Conrad v. Thruston

Supreme Court of Louisiana
Conrad v. Thruston, 11 La. 426 (La. 1837)

Conrad v. Thruston

Opinion of the Court

Marlin, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is submitted to us on the following statement of facts:

On the 15th March, 1812, Charles M. ThrustoD, residing in the parish of Orleans, made his last will, by which he bequeathed all his property to his wife, Ann Thruston, during her life, and after her death, to his two sons, Alfred Thruston and Edmund Taylor Thruston, except some few particular legacies, and shortly afterwards died there, in the same year. The widow and A. and E. T. Thruston took (or rather kept) possession of his estate, real and personal, and kept it until *427the year 1819, when Ann Thruston also died, leaving her two sons, the said Alfred and Edmund T. Thruston, in possession of the said estate, bequeathed as aforesaid.

On the 3d of February, 1821, Alfred Thruston made his will, by which he bequeathed the whole of his estate, real and personal, to his then wife, Elizabeth Thruston, the defendant in this suit, and some few months afterwards died, and she entered into possession.

On the 27th April, 1823, Edmund T. Thruston made his will, which was probated on the 17th July following, he being then dead.

Some time previous to the death of Alfred Thruston, he and Edmund T. Thruston had made a division of part of the property bequeathed to them by the will of Charles M. Thruston, their father, but another part was still owned in common by them, until they both died.

On the 17th October, 1823, eleven years after the death of Charles M. Thruston, this suit was instituted by the tutor of the child and heir of Edmund T. Thruston, against the defendant, testamentary heir of Alfred Thruston, for a partition of the estate bequeathed to them by Charles M. Thruston, and for other matters not now in issue.

On the said 17th October, 1823, David Weeks, a relation of, or friend of the other heirs at law of Charles M. Thruston, filed a petition in the Probate Court, praying that the absent heirs of Charles M. Thruston be represented by an attorney, and accordingly Frederick D. Conrad, Esq., was appointed, and having obtained time to plead, came in, and on behalf of such absent heirs, filed an intervention, claiming fo have the will of Charles M. Thruston set aside, and to be permitted to inherit and participate in his succession, as heir at law; and some time afterwards said absentees came in, and made themselves parties to the suit.

Both plaintiffs and defendants in the original action united in opposing to the intervenors, pleas to the jurisdiction of the court, and the prescription of five years, and urged upon the court below, as they now urge, that their claim against said will is barred by said prescription. It was agreed below, *428that the rights of the intervenors to come into this suit, to ijave any 0f saj(j estate, or whether they are or are not barred by prescription, should be first tried, leaving all the questions between the original parties open.

When’ all the proceedings in doseXtheCourt of Probates of the parish where the succession fuciusoffitío’&aá an action of par-lition among the heirs may be parish to which the ^succession has been remov-mentaryheirs!*1 Where heirs at fourteen years, at tamenhn-y^heir took possession of tlic ancestor’s estate, sufferfive thereafter,before instituting suit, claiming a part of the inherit-wiu’ be1 barred by prescription.

And on the trial of these matters, the judge below was of opinion, that the intervenors’ rights were barred by prescription, and gave judgment against them, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

It is also a fact, that all the absent heirs have always resided out of the state of Louisiana, and that Levin Powell came of age in April, 1824, and represents as only child of Sidney Thruston, who was one of nine children by the second marriage of Charles M. Thruston.

The counsel for the appellees, the original parties, contends, that the judgment of the Court of Probates ought to be affirmed, and the case remanded, because the Probate Court ^le Pai'is^ St. Mary has no jurisdiction, as the succession of C. M. Thruston, claimed by the intervenors, was opened in the parish of New-Orleans.

'j'kg C0Unsel further urges, that the plea of prescription 03 r „ ,5 r was correctly allowed, because the heirs of C. M. Thruston were suffered to take and keep possessio'n of his estate, under ^ will, for more than eleven years before complaining. Partida 6, title 8, law 4. 7 Martin, 402.

It appears to us, that the plea to the jurisdiction was con'ectly overruled. All the proceedings in the mortuaria of Charles M. Thruston, whose succession was opened in the parish of New-Orleans, were closed, whereby the court became functii ofjicio: the property of the estate, which is now claimed by the intervenors and appellants, having been received by the testamentary heirs, and by them removed to the parish of St. Mary. * *

We think that the plea of prescription, as to the intervenors, except Levin Powell, who were upwards of fourteen years of age at the time the testamentary heim took possession of the ° , J A . estate, was properly sustained. It is otherwise as to Levin Powell, who was born in 1803, and was not ten years of age that time.

*429It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the Court of Probates, so far as it relates to the intervenors, with the exception of Levin Powell, be affirmed, with costs, and that, so far as it concerns said Powell, it be annulled, avoided and reversed; that the plea of prescription opposed to him by the original parties be overruled, and that the case be remanded for further proceedings according to law, between the plaintiffs, defendants and him, the appellees paying the costs of the appeal in this respect.

Reference

Full Case Name
CONRAD v. THRUSTON, LEVIN POWELL AND OTHERS, INTERVENORS
Status
Published