1 Rob. 362 | La. | 1842
This suit is brought to recover the price of property sold to the defendant, by two different sales, executed to him in the years 1829 and 1880. Although the pleadings set up various means of defence, the only one relied on in argument, and which it is necessary to mention, is, that defendant has been evicted in consequence of a legal mortgage existing on the property sold, in favor of one Alexis Brasset, of whom the plaintiff had been curator ad'bona, long before these sales. There was judgment below for $6250 against the-defendant, from which he appealed.
This case came before the court in March, 1836, and was-then remanded with instructions to the judge a quo, not to reject the record of the suit in the court of probates of Alexis Brasset v. Auguste Landry, which had been offered in evidence by the defendant, and been rejected. From the proceedings had in that suit it appears, that in 1827 the plaintiff had given a special mortgage
It is therefore ordered, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed with costs; reserving the defendant’s right to sue for any sum paid by him on account of the plaintiff, in consequence of mortgages existing on the property sold to him.