1 Rob. 367 | La. | 1842
The plaintiff claims as her own property two> slaves surrendered by her husband to his creditors, and the syndic is appellant from a judgment which recognizes her title.
The facts appear to be, that the plaintiff was entitled to a certain sum in the succession of her father, which constituted her para-phernal property. That this sum was received by her husband' during the marriage ; and that in 1834 she purchased one of the slaves in her own name, of one Simmons, and that the other was purchased by her agent in Kentucky, in the year 1833; and that both were paid for out of the funds in the hands of her husband, derived' from her father’s estate.
The court, in our opinion, did not err in admitting the evidence. It does not appear to us that the evidence, that the price stated to have been paid, was in fact paid out of the proper funds of the wife, is repugnant to the deed itself; and as the wife has at any time the right of resuming the administration of her 'paraphernal property, and it belongs legally to her, we see no necessity for proving that she had the actual administration at the time that she appropriated a part of it to the purchase of the slaves, with her husband’s consent. That act alone was one of administration, and was done with the consent of the husband. The bare receipt of the money by her husband, does not alone show that she had confided to him the administration. On the contrary a part of it was employed by her agent in Kentucky, under her orders, and was invested in the purchase of one of the slaves in dispute. If the slaves had died, and the wife had claimed of the syndic, as a debt due her, the amount derived from her father’s estate, we think, under all the circumstances of this case, that she could not have recovered ; because the investment of the amount by her, even during the marriage, would be considered as a valid contract. It is difficult to find any real distinction between this case and that of Dominguez v. Lee, 17 La., 300. In that case we held, that when the wife retains the administration of her paraphernal estate, and the title is taken in her name, either as a purchase with the funds which she administers without the assistance of her husband, or as a elation en payiment made to her by a debtor of a separate and paraphernal claim, the property thus acquired remains paraphernal, and does not fall into the community of acquits et gains.
We readily admit that the subject is not free from difficulties, growing out of the very general dispositions of the law applicable to such cases. The wife’s right to sell, or otherwise alienate, and to administer her paraphernal property, is clear. Her right to
Judgment affirmed: