In November, 1838, the petitioner obtained against her husband, James E. Bertie, a decree of separation of property, allowing her as her paraphernal effects a piano worth about three hundred dollars, and a sum of fifty dollars, belonging to her, and collected by her husband. After the rendering of this judgment, to wit, on the 14th of February, 1839, she bought a negro slave named Matilda, in her own name, for the price of eleven hundred and fifty dollars. This slave having been seized by the defendant, at the instance of Fellows, Cargill, and Company, judgment creditors of her husband, to satisfy their demand against the latter, this suit was brought to arrest the sale about to be made. The injunction sued out by plaintiff having been dissolved below, she appealed.
It is urged on the part of the appellant, that the slave in question is not liable to be izedand sold for the debts of James E. Bertie, her husband, because she was purchased hy the petitioner subse
The Civil Code, article 2402, provides, that ‘ the separation of property, although decreed by a court of justice, is null, if it has not been executed by the payment of the rights and claims of the wife, made to apppear by an authentic act, as far as the estate of the husband can meet them, or at least by a bona fide non-interrupted suit to obtain payment.’ In the Code Napoleon, art. 1444, from which this article is evidently borrowed, it is provided that there must be a beginning of pursuit, or proceedings under the decree of separation, within fifteen days from its date. The suppression in the Civil Code of this delay, within which some pursuit must be commenced against the husband to render the separation valid, renders our law on this subject less rigorous, but at the same time perhaps more vague, and difficult in its application to particular cases. By the french law the decree of separation becomes a nullity, if no settlement or proceedings take place under it, within fifteen days, and no subsequent execution of it can give it validity; while from the language of the provision in our code, it seems that the decree is not perfected, and has no binding force until one of the two conditions mentioned in it has been complied with. As relates however to the execution of the decree by judicial proceedings, it may well be that an unusual delay or interruption would be fatal to the wife. The decree of separation, whatever may be its terms, does not render the parties separate of property; it entitles the wife to a separation, but this right vanishes, if not followed by a prompt and bona fide execution of the judgment. It is all im
Judgment affirmed.