2 La. 122 | La. | 1830
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff states that he attached several slaves, the property of Kimball, his debtor, and that the defendants pretending to be the owners of them, prevailed on the sheriff to surrender them. The petition concludes with a prayer, that the defendants be desired to return them to the sheriff to be proceeded on, on the plaintiff’s attachment.
The general issue was pleaded. There was judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiff appealed. •
In this court, the appellee’s counsel has endeavoured to shew title to the slaves under Kimball, and has produced a notarial act of sale — that by a bill of sale from the plaintiff to
On the part of the appellant, it is contended that the ap-pellees acquired no right, as to third persons, by the notarial act of sale, because it was not registered, after the attachment' was actually levied on the slaves. 2 Moreau’s Digest, 303 sec. 5.
It is clear the defendants and appellees’can have no title, except that which result from their notarial act, and that does not give any as to third persons, but from the date of its registry. The plaintifi and appellant are such persons who have obtained a lien by attachment, with respect to the act of sale : “ Third persons, with regard to a contract or judgment are all who were not parties to,it.” Civil Code, 3522, n. 32.
Finally, the appellee’s counsel says that a vendee must have a reasonable time to register his act of sale; that it was executed ^on the nineteenth of February1, 1829, and the slaves were attached on the twentieth at noon — nothing on the record shews the date of the registry — and the appellees have not in any manner accounted for the delay. There was surely time to have had the act registered, as it was passed in the city in which the register’s office is kept. Whether on a proper case being made out, we could relieve a vendee, will be a proper matter of consideration when sqch a case will be presented to us.