Succession of Carraby
Succession of Carraby
Opinion of the Court
The facts which led to this controversy, relate to the settlement of the estate of the late Antoine Carraby. In his last will, the deceased, after bequeathing one-fourth of the nett proceeds of all his property to his natural children, declares that all the particular legacies which he makes, to the amount of $62,000, are to be borne by, and paid out of the three remaining fourths of his succession. He institutes his brother, Etienne Carraby, the present appellant, his sole and universal heir, for any surplus of his property which may be left, after the payment oi
Under these pleadings, which have been stated only so far as was necessary to a proper understanding of the case, the parties went to trial. After passing upon the contested items of the account, the judge below ordered the several legatees, who had received any portion of their legacies, to refund the same ; and condemned the universal legatee, E. Carraby, to pay to the executor, the whole amount by him received or retained, to enable the latter to liquidate and settle the estate.
Before touching the merits of this case, which can be considered only as regards E. Carraby, who alone has appealed, an exception taken to the jurisdiction of the Court of Probates must be disposed of. It is said that as the want of jurisdiction is-ratione materia, and the court is one of limited powers, no consent or act of Carraby can give it jurisdiction. We cannot admit that, in a case like the present, the Court of Probates is without jurisdiction ratione materia. If the appellant were a stranger to the succession, withholding the price of property purchased by him, he would be suable therefor only in the ordinary courts ; but here, in his capacity of legatee and universal heir, he seeks to avail himself of the privilege acceded to co-heirs by article 1265 of the Civil Code, of retaining the price of succession property adjudicated to them, until their share has been definitively fixed by a partition. The rights of a co-heir who exercises this privilege are to be settled contradictorily with the other heirs, under the control of the Court of Probates, whose decree must fix the portion coming to each heir. Until this be done', the co-heir who purchases keeps the purchase money as a kind of deposit, in his hands, subject to the ulterior decision of the Court of Probates, which must determine what portion of it belongs to him as a coheir, and what portion he is bound to pay over. The court, which has made such a decree, must have jurisdiction to compel obedience to it. The record shows, moreover, that large sums of money have been received by E. Carraby, in his capacity of uni
Since the rendition of the judgment below, both Guesnon and Carraby have failed, and the dative testamentary executor, appointed in lieu of the former, and the syndics of the creditors of the latter, have been made parties to this appeal. A more material change has also taken place in the state of the facts, upon which the judge below had to pronounce, which is that the only outstanding claim against the deceased, to wit, that of the estate of John Gravier, no longer exists. This fact has been asserted at the bar and not denied. It is moreover within our own knowledge, as it results from a decision of this court in the case of Gravier’s Curator v. Carraby’s Executor. 17 La. 118. By reason of this circumstance, which limits the distribution of the funds of the estate among the heirs and legatees under the will, we have been earnestly requested to determine at once the sum which the appellant is bound to pay back to the executor, and to amend the judgment accordingly, instead of remanding the case for adjustment below. It has been suggested that, under the peculiar situation of the parties, and in consequence of the judgment of the Probate Court having become final, as to all of them, except Carraby, who alone has appealed, a reversal of the judgment as to him might frustrate the ends of justice, by depriving the appellee of the judicial mortgage on his estate, when it is manifest that he owes and is bound to refund a large portion of the sum he has been decreed to pay. The record enables us to comply with the request of the appellee’s counsel, and we deem it our duty, under the circumstances of this case, to do so. Code of Pract. art. 905.
It is clear that the appellant should not be compelled to pay over to the executor all the sums by him received or retained, and then await a settlement of the estate to receive back the portion
Amount of the estate as per executor’s account, $97,033 58
Notes returned as of no value, 12,454 00
$84,579 58
The debts paid amount to 9,409 55
Leaving, for nett proceeds, $75,170 03
Of which one-quarter, under the will, goes to the . natural children of the deceased, 18,792 50
Thus leaving for the remaining three-quarters, $56,377 53
This sum, being insufficient to pay the particular legacies, the universal legatee can only retain on his particular legacy of $25,000, such proportion of it as would be coming to him, on a pro rata distribution of the remaining three-quarters of the estate among all the legatees.
The proportion would be ' $22,732 87
He is, moreover, entitled to retain, for so much paid by him to the legatees out of funds in his hands, 6,902 10
Making the amount to be retained, $29,634 97
The record shows that, deducting the debts of the succession proved to have been paid by him, Carraby yet detains a sum of $57,273 10
From which deducting the amount he is authorized to retain, 29,634 97
He has to refund 27,638 13
If to this sum be added the aggregate amount of legacies paid by both Carraby and Guesnon, to wit, 24,798 73
We find $52,436 86
A sum sufficient to pay the natural children their one-quarter, $18,792 50
And the pro rata amount of the other particular legacies, to wit,' 33,644 36 52,436 86'
Thus showing that $.27,638 13 is the amount which the appellant has to reimburse the executor, to enable the latter to settle and liquidate the succession.
It is therefore ordered, that the judgment of the Court of Pro-bales be so amended, that the executor of the estate of the late Antoine Carraby recover of the syndics of Etienne Carraby’s creditors, only a sum of $27,638 13, instead of $62,303 49, which he is decreed to pay by the judgment appealed from. The costs-of this appeal to be borne by the appellee.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Succession of Antoine Carraby-Etienne Carraby
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published