14 La. Ann. 61 | La. | 1859
Plaintiffs and appellees move to dismiss this appeal, on the following grounds:
1st. That the warrantors, who are appellants, have given no appeal bond.
2d. That tho appeal bond filed by defendant is defective, inasmuch as the surety on that bond is one of the warrantors, who is also an appellant of record.
3d. That the certificate of the Clerk of the District Court to the transcript of appeal has not the seal of the court.
I. Judgment was rendered upon the verdict of a jury, in favor of plaintiffs, against defendant, for certain slaves and their hire; and also in favor of defendant, against his warrantors, for the value of said slaves and their hire. On motion, an appeal was allowed to the defendant and warrantors. The defendant alone has filed an appeal bond. From this it would seem that the warrantors have abandoned their appeal. But that is no concern of the plaintiffs. They have no judgment against the warrantors, nor have they asked any such by their pleadings.
II. Objections to tho sufficiency of the security upon the appeal bond should have been made in the court below. As already observed, the judgment against
III. The law does not in express terms require the seal of the court to the certificate of the Clerk to the transcript of appeal. C. P. 585, 896, 898. If it did, as the want of a seal is an irregularity clearly not attributable to the fault of the appellant, it would merely justify us in allowing time to rectify it. Acts of 1839, p. 170 ; Acts 1855, p. 314. But that would not be necessary here. The Clerk certifies the record, under his “ signature official and the seal of said court,” although no impress of the seal appears in the space reserved for that purpose in the margin of the certificate. See Conway v. Erwin, 1 An. 391; Medley v. Voris, 2 An. 140.
The motion to dismiss is overruled.
Plaintiffs claim a negress slave named Harriet, and her issue, in possession of defendant, as their property by right of inheritance from their mother, Winifred Hurst, deceased wife of Anderson Carla; their mother, as they allege, having-inherited said slave Harriet from the estate of her father, Henry Hurst.
Defendant and warrantors deny specially that plaintiffs’ mother inherited the slave Harriet from her father, as the plaintiffs pretend. They aver that the said slave was adjudicated, at a probate sale of Henry Hurst’s estate, to Anderson Carle, by whom she was sold to Hezekiah Harrell, from whom defendant derives J title. Defendant pleads tho prescription of five, ten and fifteen years, and avers an open and undisturbed possession in himself and his authors, by virtue of a title translative of property.
Several years after issue thus joined, plaintiffs attempted to amend, by demanding, in the alternative “ if the court should be of opinion, after hearing all the evidence, that Harriet was community property of their father and mother,” that a decree might be entered up in their behalf for the one-half of the slaves claimed. At the same time, not relinquishing, but expressly adhering- to, their original de • mand.
The District Court rejected this alternative demand; to which plaintiffs ex- j cepted. This ruling was correct. The two demands were inconsistent. Had they been presented in the same petition originally, the defendant might have refused to answer until the plaintiffs had made their election, whether they demanded a whole or only an undivided half ownership of tho slave in question.
The court also correctly rejected parol evidence that the negro woman Harriet was received by Winifred Hurst, in lieu of money due her from her father’s estate, for the price and sum of five hundred and ninety-one dollars. Such testimony was not only, in effect, making out a title to a slave by parol, but it contradicts the written and recorded evidence in the cause. Tho proces verbal of the probate sale of the effects of Henry Hurst’s succession, given in evidence by plaintiffs themselves, shows that the slave Harriet was adjudicated to Anderson Carle, at such sale, by the parish Judge, for the sum of five hundred and ninety-one dollars, on a credit of one and two years, for his notes with good and approved freehold security, with ton per cent, interest from date of purchase until paid, and special mortgage until final payment.
All the cases quoted by the counsel of plaintiffs, in opposition to the ruling of the court upon this point, viz, Dominguez v. Lee, 17 La. 295 ; Terrell v. Cutrer,
Now, there is nothing analogous to those cases in the present. Harriet was not purchased in the name of Mrs. Carle individually, or jointly with her husband, but in the name of her husband alone. The proof offered, was proof of a different contract — a sale to a different vendee — which (as the object sold was a slave) could not be proved by parol.
Even supposing that Carle made use of his wife’s separate funds to pay for the property thus acquired in his own name, that would not, under the authority of the case cited, have made such property hers. It would only have given rise to a mortgage for the amount of the separate funds thus employed, which, in a proper form of action, might have been enforced against Carle’s property, or property alienated by him in the hands of third persons.
But in referrence to this question of the manner in which the slave Harriet was paid for by Carle, we have in evidence :
1st. The final account of administration of Henry Hurst’s estate, and the judgment of the homologation of the same, rendered on the 3d of February, 1829, which were given in evidence by plaintiffs, and are entirely inconsistent with the parol evidence offered by them and rejected by the court. For in that account the administrator charges himself with all the notes given by the purchasers at the probate sale above mentioned, (including Carle) as so much cash received by him; and the judgment of homologation fixes the distributive shares of the eight heirs of Henry Hurst, (including Mrs. Carle,) without any deduction made for any thing paid on account of her share, or received pro tanto in lieu of her share. Yet this account was filed, and this judgment of homologation rendered, more than three years after the probate sale, and more than one year after the last of Carle’s notes for Harriet and for the other slaves and movables, purchased by him at the said sale, had fallen due.
The record thus given in evidence by plaintiffs, is corroborated by another record offered in evidence on the part of the defence, but which was rejected by the District Court, and which comes up annexed to a bill of exceptions. It is an extract from the record of sales and mortgages of the parish of St. Ilelena, duly certified to be a correct copy by the Recorder- of said parish. It recites a conveyance by the parish Judge and by the curator and curatrix of Henry Hurst’s succession, of slaves and movables adjudicated to Anderson Carle at the probate sale of the 26th December, 1825, with mortgage granted by said Carle for the security of the payment of two notes, at one and two years, given by him for the price of adjudication.
This act of sale and mortgage, of the same date with the probate sale, is copied at full length, with a certificate appended, signed by L. H. Moor, parish Judge of St. Helena, that he had compared it with the original, and having found it correct, had admitted it to record on the 29th of December, 1825.
The objection made to this certified extract from the parish records of St. Helena, and which was sustained by the District Court, was, that said document was not an original act, but only a copy of a copy. This objection was improperly sustained.
The certificates of the two parish Judges, one of the 29th December, 1825, that the mortgage had been recorded — and the other of the 1st of Pebruary, 1830, that the mortgage had been erased — were certainly originals, of which the parish Recorder was the legal custodian, and of which his certified copy is authentic proof. The first of those certificates recites the conveyance and mortgage very properly, in order to prevent all uncertainty as to the objects of the mortgage. The certified extract thus offered, was clearly not only good evidence, but the best evidence of the inscription of the mortgage granted by Carle upon the slave Harriet, and of its radiation.
This document was not at all needed by the defendant as evidence of the contract of purchase by Carle, out of which the mortgage originated. That contract had already been proved by plaintiffs, when they gave in evidence the proses verbal of sale.
Again: There is no reason to suppose that the original of the act of sale and mortgage, which appears to have been offered to the parish Judge for record, was ever in the possession of the defendant or warrantors. The parties to that act were, the representatives of Henry Hurst on the one side, and Anderson Carle on the other side. The latter of those parties was the father of the plaintiffs ; the former are their near relations, and have been examined by them under commissions in this suit, as witnesses..
But we repeat, that we view the copy of the act of mortgage as mere matter of recital and reference in the certificates of inscription and of radiation, which ought not to have had the effect of excluding those certificates as evidence. It will be unnecessary to remand the cause on account of the rejection of this document, inasmuch as we have it before us, and full effect may be given to it, the only objection to its admissibility being overruled. With it, nay oven perhaps without it, the claim of plaintiffs to the ownership of the slave Harriet, and her issue, is disproved.
The judgment of the District Court in favor of plaintiff's and appellees is, therefore, reversed, and judgment is hereby rendered in favor of defendant and appellant, and against plaintiffs, with costs in both courts.