22 La. Ann. 358 | La. | 1870
The plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment dismissing their demand against the defendant, based on the following instrument:
“New Orleans, Juno 1, 1862.
“ Good for ton thnsand dollars, payable five years after my death. One thousand dollars to D. J. Farrar; ono thousand dollars to Leopold Guicliard; three thousand dollars to my good friend, Joseph Girod; two thousand dollars to Camille Guillet; two thousand dollars to Nelville Soulé, and one thousand dollars to the French Society.
“Your servant and friend,
“Ant. Miciioud.”
The petitioners allege that said Antoine Miclioud died on the twenty-second of July, 1862, leaving a last will and testament, in which the defendant was instituted his universal legatee, and, as such, accepted the succession unconditionally. They pray for judgment against him for the amounts due them respectively, as mentioned in said instrument.
The defense is, that the instrument sued on is not genuine; if genuine, it is not an onerous contract, but an olographic will.
From the view we have taken of the ease, it will not be necessary to pass on the genuineness of the instrument, concerning which the evidence is conflicting and unsatisfactory. We can not regard the instrument as a commutative contract, the evidence failing to disclose any consideration whatever therefor, and it not being in the form of a negotiable promissory note, which, for commercial reasons, is presumed to have a valuable consideration. Parsons on Bills, 175. Indeed, there is also lacking the consent of the parties, or the aggregatio mentium, as it appears that the instrument was never delivered during the life of the said Antoine Miclioud, it having come into the hands of the plaintiffs, mysteriously, five years alter his death.
One of the plaintiffs, Joseph Girod, to whom the document was addressed, was called as a witness to explain how he came in possession thereof. lie says: “ I happened to be at the French Consulate in New Orleans, during the epidemic of 1867. * * * At one of these interviews, Mr. Trabue presented me the letter, * * “ in which was contained the document sued on. I read the same and communicated the contents to Mr. Trabue and to Mr. Duquesnay. I can’t tell who sent me the document, because the person who addressed the envelope did not send his name. The envelope contained only the document, and nothing else. * * * I had never seen or possessed the document before then. I don’t know that Mr. Guillet had any knowledge of 'that document before then. I can’t say that any of the plaintiffs had any before then. If Mr. Miclioud left that sum to me, it is because he had some good reason to do it, inasmuch as he had had enough to do with me, and was well aware that he should do it.”
When the plaintiffs testify in their case, and are unable to state any consideration for the instrument sued on, we think it fair to conclude that there was no valuable consideration. The mysterious manner in which the plaintiffs received the instrument five years after Miclioud’s death, leads us to believe that it remained in his possession at the time of his death, never having been delivered to those who now claim its rightful possession.
The instrument is not good as a donation inter vivos, because it has
We think this authority does not apply to the case, the instrument sued on not being a formal act of sale, nor an ordinary act of any kind evidencing the consent of the parties to an onerous contract.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be affirmed, with costs.
Rehearing refused.