Choppin v. Forstall
Choppin v. Forstall
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs, who are the widow and heirs of Valérion Ohoppin, deceased, allege that at the death of the said V. Choppin, in July, 1866, ho owned two plantations, known as the Homo Placo and Bay Tree, as his separate property, twenty thousand dollars in money, and other movable effects, and a standing crop which realized over twenty thousand dollars, and left no debts; that in August of the same year one. of his children, Eugenie Leda, died, leaving no debts; that both suecos-
The defendants excepted that the forced heirs named in the exceptions, and all the parties to the proceedings complained of, had not been made parties to the suit. These exceptions were, by consent, maintained, and the parties named were cited upon a supplemental petition describing them.
Subsequently the defendants filed the following exceptions:
First — The order to make parties has not been complied with, the forced heirs not having been cited.-
Second — -O. C. Olivier, a party to the mortuary proceedings complained of, has not been made a party.
Third — -The court is incompetent, ratione materia3, to pass on and decide the issues presented in the petition, because it seeks the avoidance of acts performed under the decrees of another tribunal.
On trial of these exceptions the court dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction, and plaintiffs appealed.
We think the court erred. The action is one to recover property, and, the value being sufficient, the district court'has jurisdiction under the constitution and laws now in force. In determining the validity of the sales in question that tribunal has power to say whether or not the alleged proceedings in the probate court are valid, and sustain or annul the sales complained of, without formally sustaining or annulling the said judicial proceedings. All that the plaintiffs ask in this respect is the annulment of the sales, and to have this done it is not necessary, as contended by defendants, to obtain a judgment annulling the judicial proceedings and decrees resulting in the sale of the property. Under the present constitution the district courts have jurisdiction of suits in which a succession is a plaintiff or defendant, if the amount involved is over five hundred dollars. Such a suit is the present one. It is not a probate matter, nor arc the plaintiffs seeking to annul a judgment of another court.
The other grounds of exception are not well taken. The parties named in the first exception were cited, or they accepted service and waived citation. And we do not see any conflict of interest between the tutrix and the minors. Wbat she claims is the same in nature as that claimed for the minors. The question of estoppel by deed and warranty does not arise in this action.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed, that the exceptions be overruled, and the case remanded to be proceeded in according to law, appellees to pay costs of appeal.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- R. F. Choppin v. Oscar J. Forstall
- Status
- Published