Court Opinion

ID: 7193083
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:59:25.001018+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:15:56.668304
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Bermudez, C. J.
This is an action by the holder of several notes, originally furnished by Rufus Lodge, in settlement of the purchase price of certain real estate sold to him by Mrs. Spearing.
The suit is brought against Widow Rufus Lodge in her capacity of surviving spouse in community and of tutrix of two minors, the issue of her marriage with her deceased husband, and against the third child, who has attained the age of majority.
The plaintiff alleges that since the death of Rufus Lodge, proceedings were had in his succession, by which all the property belonging *116to Ms widow and his children and held in common, was adjudicated to the former, and that the rights of the minors, after being liquidated, were secured by special mortgage on the property of the widow and that adjudicated.
. He charges Hand and injury and prays for judgment for the amount remaining due on the notes as liquidated by a judgment, and for a recognition of the judicial mortgage resulting from the registry of such judgment anterior to the mortgage consented in favor of the minors.
The defenses are numerous and conflicting on the one hand, while the reality of the sale and the validity of the notes are attacked, payment and prescription are pleaded on the other.
The case was first tried by a jury who found for defendants. Dissatisfied with the verdict, the district judge granted a new trial. The jury again found for defendants and the judge refused, for reasons orally assigned, to set their verdict aside.
The evidence shows that, at the maturity of the notes, after the death of Rufus Lodge, executory proceedings were instituted to compel payment; that his widow, in her own right and as tutrix, pleading payment of the notes, applied for and obtained an injunction arresting-all proceedings; and, that on trial, judgment was rendered against them, from which no appeal was ever taken and which constitutes res judicata.
It also appears that the property was then seized and sold, but did not realize enough to pay the notes; that the amount realized ha.ving-been credited on the notes, a. suit was brought before the Second Distinct Court against the widow, as tutrix, administering the succession of Rufus Lodge, and that judgment was accordingly rendered in his favor.
Subsequently, on an attempt to execute this judgment, the defense was set úp that it was a nullity, as having been rendered by a court without jurisdiction, as, prior thereto, the -widow and heirs had been put in possession, and the defense prevailed.
The judgment rendered on that issue has never been revised on appeal and cannot be disturbed.
It is that judgment which was recorded and the registry of which the plaintiff claims has created, in his favor, a judicial mortgage affecting the property of the succession.
The proceedings had in the mortuoria for the adjudication, the liquidation of the rights of the minors and the execution of a special mortgage to secure them, even if not conducted and carried out to injure the plaintiff, cordd not have that effect.
*117Tlie plaintiff was nncl lias continued to be a creditor of the community. At the death of Rufus Lodge, the property comprising the mass of the community passed, by operation of law, half to his surviving wife and half to his children inheriting his share therein,'but burdened with the claims of the creditors of the community, one of whom was and still is the plaintiff.
No act of the widow, in her own name or as tutrix, and no act of the heirs, whether of age or not, could deprive the creditor of the community of his rights to be paid out of the common property in preference to any right of ownership which the widow or the heirs acquired thereto at the dissolution of the community.
The defense of prescription cannot be sustained. The plaintiff appears to have been restless during the nine years following the maturity of the notes, in seeking payment of the same. He first proceeded via executiva, but was kept in suspense by the injunction. He subsequently sued via ordinaria for the balance remaining due. If it be true that the court which recognized his claim had no jurisdiction, the fact-of the suit and the service of the citation were enough, effectually, to interrupt prescription. Since the judgment sustaining the plea to the jurisdiction, lie has brought the present suit which has been pending for more than three years.
We attach no imxiortance to the other defenses, set up as they were, raised and overruled in other proceedings.
The reality of the sale was'attacked by the assignees of Spearing & Co., in a bankruptcy proceeding before the United States District Court, in this city, in which it was sought to have it declared that the property did not belong to the succession of Rufus Lodge, but to the insolvents. The defense of the widow, in her name and as tutrix, was the validity of the sale. After trial, the bill was dismissed and title thus recognized in the succession of Lodge.
The answers to the interrogatories propounded to plaintiff and which remain uncontradicted, establish that he is the owner of the notes sued on and that the. original sale was real. Nothing shows that the defendants would have had any valid defense against the notes had they been sued on by Mrs. Spearing, who had sold the property to Rufus Lodge.
The plaintiff claims that he is entitled to a judgment in solido against the widow and heirs of Rufus Lodge. He is not entitled to such judgment and can recover only to the extent of one-half against the widow and one-lialf against the heirs, each for his virile share, the minors not to be bound for more than the amount of their inheritance.
*118It is, therefore, ordered and decreed that the verdict and judgment thereon he avoided, annulled and reversed; and,
It is now ordered and decreed that the plaintiff, Joseph E. Ealer, do have and recover the sum of four thousand six hundred and one dollars and seventeen cents ($4601 17) from the defendants, half from Hannah Jourdan, widow of Rufus .Lodge, regardless of the special mortgage in favor of her children, and half from the minors, Kate and Virginia Lodge and the heir of age, Olivia Lodge, jointly, each for her virile share, regardless of the adjudication ©f their half to their mother; the minors not to he liable to payment beyond the property inherited by them from their father, and the heir of age not to be liable for more than one-third of the half of the whole debt, recovered; the defendants to pay costs in both courts, in the same proportion.