Six of the minor children of the late Pierre Bauchet St. Martin, jr., made opposition to the tableau of distrh bution filed in this case, claiming to be placed thereon as mortgage creditors for the sum of $2540. This sum, they allege, accrued to them from the succession of their grandfather, and was
Charles Byrne and Theodore Ryon, of the firm of Byrne, Ryon & Co., testified that they had been the factors of the widow St. Martin, the mother of the opponents, but transacted all her business through her son, P. A. St. Martin, with whom they always treated as her agent; that on the 20th of March, 1832, they accepted the draft of $2540, drawn on them by P. A. St. Martin, and charged it in their bill-book to his mother, the widow St. Martin, as being the person for whose accommodation the acceptance was made; that in 1833 they rendered to her an account, in which they charged her a commission for accepting this draft which they paid at maturity, but of which, the amount was rein-bursed to them by Moreau Lislet, the same day, or the day after it had been paid ; that all the items for supplies set forth in their account were charged to the widow St. Martin, for the use of a plantation she owned, and that all the notes and drafts therein mentioned were for her account, although signed by her son, P. A. S,t. Martin, in his own name, and that he paid them the balance stated in the account as due by his mother; that at the time of the acceptance of this draft, and up to the death of the widow St. Martin, there was no account opened with the insolvent, who, they believe, was living with his mother on her plantation; that they never had any communication with her except through her eldest son, the insolvent, who was in the habit of transacting all her business with their firm. -
This evidence sufficiently shows, we think, that this draft of $2540 was for the account and accommodation of the widow St. Martin, and that the money which Moreau Lislet applied to its payment was in fact received by her. We must come to this conclusion, unless we suppose a long continued and concealed fraud practiced by the insolvent upon his mother, a supposition.
It is therefore ordered, that the judgment of the District Court be reversed; and proceeding to give such judgment, as in our opinion should have been rendered below, it is ordered that the tableau of distribution be amended, and the opponents placed thereon as mortgage creditors for $2381 25, with legal interest from the 18th of June, 1832, on the property formerly belonging to their tutrix and surrendered by the insolvent; the costs to be
