The judgment of the court was pronounced by
This was a suit for the slander of a title unattended with possession, which the issue made by the defendants has changed into a petitory action.
A curator ad hoc was appointed as prayed for, and the defendants answered that they were in the possession of certain lands in the Parish of Ouachita, which they held by good and sufficient title, as well as by prescription; they further denied all otherfacts and allegations in the petition.
The court, of the first instance, gave judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for two undivided eighths of the land in controversy, and the defendants appealed.
On the appeal the plaintiffs have prayed that the judgment be amended, and the whole land decreed to belong to them.
The material facts of the case are as follows: In 1790, Abraham Morehouse married Abigail Young, in the State of New York, and had two children by her. He subsequently came to the Spanish colony of Louisiana, gave it to be understood that he was a widower, and, in September, 1799, by an act passed before the commandant of Fort Miro, in the District of Ouachita, acting as a notary public, agreed to take as his wife, BUonore HooTc, The commandant states in the act, that it is passed before him in conformity with a custom sanctioned by the government, on account of the want of spiritual assistance, and that the marriage is to be solemnized before the church on the first opportunity.
Abraham Morehouse declares himself, in the act, to be the widower of Abigail Young, and stipulates with EUonore Hook and her curator, the Chevalier JDanemours, that the rights of the children of this and of the preceeding marriage shall be the same, whether those born from the present second marriage be bom before or after its solemnization before the church, and whether or not the solemnization takes place. The daughter of the commandant testifies, that there was no priest at that time in the District of Ouachita ; that she was present at the celebration of the marriage before her father; that the usual formalities were complied with ; and that immediate cohabitation followed, as was then the custom in the colony.
It was contended, in argument, that this was a contract per verba de futuro. As it was followed by cohabitation, the distinction is not material, a marriage per verba de futuro cum copula, having all the legal effects of a marriage per verba deprcesenti. Hubbard’s Evidence of Succession, 38 Law Library, p. 218.
"We incline to the opinion, however, that a contract per verba de prasentí, was intended. The commandant of Fort Miro was no civilian, and, at this distance of time, the intention of his acts and the understanding which the parties inter
There is nothing in the objection, that the contract was passed before the commandant, acting as a notary public. This is believed to have been the style of all the civil acts authenticated by those officers, except the putting in possession of land under orders of survey.
As stated by the plaintiffs, the land in controversy was acquired by Abraham Morehouse, in 1805. He died in 1813, his two wives being then alive ; and, many years after his death, Stephen Girard acquired those lands through Abigail Young and her sons, representing themselves as being the only legitimate wife and children of said Abraham Morehouse.
The first position taken by the plaintiffs’ counsel is, that the heirship is not put at issue by the answer, and cannot be enquired into. However this might be, if the plaintiffs had introduced no evidence on the subject of the marriage of their ancestors, and rested their title upon proof of their status as legitimate descendants, the defendants cannot now be precluded from contesting the validity of evidence introduced by the plaintiffs themselves. The defendants having traced their tide to Andrew Morehouse, the plaintiffs were bound to do the same. To that effect, they have thought it necessary to prove their legitimacy. The defendants have the right to rebut that evidence, and to invalidate, if they can, that portion of the title. There has been no surprise on either side, both parties seem to have considered that the battle was to be fought there, and the question of legitimate descent being fairly placed before us by the evidence, it id our duty, as far as necessary, to decide it.
On the merits, this cause presents the following legal questions for our consideration :
1st. Was the marriage of Abraham, Morehouse and EUonore Hook valid, as a civil contract, under the laws in force in Louisiana at the time of its celebration, although that marriage was not afterwards solemnized before the church 1
2d. If the marriage was valid, when did EUonore Hook acquire such a knowledge of the previous marriage of her husband, as put an end to her good faith ?
3d. While she continued in good faith, what right had each of the wives in the acquests and gains made by the husband ?
4th. What are the legal effects of the declaration made by EUonore Hook, ok the 19th September, 1813 1
I. Marriages, such as that celebrated by the plaintiffs’ ancestors, were included by the canon laws, with other imformal and secret marriages, under the general appellation of clandestina matrimonia. The council of Trent, 24 sess. chap. 1, recognized their validity on this emphatic language : “ Tametsi dubitandum non est, clandestina matrimonia, libero contrahentium consensu facta, rata et vera esse matrimonia, quamdiu ecclesia irrita non fecit, et proinde jure dam-nandi sint illi, ut eos sancta synodus anathemati damnat, qui ea vera ac rata esse negant.”
The reservation “quamdiu ecclesia ea irrita non fecit,” is considered by commentators as an abuse of power, on the ground that, since those marriages were rala et vera, the Church could not, under the new law, put asunder what God had joined together. Be this as it may, the Church never annulled those marriages; but the Council of Trent ordained that marriages contracted after its adoption should be null, unless they were celebrated before the priest of the
That Council was adopted in Spain by a real cédula of Philip II., bearing date 12th August, 1564. Prompta Bibliotheca, verbo Concilium. At that timei Louisiana had not been discovered, and when, two centuries after, it became a Spanish colony, we do not know that the Council of Trent was expressly introduced here, or that it was ever published in every parish of the colony, during the space of thirty days, as requhed by the dispositions of the Council itself. We will, however, for the sake of argument, admit that the Kings of Spain intended that their adoption of general councils should extend to all countries which they might subsequently discover or acquire.
It would be an error to suppose that the adoption of the Council of Trent by the King of Spain, at the solicitation of the Pope, was in the nature of a treaty stipulation with the court of Rome, and that the King of Spain contracted by it the obligation to enforce all its provisions, in all places and at all times, till it pleased the Pope to dispense him from doing so. Such was not the undcrstandr-ing of the high contracting parties. . . .
The avowed object of the Council of Trent was, to reassert and embody the orthodox doctrines of the apostolic church, and to unite-the Christian sovereigns in their support, against the reformers of Germany. The authority of Rome had, for the first-time, been successfully resisted, and the question of the adoption, throughout Christendom, of this Council, though, no doubt, in the eyes of the Church, a question of right, was also a question of power. The Church conceived it necessary to its existence and usefulness, that its supremacy in all spiritual and some temporal matters should be acknowledged; but when submission was secured, that great institution was too wise to bring into disrepute the moral power it possessed over the masses, by requiring the enforcement of the provisions of the Council, when they might be productive of hardship and oppression, or shock the common sense, the habits and customs of nations.
When Clément VIII asked Henry IV of France, in exchange for the absolution which he gave him, to cause the Council of Trent to be published in his dominion, he added, exceptis, si quce forte absint quce revera sine tranquillita~ tis perturbatione, executioni demandari non possint-
, When the kings of Spain caused the same Council to be published in the low countries, the publication was made with many exceptions and reservations, as to their rights and privileges, and the peculiar customs of those provinces. Margaret, who, at that time, governed the Low Countries for the King of Spain, informed the Archbishop of Ccmbray, of the reservations made, and added, after mentioning them, “d tous lesquels droits et autres, semblables quipariji aprés vous seront, si besoin est, plus particuliérement touchée, sa dite Majesté n’entend étre dérogée par le dit Concile, mais pour le mieux effectuer et mettre á due execution selon la qualité et nature de chacun pays et province á laquelle ¡’execution doit étre accommodée,”
The successors of Clément VIII acknowledged with him, that sovereigns had the power to regulate any portion of the laws of discipline established by general Councils, when they deemed it necessary to the public good; and it is conceded that by those reservations they retained the exclusive authority to decide in each particular case, 'what was to be received or rejected, without the Popes or Bishops over having considered the exercise of that discretion as an encroach
We conclude, therefore, that after the adoption of the Council of Trent, the kings of Spain retained the power to suspend the operation of that portion of it which relates to the celebration of marriages in the remoto settlements of new colonies, yet unprovided with either churches or priests. In proof that this power was exercised in Louisiana, we have the historical facts that marriages per verba de prcesenti were usual in the remote parts of this colony, and that one of the Spanish governors was married thus. We have, further, the declaration of the commandant who celebrated the marriage of the plaintiffs’ ancestors, that, on account of their being no priest in the district of Ouachita, he was authorized by the government to do so. We deem that evidence sufficient, and consider this to be a proper case for the application of the rule laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Arredondo, “that when the commandant says he had authority and exercised it, his authority will be presumed, and that no one can question it but his superiors.” 6 Peters, 714, 729. 2 Martin’s Hist, of Louisiana, 15.
This is not the only instance in which the operation of general Councils was suspended in Louisiana. Those establishing the tribunals of the inquisition and ah other ecclesiastical courts, were never enforced here.
It was argued at the bar, that there can be no marriage in the dominions of Spain, without sacrament. But it cannot be denied that such marriages were valid before the Council of Trent, and one of its commentators explains in this manner, how the sacrament was administered in cases like the present:
“ The marriages of catholics living amongst heretics or infidels, where die exei’cise of die catholic religion is not tolerated, though contracted per verba de. prcesenti, without the presence of the priest, are a real sacrament. I take it for granted that the civil law of the country approves this manner of contracting marriages. Necessity deprives the parties of the accidental minister, but they are themselves the essential ministers, and consequently, in countries where they cannot have the presence of the priest, and where the civil law does not imperatively require it, they are capable of administering the sacrament to each other.” Dissert, sur le Marriage, p. 162.
He illustrates his argument by stating that, in cases ofnacessity, other sacraments, baptism for instance, maybe administered by persons not in holy orders. Indeed, it was the opinion of St. Thomas, of Bellarmine, and of many general Councils, that, in all marriages, the parties are the ministers of the sacrament, and that the priest simply authenticates the contract, and vouchsafes to them the promise of Heaven that diey will increase and multiply. This question we will not presume to decide.
It matters not, therefore, whether it be true, as stated by one of the witnes-sess, that Abraham Morehouse refused, subsequently, to solemnize his marriage before the priest. That marriage was valid without the solemnization, and Eleonore TIooh was his lawful wife as long as she remained in good faith. We will state here that, had this marriage been contracted in any other manner - not expressly authorized by the King of Spain, we would have come to a different conclusion.
II. The decision of the late Supreme Court in the case of Klendenning v. Klendenning and others, 3 Mart. N. S. 438, in relation to the good faith of the second wife, Í3 a correct application of the Spanish law which regulated the'
Applying these principles to the case before us, the court is of opinion that,, before what occurred oh the arrival of Andrew Y. Morehouse, one of the sons by the first marriage, sometime in the year 1809, the evideuce establishes nothing more than the existence of a doubt. The testimony of Margaret Poor, if it was unimpeached, does not prove that the statement of Morehouse, in relation to his previous marriage, when he was asked to solemnize the second before the priest, was ever made to his wife or in her presence. That evidence is not as positive as that of Kilpatrick, in the case of Klendenning, which the court did not deem sufficient. We confess, besides, that we doubt the veracity of this witness. The general reports current in the country, in relation to the existence of the fii’st wife, are not b rough thome to EUonore Hook, otherwise than by the fact, that she at one time consulted the wife of the commandant in relation to them, and was advised not to believe them, because they were got up by the enemies of Morehouse for the sole purpose of annoying him. This does not fix upon her the certain knowledge, which the law contemplated. Notwithstanding those reports, Morehouse enjoyed public confidence, and was elected to the territorial legislature. The witnesses say that he was a kind and affectionate husband, and there is, in his letters to his wife, a truth of feeling and a warmth of affection, worthy of a better man. Under those circumstances, reports, which EUonore Iiook was advised, by the first lady in the land, not to believe, could not satisfy her that she had been deceived. But Abigail Young, left in New York to shift for herself and her young children, must have been under the influence of very different feelings, and ready to believe any report to the disparagement of her husband. When she first heard of his marriage, she should have apprized EUonore Hook of her rights. After the change of government, she might have done so without difficulty. She did not soe fit to take any steps in the matter, and left the second marriage undisturbed,- till the arrival of her son in Ouachita, in 1809. Till then, we consider that the good faith of EUonore Hook' continued.
Lucretia Morehouse, one of the plaintiffs, has not made it certain that she was conceived during the continuance of the good faith of her mother; indeed, if the declaration of the latter should not be deemed legal evidence to prove the age of her children, the legitimacy of Ann Maria, another of the plaintiffs, is also left in doubt; hut we abstain from deciding these questions. The opinion-we have formed rendering such decision unnecessary.
III. We agree with the plaintiffs’ counsel, that the second wife, and-tile-children conceived during her good faith, have all the rights which a lawful marriage gives. We concur, on that subject, in the opinion of the late Supreme Court in the case of Klendenning, already cited. Jt is because EUonore Hook had all the- rights of a lawful wife, that the plaintiffs have no title or claim to lands acquired by their father during the existence of the two marriages. The plaintiffs have taken it for granted that thero could not be two communities.
“ Out of the acquits and gains the debts must be paid, because what the parties owe during the marriage cannot form a part of the acquits and gains, and belongs to the creditors. The balance, after paying the debts, must be divided between the two wives, without any portion of it going to the succession of the husband. The reason of this is that, by the laws of this realm, one-half of the acquits and gains belongs to the first wife, although they have been made by the husband. Lib. 5, Nueva Recopilación, tit. 9, 1. 1-G. And although the second law of this title requires the cohabitation-of the wife with the husband, in order that she be entitled to her share, yet as the marital cohabitation has not failed through her fault, but, on the contrary, through the fault of her husband who abandoned her, she is not to loose her rights on account of the fault and misconduct of her husband. Invputari non debet ei per quem non statv si non faciat quod per cum fuerat faciendum. De Reg, Jur. 6 reg. 41.
“ To the second wifo the other half is due, because, by virtue of her good faith at the time of her marriage, she is reputed a lawful wife, for the same reason for which tho law recognizes her issue as legitimate. This is affirmed by Covarruvias in Epit., p. 2, cap. 7, sect. 1, no. 7 ; Antonio Gomez, 1. 50 do Toro, no. 77; and Molina de Just, tract. 2 disp. 433; who all agree that it is the common opinion of the doctors of the law that a woman, marrying in good faith, although the marriage may be null, is entitled to one half of the acquits and gains. From which it results that one-haif goes to each of the wives, and that the husband deceiving the second and doing a grievous wrong to the first, refuses unjustly to either the share which belongs to her ; and that he is bound to satisfy both out of every thing he possesses, because the law favors those who are deceived against those who deceive them. Cum deceptis et non deeipienlibus jura subveniunt. In taking from the father’s succession those acquits and gains, no wrong is done to the inheritance or the legitimate portion of his children, because this is a just debt which he owes to his two wives, and the thing which the father owes is not inherited by his children, but taken by his creditors, as their own.” Paz, Consultas Varias, pp- 483-4.
The lands claimed in this suit formed part of the acquits and gains, and, at the death of Morehouse, the tille to them vested in his two wives, each for one ' undivided half, to the exclusion of the plaintiffs. If, therefore, they have now any right to exercise upon these lands, it must be derived from the declaration of Elionore Hook, made before the parish judge of the parish of Ouachita, on the 19th September, 1813. That declaration is in these woi'ds :
IV. “ The declaration of Elionore Morehouse, late widow of A. Morehouse, deceased, which declarant says, that she claims no part of the succession of the said A. Morehouse, but claims such property as is in her own right; also as natural tutrix to her minor children, claims what property is in the right of the said minor children.”
What did she mean by property in her oum right ? The marriage contrac, states “ que la dite demoiselle n’apporte en mariage au dit sieur Morehouse, que ses hardes, linge, bijoux, bagues et joyaux.” She was a destitute orphan, lately arrived from Maryland under the care of the Chevalier Danemours.
A deed of trust, found in the record, executed in her favor by one John Miller, in October, 1811, shows ¡that she had sold him a tract of land, (whether this -was the other plantation of Morehouse, is not material,) for the sum of $6,405, bearing interest, and payable to her in ten -equal annual installments. In less than two years after this Morehouse had died, and one of the sons by the first marriage, in his own right and as curator of absent heirs, had been put in possession of the property considered as belonging to the succession, by the judge of the Court of Probates. The judge states in the order that, from the situation of the estate, it has been impracticable to make an inventory of any .thing but of some moveable effects.
This putting in possession took place on the 5th October, 1813, fifteen days after the date of the declaration of Eléonore Hook, and the judge states that it met with no opposition from her.
The parties claiming adverse rights under the two marriages stood at that time, in this manner: Eléonore Hook was in possession of the plantation with all the buildings and improvements made at the expense of the community, and all the slaves, teams, stock and farming utensils attached to it, whether acquired before or during marriage. She had besides, a claim of over $6,000,' secured by a deed of trust upon another tract of land, which had been sold by her with the authorization of her husband; that plantation and that claim were what she meant by property standing in her own right. Dotal or paraphernal property, she had not.
Abigail Young and her children, on the other hand, had taken for their share a few moveables not attached to the plantation, and the waste lands forming the four-tenths of the Eastrop grant. It was moreover stated by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that Morehouse was very much in debt when he died, and that a great part of those lands had been sold to liquidate his succession.
Viewed with reference to this state of facts and the situation of Eléonore Hook under it, her declaration cannot be construed into a renunciation of the community. After intermeddling in the affairs of the succession, as She did, after retaining all the most valuable and the only productive portion of the property, and leaving the other parties to pay the debts, she did not renounce the community, and her declaration cannot be considered otherwise than as a receipt and acquittance for her share of it. It was so understood by all parties at the time. She let Abigail Young and her sons take possession of some moveable effects and of the waste lands, without opposition, and they have never disturbed her in the enjoyment of the property she retained. The family raised by her to adorn Louisiana, as observed by counsel, was supported and educated out of the ;"come of that property ; that income has enabled the-
For the reasons assigned, it is ordered and adjudged that the judgment of the District Court be reversed; that the defendants be for ever quieted in their possession and title against all claims and pretensions of the plaintiffs ; and that the said plaintiffs pay the costs in both courts.
Existís, C. J., having been of counsel in this case, did not sit on the trial.