3 La. Ann. 600 | La. | 1848
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
The plaintiff seeks to1 enforce the vendor’s privilege upon certain slaves, in the possession of the defendant. The defendant avers that no such privilege was reserved ; but, on the contrary, at the time of the sale, was abandoned by the plaintiff, in consideration of a special mortgage being given him on other and distinct property, to secure him in the full amount of the price not paid in cash ; that, if the abandonment was not inserted expressly in the deed of sale, the omission occurred through the “ remissness, negligence, or perhaps ignorance” of the notary, who drew up the act; that the plaintiff, availing himself of such omission, is fraudulently attempting to enforce a right which he had abandoned.
To prove the renunciation of the vendor’s privilege, the defendant offered, in the lower court, the parol testimony of the parish judge, who, in his capacity of notary, drew up the act of sale, and before whom it was executed, to prove what was said at the time by the parties. The court refused to receive the testimony, and to that refusal a bill of exceptions was taken. The defendant’s counsel acknowledges, in his brief, that the decision of this cause rests almost entirely upon the question of the admissibility of the parol evidence. He has, however, relied in some degree upon the act of sale itself. Before considering the question of the admissibility of the parol evidence, we propose to examine the case as standing simply upon the act of sale, the written contract of the parties.
The material contents of the act are as follows: Boner declares that, for the consideration of §5250, cash, and the vendee’s note, of ©ven date with the act,
Is a renunciation of the vendor’s privilege to be inferred from the face of the act, upon a sound interpretation of the language which the parties in this solemn written form, have used to express their intentions 1
By article 3216 of our Code, the vendor has a privilege on the estate, or slave, sold by him, for the payment of the price, or so much of it as is due, whether it was sold on, or without, a credit. It is not necessary that, in the contract of the parties, this privilege should be expressly stipulated. It is a right which springs from the nature of the debt, and by force of law is embodied in the contract, unless it be renounced. It is also a right of a very high character, conferring advantages superior to .those which flow from a mortgage. It is not necessary that this right should be renounced in express terms, in the act of sale. Such renunciation may be implied from the terms of the instrument. But, inasmuch as the obligation of contracts extend not only to what is expressly stipulated, but also to everything that by law is considered as appertaining to the nature of the particular contract (Code 1897); and, inasmuch as the vendor’s privilege is a legal concomitant of the contract of sale, it must be held, upon sound principles of interpretation, that the renunciation of this important right which sets aside the legal presumption, should be established, not by doubtful, but by clear and cogent inferences from the language of the parties. Now the omission of the parties to stipulate a special mortgage, cannot be considered as an implied renunciation of the higher right of privilege. Such a construction would militate •against the express .previsions of our law, which declare privileges to be given by the nature-of the debt, and confer a privilege upon the vendor by force of the contract of sale itself. It has even been held that, when a special mortgage had been taken, its subsequent release did not affect the vendor’s privilege. Citizen’s Bank v. Cuny, 12 Rob. 279. See also Succession of Johnson, 3 Rob. 217. Howard v. Thomas, 3 La. 112. Privilege and mortgage may co-exist, and the former may exist without the latter. The rights are different.
But it is said that the renunciation of the privilege may be inferred from the •omission to grant a mortgage upon the slaves, coupled with the fact of granting a mortgage upon other and independent property. In our opinion this is not a necessary inference. Because a vendor takes the seeiirity of other property, we are not to presume that he relinquishes the security which the law gives him upon the property sold; but rather to consider him as superinducing an additions' security; and more particularly, where the property sold is in its nature perish.able, liable to be impaired by disease, or destroyed by death. We cannot look •upon it in the opposite light, without assuming that the parties were ignorant of •the law, and disregarded the legal consequence which it attaches to the contract they were making, An interpretation of contracts based upon presumed ignorance of the law by the contracting parties, is inadmissible.
Some stress was laid by the counsel upon the words of the act — “and, in order ,t.o secure the payment of said note.” From these expressions it was argued
In conclusion, we may add, that although .the doctrine that a renunciation of a mortgage or privilege may be implied, is fully sanctioned by authority, the illustrations found in the books, are .cases where the implication is cogent, and its rejection wo.uld be against good conscience. Thus, in the roman law, the wife was considered as making a tacit renunciation of her mortgage, by uniting with her husband in a contract of sale, avec promesse d’eviction. So in the same law, .a wife w,ho appears with her husband in a contract, by which he constitutes a dowry for his child on a property subject to her legal mortgage., was .considered .as releasing her mortgage on that property. S.o of a mortgage creditor consenting .that .the property encumbered in his favor should be mortgaged to another creditor. So of the lien of a factor under the law merchant: It is founded ¡upon a tacit agreement of the parties, which the law implies, but will consider as waived if, while the. property is in the hands of the factor with a lien attached to it, he agrees .to hold the property exclusively for, or as the property of, a third person.
Merlin expresses, with his .usual accuracy, the j.ust rule for the interpretation .of renunciations. Les renunciations se font de deux maniér.es; expressément, ,et par des faits, Mais pour .que des faits enrportent renonciation, il faut qu'il en résulte une y.olonté manifesté d.e renoncer, c’est-tL-dire, que e.es faits soient directement e.t á tous égards contraires au droit o.u au privilege dont il s’agit. Merlin, Rep. verbo Renon. § 3. .See also Persjl, Questions sur les Hyp. p. 38. Wall v. Bry, 1 An. 314.
Being, ther.efo.re, of opiuion that, on the face of this instrument, which the parties have chosen .to make in the mo.st solemn form known to our law, the repository and .evidence of their intentions, the vendor’s privilege w,as not waived, we proceed to the consideration of the question whether the parol evidence is admissible to .contradict the ac.t, and .show that the parties did intend that it should not exist.
It appears, by the bill of .exceptions “ that, on .the trial of .this cause .the defendant offered in evidence the .testimony of C. E. Qreneaux, (which evidence is made part of the bill of exceptions,) for the purpose of rebutting the presumption arising fro.m the deed pf sale of Boner .to defendant, that the said Boner had avendor’s lien on the negroes therein sold; and also for .the purpose of explaining the .ambiguity latent i.n said deed, that plaintiff took the mortgage on .the Natchitoches property as sole and substantive security for his debt, and not as further and additional security ; but the .court refused to admit the said testimony on the ground that it is not legal .to defeat by parol the authentic act containing a privilege ; that the parties must stand by the written act; and that any other rule would unsettle the rights .of property, and leave the defendant upon the uncertain memory of man.'”
The testimony of Judge Qreneaux was as follows: Interrogatory 1. Be pleased to refer to tho act of sale passed before you in your capacity of notary public, on or about the 19th May, 1833, from William Boner to JphnJi. Mahlcs
Answer. I refer to the act of sale passed before me in my capacity of notary public on the 19th of May, 1838, from William Boner to John II. Mahle, of certain slaves, and believe I have some recollection of what took place between the parties when said sale was made.
Interrogatory 2. State why it was that Boner did not retain a special mortgage on the property then sold ?
Answer. Boner did not retain a special mortgage on the property then sold, because Mahle stated that he wished to have the slaves free of hypothecation, in order to enable him to mortgage them with his plantation to some bank.
Interrogatory 3. Did, or did not, the said Boner accept the special mortgage on town property in Natchitoches, as full security for the price of the slaves sold?
Answer. I then understood, from the purport of the act of sale, that Boner was satisfied with the mortgage on the house, as full security for the payment of the price of the slaves sold ?
Interrogatory 4. What a'eason did Mahle assign for not giving Boner a special mortgage on the slaves ? Did he, or nGt, tell Boner that he wanted to obtain a loan by mortgaging said slaves in bank?
Answer. I have answered ' this in my answer to the second interrogatory.
Interrogatory 5. What was, at that time, the-value of the town property mortgaged by Mahle? Was it or not, according to the value of town property at that time, sufficient to secure the amount of the purchase ?
Anstoer. I cannot say. .
Interrogatory 6. Was it, or not, at -the time of the sale, and afterwards, understood between Boner and Mahle, that Boner was to have no mortgage, privilege, or hen on the slaves sold; and was not the mortgage on town property given in consideration of Boner's relinquishment of his lien on the slaves?
Answer. I have stated my impressions at the time, in my answer to the third interrogatory.
Interrogatory 7. Is it, or not, the almost universal eustom when real estate or slaves are sold en credit, to retain a special mortgage for the price, in addition to the vendor’s privilege ? Why was the custom departed from in this instance ?
Answer. It is generally the custom, when real estate or slaves are sold on a credit, to retain a special mortgage for the priee, in addition to the vendor’s privilege. I recollect having asked the parties in this case, and specially Mahle, why he preferred giving a mortgage on his house aud lot, and his answer was as I have already stated. Mr. Boner was present, and did not object. There was no express understanding .that Boner should relinquish his privilege'; but. the object of his taking a mortgage on the house and lot, instead of retaining it on the slaves, -was to enable Mahle to mortgage them free from all encumbrances or liens. This is what I understood from both of them, at the time the sale was made and passed before me.
It-must be observed that the answer did not charge, nor was the testimony offered to prove, fraud. The language o’f the answer is, that it was well understood and agreed betweenj the vendor and vendee that no lien or privilege of any kind should be retained, that the Natchitoches property should be mortgaged in lieu thereof to secure the payment of the note, .and that if an express r.elin
The law requires that every transfer of immovable property or slaves must be in writing, saving, however, under certain circumstances, the confession of the vendor, when interrogated on oath. Following this provision, and under the title of “ testimonial proof,” is the stringent rule: “ Neither shall parol evidence be admitted against, or beyond, what is contained in the acts, nor on what may have been said before, or at the time of, making them, or since”. Articles 1842 and 2267 authorize an exception, where an act is attacked on account of “ fraud or deceit”.
It is obvious that the attempt here is, to contradict the authentic written evidence of the parties, to give parol evidence against the act. The written contract, by its legal effect, confers the vendor’s privilege; by the testimony, the plaintiff seeks to show that the parties intended that no such privilege should exist — to substitute another contract for that which they have in a solemn writing expressed — to establish that they meant one thing, but signed another. Let it be observed that the act is not in itself unintelligible. What is written in the act is unambiguous, and tho legal effect of what is written is also clear.
This testimony then, we think, could not have been admitted under the pleadings, and for the purpose for which it was offered, without violating the letter and the meaning of the Code, It was properly said at bar that, on this question we must follow our own law. In the equity jurisprudence of England, to which we have been referred, there seems to be a good deal of latitude allowed in the admission of parol evidence to vary or reform written contracts upon the ground of mistake. Although it must be, at the same time, observed that, courts of Equity will grant such relief only where there is a plain mistake, clearly made out by satisfactory proofs, and refuse it where the eviidence is loose, equivocal, or contradictory, or is in its texture open to doubt or to opposing presumptions. See Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 155. The opponents of that doctrine contend that, there is great danger in setting aside the solemn engagements of parties when reduced to writing, by the introduction of parol evidence, and that it leaves too much to the discretion of the bench, and holds out temptation to perjury; while its advocates insist that, it is in furtherance of justice, and that it would be a great defect in the moral jurisdiction of courts of Equity if they were to refuse in such cases to administer relief upon parol evidence. It is not our province to enquire what our own law ought to be, but what it is. It forbids as to let in contemporaneous parol evidence to defeat the written contract, and prefers that cases of individual hardship should sometimes occur, rather than that the daily transactions of the people ahd their titles to immovable property, should be exposed to the uncertainty which would result from permitting written contracts to be questioned upon oral testimony.
In conclusion we may remark that, the present case is not an inapt illustration of the danger that would result from a contrary rule. The witness does not profess to speak with certainty: “I believe I have some recollection of what took place between tho parties when the sale was made”. “ I then understood from the purport of the act of sale, .that Boner was satisfied with the mortgage on the house &c’’. “I have stated my impression at the time”.
But, even if Mahle and his heirs could, under the circumstances, be deemed third persons, the vendor’s privilege was preserved against them by the due recording of the act of sale (C. C. 3238); and, for the purposes for which it was offered, the parol evidence would have been as inadmissible against Boner as though the title had never passed from Mahle. What safety would there be in contracts, and what security for the rights of property, if, when A. and B. have made an agreement in a solemn written form, C., a subseqsent creditor of B., should be permitted, without a charge of fraud, to attack the rights of A., by proving that B. undertook one thing in the agreement, but meant another. The principles and policy of the law upon which we have already commented, forbid such evidence.
But it is said that the children of the female slaves, born since the sale, are not subject to the vendor’s privilege; and that the judgment which, by relation to the pleadings, recognizes a privilege upon such increase, is therefore erroneous. In the consideration of this question it may be well to enquire whether, if the vendor has chosen to sue for the resolution of this sale by reason of the nonpayment of the price, he would have been entitled to take this increase.
Upon this point we are not aware that the Code contains any express enunciation. We must draw our conclusions from the anology of cases where it has plainly spoken, and from authority. The child follows the condition of the mother, and, if she be a slave, the child- born becomes the property of her owner. This relation, established by the Code (art. 183), construed in a restricted sense, might be said merely to solve the question of the child’s condition; but, taken in connection with other provisions of the Code and of our statute book, it corroborates the view that, the child should be deemed annexed to the parent, and that the property in the former should follow as an accessory the property in the latter. It is in this sense that the law speaks in treating of the rights of an usufructuary. Slaves are spoken of as natural fruits, in article 557 of the Civil Code. In article 491 it is said that, the children of slaves belong to the proprietor, by right of accession. In both articles they are spoken of concurrently with fruits of the earth, spontaneous or cultivated. But while the latter, produced during the existence of the usufruct, are declared to be
Acting upon the analogy of this article of the Code (536), the court held, in Patterson v. Bonner, 19 La. 509, that the vendee under a vente a remiré was not the owner of slaves born of the slaves purchased, during his possession under the contract, and that the vendor, when he exercises the right of redemption, is entitled to recover them as owner.
If, in such a sale, the increase would not be considered the property of the vendee, it appears to us they should not, when the vendor sets aside the sale, by availing himself of the resolutory condition. In the vente a remiré — the sale with the right of redemption — the resolution of the sale does not spring from the fault of the purchaser, but is based upon the exercise of the potestative condition reserved to the seller, and of which, under the agreement of the parties, he choses, for the furtherance of his own interest, arbitrary to avail himself. But, in the other case, the right to exercise the resolutory condition has its source in the fault of the purchaser, who has violated, or failed to perform, his promise to pay the price. Quia nihil penes eum residere oporierei ex re in qua fidem fejellisset.
The view we have taken of this question derives additional force from the language of our statutes concerning slaves, which are conceived in the same humane spirit which restricts the master’s power to punish the slave. “ Eve* ry person is expressly prohibited from selling separately from their mothers, the. children who shall not have attained the full age of ten years.” So, too, from the fiction of the law : “ Slaves shall always be reputed and considered real estate; shall be, as such, subject to be mortgaged, according the rules prescribed by law ; and they shall be seized and sold as real estatp.” Statute of 1806. It is proper to observe that the children, in this case, do not appear to have reached the age of ten years. The sale from Boner, and the mortgage to Barrett, do not speak of the slaves Charity, Susan, and Elvira, as then having issue. The only child, whose age is exhibited by the record is a child of Elvira, not at the present time nine years old. The two children, issue of Susant are not mentiened in any of the sales or the mortgages down to 1843 ; and she was fifteen years old at the date of Boner’s sale, in 1838. In the absence of contrary proof, we must presume them to be under the age of ten years. If the issue are to be treated as fruits, still, as the law forbids them to be separated from the mother until the age of ten years, we cannot liken them to gathered fruits until they have attained that age.
The conclusion, we think, is clear that, if Boner had chosen to sue for a're* solution of the sale, he would have had a right to take back the offspring. They would not have become the property of the purchaser. This goes very far to establish the right of privilege. It is indeed difficult, on principle, to distinguish the cases. We have not been favored with any argument which would authorize us to make a distinction, and to say that if the vendor chooses to resolve the sale, he shall take the increase; but that if he seeks to collect the price, the increase shall be considered as disconnected from the parents, and unreservedly, and without encumbrance, the property of the purchaser.
The privilege of the vendor is a species of implied mortgage, superior, however, in some respects, in its rank and effect to the conventional mortgage. The
Our law, in this respect, follows the ancient jurisprudence. 11 Quae rebutf obligatis aecesserunt obligata censentur, veluti si quid fundi oppignorato per alluvionem adjectum sit, aut proprietati, quEe pignori data erat, ususfructus posteá accreverit.” Voet, cited in Tropíong, Lfyp. vol. 2, no. S5'£. In the language sf the commentator it is assise suf la chose, and extends itself with the property and its “ modifications.”
In the roman law, we find this question considered with reference to slaves. Quae ex re pignorata apud eum qui earn oblrgavit nascuntur, hnjus rei pignori accedunt. Partus pigneratae ancillíé in pari causa, esse qua mater est, olini placuit. Si mancipia in causam pignoris cecideiunt, eaquoque qute ex his nata sunt, codem jure habendasunt.
Although the mortgage be restrained to certain* things, yet it will nevertheless extend to nil that shall arise or proceed from the.t.hing which is mortgaged, or that shall augment it, and make part of it. Thus,- the fruits which grow ote the lands that are mortgaged, are subject to the mortgage, while they continue unseparatecl from the ground. Thus, where a stock of horses, a head of cattle, or a flock of sheep, is put in pawn into the creditor’s hands, the foals, the'lambs, and other beasts which they bring forth, and which augment their number, are likewise engaged for the creditor’s security; and if the whole herd, or flock, be entirely changed, the heads which have renewed it are engaged in the same manner as the old stock. . Thus,, when the bounds of a piece of ground that is mortgaged happen to be enlarged by that which the course of a river may add to it, the mortgage extends to that which has augmented the ground. Thus a house that is built on ground which is mortgaged, is subject likewise to the mortgage. And if, on the contrary, a house be mortgaged, and it perishes by fire or falls through decay, the mortgage will subsist on the ground-where the house stood. Thus when a debtor mortgages a piece of ground of which he had only the bars property, another enjoying the usufruct of it, when the said right to the usufruct comes to be extinct, the mortgage will comprehend the ground together with the fruits. Domat, book 3,"tit. 1, sec. 1, § 7. (Stra.han’s ed.) See Civil Code, 3*278, 3371, &c.
We are, therefore, of opinion that, the vendor’s privilege attached on the issue of the slaves, born after the defendant purchased.
We have already expressed a doubt as to the right of Mahle and his heirs, to be considered as third persons by reason of the sale tó Elgee and the resale to Mahle after his bankruptcy. But, however this may be, the act of sale was duiy recorded ; and we do not perceive how a third possessor could resist the privilege, any more than he could resist an action based upon the resolutory condition. Resoluto jure dantis, resoivitur jus accipientis. Persil, Ques. sur les Hyp. p. 27. Trop. Vente, § 629.
It is, therefore, decreed that, the judgment of the court below be affirmed, with costs; said judgment being considered by this court as comprehending, under the expression slaves mentioned in the petition, not only the slaves Jasper, Isaac, John, Jim, Charity, Susan and Elvira, but also any increase born of ¡my or either of said slaves since the 19th day of May, 1838.