8 Rob. 181 | La. | 1844
This suit was instituted for the purpose of liquidating contradictorily with the administrators of the succession of George A. Waggaman, deceased, the amount which the plaintiff, who is the widow of the deceased, alleges to be due to her by the estate of her late husband, and of compensating so much of the said amount as may be found necessary, with the value of certain improvements put upon her own land and city lots by her late husband, during the existence of the community.
The claims set up by the plaintiff consist in the following surps, to wit: 1st. In the sum of $36,000 principal, and $7200 interest, being the amount of a debt contracted by the deceased in favor of R. f). Shepherd, for which, she states, she became surety, though ih the form of a principal.
2d. In the sum of $14,310 principal, and 12868 interest, being the amount of two debts contracted by the deceased with the Union Bank of Louisiana for money loaned him, in which, she alleges, she was in truth the surety of her husband, although in each of the contracts she js represented as a principal, bound, in, solido, with him,
3d. In the sum of $50,000 principal, and $7500 interest, being the amount of a debt of the deceased in favor of Framjois Gar-dére, which she assumed as her own, in a contract signed by herself and husband, and for which, she alleges, she was in truth the surety of her husband, although a different form was given to her engagement.
4th, In the sum of $6008, of which $1708 was received by the deceased,'in May, 1833, from the testamentary executor pf her father’s estate; $500 being a part of a debt due to her father
5th. In the sum of $15,987 20, being the amount of moneys belonging to her and in the hands of her father’s executor, and by him paid over to the deceased.
All which sums amount to $139,873 26. She prays, that $29,150 thereof may be compensated with the same sum as the increased value of hér property improved during the community, and that judgment for the balance may be rendered in her favor against her husband’s succession, with mortgage and privilege, «fee.
The defendants first pleaded the general issue, further alleging that the deceased during his lifetime, caused to be erected, with funds of the community, extensive and valuable improvements on the plaintiff’s paraphernal property, all amounting to the sum of $70,000, money expended on said buildings and improvements; that all the buildings belong to the community, and should be applied to the community debts; and they’further aver, that if the improvements belong to the plaintiff, as by her pretended, the succession should be entitled to a credit of $70,000, to be charged against the plaintiff on account of whatever credit she may be entitled to. They pray, that the buildings and improvements may be decreed to belong to the community; that they be appraised by separate appraisements of the land and improvements; and that the proceeds thereof be divided between the plaintiff and the succession in the ratio of said improvements. But in case the opinion of the court should-be adverse to the claim of ownership by the succession, they pray, that a credit of $70,000 may be given in account to the said succession, and that a judgment for the balance may be rendered against the plaintiff, &c.
There was judgment below in favor of the plaintiff allowing compensation to the amount of $29,150, the value of the buildings and improvements, and liquidating the balance due her by the succession of her husband, at $110,343 20, with mortgage on all the immoveable property of the estate; and from this judgment the defendants have appealed.
From the issues presented by the pleadings, it is contended by the appellants: 1st. That the plaintiff has not satisfactorily proven
2d. That she has not established her right of mortgage and privilege on the property of the deceased, or of the community.
3d. That the buildings and improvements belong to the community, and should be administered and sold by the defendants as administrators.
4th. That if the buildings do not belong to the community, but may be kept by the owner of the soil as her own, they must be paid for at their original cost.
I. Without its being necessary to review the whole evidence contained in the record, we think it proper to notice here the most important facts which the case presents. It appears that the parties were married, in 1818. In 1832, Mrs. Waggaman’s father died, leaving her his sole heir. His estate was considerable, and consisted in a large mass of property which came immediately under the administration and control of the plaintiff’s husband. In 1833, the testamentary executor of her father having rendered an account of his administration to the deceased husband of the plaintiff, it is shown that he (G. A. Waggaman) received a sum of money amounting to $1708 10. He also received subsequently divers other sums of money, proceeding as well from the estate of plaintiff’s father, as from the sales of several slaves belongingto the plaintiff, or by her inherited from her father, the whole amounting to $21,645 30, which came to the hands of the deceased, and were by him received in the right of his wife, as her paraphernal funds. ■
It is also shown, that the plaintiff’s father left an unencumbered estate; that the plaintiff had no debts of her own, never took any active part in the administration of her property, and that her husband, who had the entire control of it, had the absolute enjoyment of the revenues. He had large debts of his own, which had been partly created by buildings erected by him on the para-phernal property of his wife, although, as one of the witnesses says, “ the revenues would have been sufficient to have paid all the debts and leave a surplus in money.” It further appears, that in the year 1841, the deceased, who was greatly embarrassed, induced his wife, the plaintiff, to sign three several contracts of
II. According to the jurisprudence of this court, as established in the case of Johnson v. Pilster, (4 Robinson, 71,) and in the case of Compton v. Her Husband, lately decided at Alexandria, (6 Robinson, 154,) the plaintiff is clearly entitled to her tacit and legal mortgage on the property of her husband or of the community, to secure the reimbursement of the sums which he may have received in her right as her paraphernal funds. The plaintiff appears to have renounced the community in due form, after
The case of Dixon v. Dixon’s Executors, 4 La. 190, relied on by the plaintiff’s counsel, is very different. In that case, the rights of the spouses to the property of the community were acquired under the law in force at the time of the marriage — under a law which had begun to operate upon those rights from the moment the marriage was contracted, although the property may have been acquired subsequently; and it is clear, that those rights, which had their origin under a particular law in relation to which the parties contracted, cannot be affected by the subsequent enactment of a law abrogating or modifying the former provisions. Here again, no rights had been acquired; they were merely prospective and eventual, and they must be governed by the law in force at the time the obligations from which they are derived were executed. We conclude, therefore, that the plaintiff has no legal mortgage on the property belonging to the succession of her husband, to indemnify her against the debts which she assumed to pay under the three contracts above referred to.
III. IY. It cannot be controverted that, under the spirit of art. 2377 of the Civil Code, buildings and other improvements erected by the spouses during the marriage on the hereditary property ef either, belong necessarily, at the dissolution of the community, to the owner of the soil, in this sense — that he may keep them, and that he owes to the other spouse a recompense of one-half of the
Under this view of the questions presented by the pleadings, we come to the conclusion that, although the plaintiff has established the amount of her claims against her husband’s estate in the sum of $139,493 20, she is not entitled to her legal mort
It is, therefore, ordered, that the judgment of the Court of Probates be annulled; that the plaintiff recover of the succession of George A. Waggaman, deceased, the sum of $139,493 20; that out of this sum, she be allowed to compensate that of $21,645 30, secured by legal mortgage, with so much of the amount by her due to the estate, to wit, $29,150, for the value of the increase of her property; that she pay the balance, to wit, $7504 70, to the defendants, to be applied by them, in the course of administration, to the satisfaction of the debts of the succession, as expressed in the foregoing opinion; and that said plaintiff be classed in the tableau of distribution of the estate, as an ordinary creditor thereof, for the sum of $117,847 90; reserving to her, however, the right of claiming from the administrators (in deduction of the said sum,) whatever portion of the funds of the estate which may be placed on the said tableau as applicable to the satisfaction of the mortgage debts for which she has made herself responsible, and this, by virtue of the legal subrogation to which she may show herself entitled. It is further ordered and decreed, that the costs in the lower court be paid by the succession, those in this court to be borne by the plaintiff and appellee.