11 Rob. 526 | La. | 1845
This is a suit for separation of property, founded on the alleged disorder of the husband’s affairs. The plaintiff claims, among other things, as her separate property, a mulat-tress, named Adelaide, and her descendants. She alleges that said slave was conveyed to her, in November, 1811
On the trial the plaintiff gave in evidence a copy of the act of sale, passed before Pedesclaux, from her mother, the widow Yienne, to herself, and accepted by her husband, in which the vendor acknowledges to have received $200, the price, from the present plaintiff Her counsel then offered in evidence the depositions of certain witnesses, taken under commission, to prove that the said sale, purporting to be for the price of two hundred dollars, previously paid by the purchaser, was, in fact, a dation enpayement, and that the slave was given to the plaintiff, by her mother, as an advance upon her inheritance. The intervenors objected, on the ground that parol evidence is inadmissible to vary the nature of the written contract, or to show that the contract was not a sale, as upon its face it purports to be; but the judge presiding admitted the evidence to prove that the slave was acquired with the funds of the wife, and a bill of exceptions was taken.
The question, whether the slave Adelaide and her increase are paraphernal, or belong to the community, must be decided according to the Code of 1808. That Code introduced, we think, some modifications of the Spanish law upon this point. In the case of Ducrest v. Bijeau, 8 Mart., N. S. 192, this court held that the increase of a female slave, constituting the paraphernal property of the wife, belongs to the community. That decision is fully sustained by the authorities referred to, and especially by Febrero; but it arose before the Code of 1808. But the case of Frederic v. Frederic, 10 Martin, 188, was decided with reference to the Code of 1808, and the court then held, that a child, the issue of a paraphernal slave, follows the condition of the mother, and, as such, is paraphernal. The court in that case referred to page 332, art. 50, of the old Code, which speaks of the young of a dotal slave, and applied the same rule, by analogy, to the young of a paraphernal slave. In this position, we think,
It only remains, then, to enquire whether Adelaide became, by the purchase, the sole property of the plaintiff, or that of community. The sale is in her name, and the vendor acknowledges that she paid the consideration.
The Spanish law, the Code of 1808, and the Code of 1825, agree in the general principle, that all property acquired by purchase during the marriage, whether in the name of the husband or of the wife, belongs to the community. 1 La. 522. Code of 1808, page 336, art. 64. Febrero, part 2, lib. 1, cap. iv. §1, no. 6. 10 La. 148.
This principle applies even when the purchase is made with the funds belonging to the wife. To this there was an exception, which the court recognised in the case of Savenat et al. v. Le Breton et al. (1 La., 522), of such things as may have been received by either of them, in payment of money due to them, as their separate and individual rights. A similar exception has been recognised by us, under the existing Code, particularly in the cases of Domingues v. Lee, 17 La., 300, and Terrell v. Cutrer, 1 Rob., 367.
• In this last case, we said, that the purchase made by the wife should be a bond fide re-investment of money, under her control, and forming a part of her paraphernal property, or a dation en payement.
The case now before the court comes within the spirit of the exception, as existing under the Spanish law, as well as the Code of 1825. The act acknowledges that the plaintiff had paid the price. The parol evidence, which was properly admitted, (under the restriction expressed by the judge,) because it does not contradict the act in this respect, shows that Mrs*
■Judgment affirmed.
The plaintiff was married on the 6th of July preceding.