This is a suit by heirs against an administrator for an account.
The defendant pleads that he filed an account of administration as far back as 1847, which was notified in the manner required by law, and after the legal delays was homologated, and the administrator discharged from his trust by .the judgment of court: which judgment he pleads as res judicata.
He pleads further that a large portion of the assets placed upon the inventory of this estate, consisted of notes of the administrator himself, which are more than five years past due and are now extinguished by prescription.
Further, that the ancestor of plaintiffs, by representation of whom they claim as heirs of the deceased, was indebted to said deceased by judgment in the sum of $769, with interest; which judgment constituted an item in the inventory, and is due by plaintiffs to the estate.
Defendant annexes to his answer an estimate of moneys received and disbursed by him as administrator, to serve as an account of administration in case the court should be of opinion that he was bound to render another •account.
The record shows that Joseph Truxillo died on the 19th September, 1846, intestate. The defendant obtained letters of administration. The inventory amounted to $2,569, composed principally of three notes, due by the administrator himself, and of a judgment obtained many years previously by the *413deceased against his brother, Juan Truxillo, who died before Joseph,, and by representation of whom the plaintiffs claim as heirs for one third of the estate of Joseph Truxillo. On the 5th May, 1847, defendant filed his account of administration, in which he charged himself -with everything in the inventory, except the judgment against Juan Truxillo, and credited himself with funeral expenses, costs of court, and commissions. He also claimed to be a creditor of deceased for thirteen years boarding, at $10 per month. There was a balance, according to this-account, in favor of the administrator, of $24 80-100.
The account was published by posting notices at the court house door (there being no newspaper published in the parish,)' during ten days, and, no opposition being made, was homologated, and .judgment entered, discharging the defendant as administrator.
There is no doubt that this judgment of homologation is not res judieata against the heirs. The form of notice pursued was’ in accordance with Article 1172 of the Code, which has reference merely to creditors.
The defendant invokes Article 1057, which mentions legatees in connection with creditors, and argues from thence, tha,t heirs are synonimous with legatees, and that the law contemplates the same kind of notice to both. The argument is fallacious. There was, in this case, no will, and consequently no legatee. To bind the heirs, under the circumstances disclosed by this case, they should have been cited. The evidence shows that they were all residents cf the parish. See Millaudon v. Cajus, 6 L. R., 222; Baldwin v. Carleton, 11 Rob.
The only serious question in this case, in our opinion, is the right of the defendant to offset the judgment against Juan Truxillo, to the share of plaintiffs in the inheritance of Joseph Truxillo. The counsel of plaintiff contends that the former having died before the latter, was never the heir of the latter, but that plaintiffs have inherited directly from their uncle. The plaintiffs came to the succession of their uncle concurrently with an aunt and several cousins, by representation of their father, Juan Truxillo, the judgment debtor of their uncle. Representation is a legal fiction, the effect of which is to put the representative in the place, degree and rights of the party represented. It is true, a person may represent one whoso succession he has renounced; but that is not the case of plaintiffs, who declare in their petition that they are the sole heirs of Juan Truxillo. The case of Destrehan v. Destrehan, 4th N. S., is not analogous to the present case. The claimants in that case, had not only renounced the succession of the party whom they represented, but their relationship to the deceased was in the direct descending line, and the decision turned entirely upon peculiar provisions of the' Code applicable to that relationship alone, in connection with the subject of collation.
We are of opinion that the administrator has the right to oppose the judgment against Juan Truxillo to the claim of plaintiffs in the inheritance of Joseph Truxillo. That judgment was for $769, and bore 5 per cent, interest from October, 1853. At the time of the death of Joseph, it amounted, including 28 years interest, to. $1,653
The plaintiffs, being heirs of Joseph, for one-third, the judgment was extinguished at the death of Joseph, 'to the extent of one-third, by confusion, say.. S51
Balance due on judgment $1,102
*414The amount of Joseph's inventory was, as we have seen. $2,569
Add 23 years interest on the judgment against Juan Truxillo, of which the capital ($769) is inventoried. 884
Gross amount of Joseph Truxillo's estate...... $3,453
Deduct charges included in the account of administration rendered by defendant in 1847, which are admitted by plaintiffs to be correct_ 273
Nett amount to be divided among the heirs. $3,180
Of which one-third belongs to plaintiffs, say.,. 1,060
The plaintiffs had nothing to claim in the estate of their uncle, as the evidence shows. There is, therefore, no reason for charging the defendant with the expense of this suit.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed; and the judgment of this court is in favor of defendant, with costs in both courts.
O. A. Johnson, for plaintiff, applied for a re-hearing:
The conclusions of the court, if we have rightly’ understood them, amount substantially to finding that plaintiffs have made themselves the heirs, pure and simple of Juan Truxillo. The evidence to sustain them is the declaration made in our petition, that we were the sole heirs of Juan Truxillo. The part of the petition in which this declaration occurs, is here copied in full.
“That your petitioners are entitled each to one-sixth of the said estate for this — viz: That the said José left no heirs of his body, and that his legal heirs were his sister, Marcellina Truxillo, widow of Domingo Aeosta, of the parish of Assumption, for one-third; and the children and representatives of the late Antoine Truxillo, brother of the deceased, for one-third ; and the children and representatives of the late Juan Truxillo, also a brother of the decased, for the remaining third; that the representatives of said Juan Truxillo are your petitioners, Antoine, son of said Juan and your petitioner, the widow Domingo Truxillo — the said Domingo being, together with said Antoine, your petitioner, the only children and sole heirs of said Juan, deceased ; and the said Domingo having died intestate, leaving for his sole heirs his children, Philogene and Jean Baptiste, sole issue of the marriage of said Domingo with your petitioner, 'his widow; and the said Philogene and Jean Baptiste having since died intestate and without heirs of their body, whereby your petitioner, their mother, became their solo heir, and is sole entitled to their rights.”
We say the conclusions of the Court are based upon the finding that the plaintiffs have made themselves the unconditional heirs of Juan Truxillo, inasmuch as thejudgment has, by giving.effect to the offset pleaded, applied our funds to the payment of the debt of Juan. No other theory of the case adjudged by the court, is admissible. It cannot, for instance, be maintained that the debt of Juan has been extinguished by funds belonging to his estate, for Juan died before José, and this share in the estate of the latter, which has been applied by the court to the extinguishment of Juan’s debt, thus never made a part of Juan's estate. In other words, our funds, derived from a source foreign to the estate of Juan, have been made use of to pajr the debt of Juan. To our minds, this is nothing more or less than a condemnation of the plaintiffs as unconditional heirs of Juan-, and the warrant to this judgment is the language used by us in the extract from our petition above given, which the court seems to consider as an express acceptance of the succession of Juan. %
I. The first question which we submit then is, whether the court have not given to the declaration referred to, a meaning and effect which do not belong to it. Though the opinion of the court does not cite any law applicable to the above state of facts, it is plain that its conclusion, if legitimate, must rest upon Art. 982 of the Code, which is in these words:
“ 0. C. 982. The simple acceptance may be either express or tacit. It is *415express when the heir assumes the quality of heir in an unqualified manner, in some authentic or private instrument, orín some judicial proceeding.”
Now a most obvious limitation in the interpretation and application of this article, a limitation inherent in the very nature of the case, at once suggests itself; and that is, that the public or private acts or the judicial proceedings spoken of in the Article, must be such as have, for their subject matter, the succession with reference to which the quality is assumed, or at least, some right or thing supposed to depend upon it. Such was expressly held to be the rule in Anderson v. Cox, 6 A. R., 13.
‘‘AH law, ‘ says the court ’ must receive a reasonable interpretation. The judicial proceedings meant by Art. 982, are those in which the heir appears to claim as such some right in the succession.”1
So Marcadé, in treating particularly of the “acceptation cxpresse” and of the “qualification d’héritier,” even in acts pertaining- to the things or rights with respect to which the quality has heen assumed, uses the following emphatic language:
“De méme, ce sera uniquement la manifestation d’une intention certaine qui pourra constituer Facceptation expresse ; et il ne suffirait pas toujours que le successible cút pris dans un acte la qualité d’héritier. En effet, le mot héritier non pas seulement dans le monde, mais dans le Code lui-méme, signifie tantót celui á qui l’hérédité est irrévocablement acquise, tantót celui-lá seulement qui est appelé á la reeueillir et qui est libre de l’accepter ou de la répudier, tantót méme celui qui a formellement déclaré n’en pas vouloir; c’est ainsi que 1’art. 790, nous parle des ‘néritiers qui ont renoncé.’ S’il en est ainsi, il est bien impossible de prétendre que j’ai accepté par cela seul que je me suis qualifié d’héritier.’ Vol. iii. pp. 149, 150.
“ L’acceptation d’une succession,” says the same author, loe. cit. “ n’est et ne peut élre rien autre chose que la manifestation de la volonté d’etre héritier; mais il faut que la volonté soit certaine et indiquéo do maniere a ne laisser aucun doute.”
But this degree of certainty can only exist when in the acts or judicial proceedings specified by our article, something depends or is supposed to depend upon the assumption of the quality. To the same effect we quote Marcadé again, who sums up a verbal criticism of the structure of the Corresponding-Article of the Code Nap. with this sententious but comprehensive and accurate paraphrase of the Article itself:
“ Notre article devait dono se contenter de dire que l’acceptation résulte de tout fait on de toute déclaration écrite manifestant d’une maniére certaine l’intention d’agir en maitre de la succession.”
Now, in the case at bar, the assumption was, of the title of heir of Juan Truxillo, in an action instituted by us to assert, not any right or claim to his succession, or anything supposed to depend upon it, but in an action to obtain our share in the succession of José: in which action no demand was made or matter presented for argument by us, which could be held in any degree to turn upon the question, whether we were or were not the heirs of Juan Tmxillo, in the technical sense in which the court has interpreted our assumption of that quality. In short, the declaration in our petition, that we were the sole heirs of Juan Truxillo, was language of description merely, used to set forth the affiliation or relationship of plaintiffs to José Truxillo, and, except for that purpose, having no place or significance in the instrument of pleading in which it is found. It was tantamount to declaring Juan Truxillo to be our “ author ” in respect of the rights of heirship claimed by us in the succession of José, but nothing more, it was the equivalent of the words “ suc-cessible ” or “ habile á succéder ” in the examples put by Marcadé. Ibid. 150.
The subject matter of our action being, not the succession of Juan, but that of José, to sustain which, we sought only to trace title through Juan, it certainly cannot be maintained that the use of the language in question amounts even to an act of heirship, much less to a-n express acceptance of the succession of Juan. It is not such an assumption of the quality of heir in a judicial proceeding as is contemplated by Art. 982, and can only be consigned to the same class with the cases supposed by Marcadé, in the passage first cited from that author, and, equally with them, would justify his emphatic language, “ il est bien impossible de prétendre que j’ai accepté. par cela seul que je me suis qualifié d’héritier.”
*416Two cases from our own reports having been cited by defendant, viz: Lescesne v. Cottin, 2 N. S. 475, and Frazier v. Hills, 5 A. R. 114, it is only necessary to state, that in both of them the subject matter of the “judicial proceedings ” was the succession with reference to which the quality of heir had been assumed and that in neither, was there any room to doubt of the intention of the party, “ d’agir en maitre de la succession.” In short, the state of facts was just what we contend that it must be, to give rise to the application of Art. 982.
We submit then that the court has inadvertently given to the declaration relied on, taken in connection with the instrument of pleading in which it is found and weighed with reference to the object and purpose of our suit, a meaning and effect which do not belong to it; and that the court has evidently been led into that error by the state of facts developed by the defense with which our action was met and resisted.”
A re-hearing having been granted, the judgment of the court was pronounced by