1 La. 72 | La. | 1830
delivered the opinion of the court. The plaintiff states that a lot of hers was sold by the testamentary executors of her mother, from whom she inherited it, and her guardian, to the defendants’ ancestor, in 1811, and the premises being incumbered by a mortgage for a sum of about two thousand dollars, it was agreed that it should be retained by the vendee during one year, and then paid, if the mortgage was canceled, otherwise within thirty days after the vendee received notice of the canceling ; that a period of nineteen years had elapsed before
The defendants pleaded a tender (on the thirtieth day after notice) of the sum, denying any interest was due.
The tender was admitted — the plaintiff had judgment for the principal and interest from the end of the year following the sale. The defendants appealed.
The appellee’s counsel has contended that a' vendee of property producing fruits, owes interest from the day of the sale, even when he has a term for the payment of the price.
A number of French authorities have been produced which establish this proposition, in its fullest extent.-Poth Contra de Vente, with Bernard's notes, w.283—6 Pandect's Fran-caises on art 1652 of the Napoleon Code—Muleville on Domat, Vente, tit. 2, sect. 363—Id. interest., 5, 14,—6 Toullier, 681.
The article of the Napoleon Code, 1652, has been literally copied in our code of 1808,
It is not extraordinary that the courts of this state should give different opinions from those of the courts of France, on an article copied from the Napoleon Code in ours. The Napoleon Code introduced an entire new system, and abrogated all former laws. The confused state in which the civil laws of the country were plunged by the effect of the changes which happened in its government, having rendered it indispensable to make known the laws which had been preserved, after the abrogation of those which were contrary to the constitution of the United States, or irreconcileable with its principles, and to collect them in a single work, which might serve as a guide for the decisions of courts and juries, without recuring to a multiplicity of books, which, being for the most part written in foreign languages, offered, in their interpretation, inexhaustible sources of litigation.—1 Moreau’s Digest, 220.
In giving their sanction to our code, the legislature abrogated only such parts of former laws, as were contrary to, or irreconcileable with its dispositions. Id. 224.
Pothier, however, who wrote before the Napoleon Code, has expressed his opinion against the position of the appellee’s counsel, an(j teaches that the vendee of land, who has a delay to pay the price, owes no interest in the mean while. He cites in support of his conclusion, Covarrulias,a Spanish writer.
In examining, therefore, the pretensions of the appellee, we have entirely disregarded the opinions of French writers.
According to our laws, interest, in contracts to pay money, is the measure of damages to be paid by the party who neglects to comply with his engagements.— C. Code, 270.
These damages are due only when the D J debtor has delayed to comply with his obli-gatfon, except when the thing which the ® ’ » o debtor had obliged himself to give or do, could not be given or done only at a certain time, which he has suffered to elapse,—C. Code, 268, art. 4. Hepp & al. vs. Ducros, 3 M. n. s. 189. By construing, therefore, the article 84 p. 360 of the Code, we conclude that the vendee of land is only chargeable with interest after a delay of payment.—Pothier, vente n. 28, 286.
Interest is with us either conventional or legal.
In the present case, as there is no convention, legal interest only can be claimed. Our laws know but two rates of legal interest-That of jive per cent, on all suras that are the object of a judicial demand; six per cent, on discounts in banks.—C. Code 408, art. 32. Now the money claimed by the plaintiff in this case was tendered as soon as it became the object of a judicial demand, as soon as it was payable.
Generally speaking, interest is not due before a demand.—C. Code 270, art. 53. But where the law makes them accrue of right, id est, as in the case of a sale of a thing producing fruit, they become due on the delay, without any previous demand or suit. And this is the only difference between the sale of such a thing or any other.
After that day, if the debtor be prevented by the act positive or negative of the creditor, or if the latter withdraw or conceal himself, the debtor is not in fault, and owes no interest or damages. His obligation to keep the money ready to be paid on demand, prevents him from parting with it to make it produce interest, except at his own risk.
In a late case, in the western district, Miles vs. Odin & al. 8 Martin n. s. 214, we held that Brent, the vendee of a number of slaves, in whose hands a creditor of the vendor had attached the price, did not owe any interest during the pendency of the suit, although the judgment was protracted for several years. See also the case of Boutuny vs. Ducournau, 6 Martin, 657.