2 Mart. (N.S.) 389 | La. | 1824
delivered the opinion of the court. The plaintiff sued to recover a female slave, who had been illegally and forcibly taken out of his possession. The judge below decreed he should recover, but condemned him to pay the price of the negro, because she had been stolen, and purchased by the defendant at public auction.
Both parties appealed from this judgment.
The first question for our decision, is sented by a bill of exceptions taken to the introduction of a document offered by the plaintiff, to prove he was guardian of the minor for whose USC he sued. We find it unnecessary to decide whether the paper offered was duly authenticated or not, for by the pleadings the plaintiff was not obliged to offer evidence to this fact. The plea of the ant was nothing more than a general denial. The exception which would have required this proof, should have been specially pleaded ; for it was a dilatory one, and it was waved by putting in a defence on the merits. Cur. Phillip. Citacion, nos. 2 & 3.
His obligation to do so, has been contended in this court, to result from the provision in the code which declares that things moveable may be prescribed for in three years, unless they have been stolen ; and that even if they have been stolen, the owner cannot recover them without paying the possessor the price which they cost him, provided he bought them at a public market, fair, or at public action. Civil Code, 488, art. 74 & 75.
Slaves, by the law of this country, are considered as immoveable, not moveable : therefore the above rule does not apply to them. The reason on which that rule was established, also excludes the idea of its having any appli
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be annulled, avoided and reversed, and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiff do recover of the defendant the slave claimed in the petition, with costs in both courts.