from the judgment appointing O’Duhigg ; bút the effect would have been the same, because that judgment would have had its effect pending the appeal, and the same difficulty would have occurred in disposing of the legacy, which is the great bone of contention, the administration of the estate being in perfectly safe hands. It is said by O’Duhigg, or his assignee, in his answer to the rule taken on him by Bernard, that the judgment of the Supreme Court was an ex parte judgment, to which neither he, nor the succession of Gourjon was a party. This assertion is contradicted by the record, from which it appears not only that O’Duhigg was personally cited as appellee, but that he attempted to make himself a party in his capacity of executor, in virtue of the proceedings subsequently carried on in the Court of Probates; and we held in that case, that it was not necessary to make the succession a party, in a controversy between two persons contending for its administration. As soon *543as that judgment was pronounced, it was conclusive upon O’Duhigg, and in the last resort. The court, therefore, did not err in awarding the legacy to Bernard. The homologation of the account filed by the executors, is not conclusive upon Ber nard.
There is another appeal, by C. Roselius and P. A. Bernard, the attorneys of E. L. Bernard, from a judgment overruling their pretensions, to be paid for their professional services in obtaining the appointment of Bernard out of the estate. We concur with the court in the opinion, that such services are to be paid by the applicant, and not by the succession. If they had failed, they would still have been entitled to a fee, but surely not chargeable upon the estate.

Judgments affirmed.

 The clause of the will referred to, is in the following words: “ Je nomine pour mes executeurs testamentaires en ce qui concerne les biens á la Nouvelle Orleans, Messieurs S. et C.; et en cas de déces ou ¿’absence, je nomme pour remplacer Messieurs O. et B. Je les prie de vouloir me rendre ce service, ainsi que d’agréer comrae temoignage de ma gratitude une somme de quinze cents piastres, que je donne et légue á chacun de ceux qui rempliront cette charge, pour les déd ommager de leurs peines et soins.”