Boner v. Mahle

3 La. Ann. 600
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 La. Ann. 600 (Boner v. Mahle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boner v. Mahle, 3 La. Ann. 600 (La. 1848).

Opinion

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Slideix, 3.

The plaintiff seeks to1 enforce the vendor’s privilege upon certain slaves, in the possession of the defendant. The defendant avers that no such privilege was reserved ; but, on the contrary, at the time of the sale, was abandoned by the plaintiff, in consideration of a special mortgage being given him on other and distinct property, to secure him in the full amount of the price not paid in cash ; that, if the abandonment was not inserted expressly in the deed of sale, the omission occurred through the “ remissness, negligence, or perhaps ignorance” of the notary, who drew up the act; that the plaintiff, availing himself of such omission, is fraudulently attempting to enforce a right which he had abandoned.

To prove the renunciation of the vendor’s privilege, the defendant offered, in the lower court, the parol testimony of the parish judge, who, in his capacity of notary, drew up the act of sale, and before whom it was executed, to prove what was said at the time by the parties. The court refused to receive the testimony, and to that refusal a bill of exceptions was taken. The defendant’s counsel acknowledges, in his brief, that the decision of this cause rests almost entirely upon the question of the admissibility of the parol evidence. He has, however, relied in some degree upon the act of sale itself. Before considering the question of the admissibility of the parol evidence, we propose to examine the case as standing simply upon the act of sale, the written contract of the parties.

The material contents of the act are as follows: Boner declares that, for the consideration of §5250, cash, and the vendee’s note, of ©ven date with the act, [603]*603for $7220, payable to the vendor’s order, with interest, on the 1st February ensuing, and duly paraphed, he sells to Mahle seven slaves (being those in controversy). And, in order to secure the payment of the said note, as well as all interest that may become due therein, the said John H. Mahle hereby mortgages and especially hypothecates all that lot of ground situated in the parish of Natchitoches, etc.; also, the undivided half of another lot of ground, etc., (describing them) all of which property is so to remain mortgaged until complete payment of said sum and interest.” Nothing is said about mortgaging the slaves, and the act is also entirely silent as to the vendor’s privilege.

Is a renunciation of the vendor’s privilege to be inferred from the face of the act, upon a sound interpretation of the language which the parties in this solemn written form, have used to express their intentions 1

By article 3216 of our Code, the vendor has a privilege on the estate, or slave, sold by him, for the payment of the price, or so much of it as is due, whether it was sold on, or without, a credit. It is not necessary that, in the contract of the parties, this privilege should be expressly stipulated. It is a right which springs from the nature of the debt, and by force of law is embodied in the contract, unless it be renounced. It is also a right of a very high character, conferring advantages superior to .those which flow from a mortgage. It is not necessary that this right should be renounced in express terms, in the act of sale. Such renunciation may be implied from the terms of the instrument. But, inasmuch as the obligation of contracts extend not only to what is expressly stipulated, but also to everything that by law is considered as appertaining to the nature of the particular contract (Code 1897); and, inasmuch as the vendor’s privilege is a legal concomitant of the contract of sale, it must be held, upon sound principles of interpretation, that the renunciation of this important right which sets aside the legal presumption, should be established, not by doubtful, but by clear and cogent inferences from the language of the parties. Now the omission of the parties to stipulate a special mortgage, cannot be considered as an implied renunciation of the higher right of privilege. Such a construction would militate •against the express .previsions of our law, which declare privileges to be given by the nature-of the debt, and confer a privilege upon the vendor by force of the contract of sale itself. It has even been held that, when a special mortgage had been taken, its subsequent release did not affect the vendor’s privilege. Citizen’s Bank v. Cuny, 12 Rob. 279. See also Succession of Johnson, 3 Rob. 217. Howard v. Thomas, 3 La. 112. Privilege and mortgage may co-exist, and the former may exist without the latter. The rights are different.

But it is said that the renunciation of the privilege may be inferred from the •omission to grant a mortgage upon the slaves, coupled with the fact of granting a mortgage upon other and independent property. In our opinion this is not a necessary inference. Because a vendor takes the seeiirity of other property, we are not to presume that he relinquishes the security which the law gives him upon the property sold; but rather to consider him as superinducing an additions' security; and more particularly, where the property sold is in its nature perish.able, liable to be impaired by disease, or destroyed by death. We cannot look •upon it in the opposite light, without assuming that the parties were ignorant of •the law, and disregarded the legal consequence which it attaches to the contract they were making, An interpretation of contracts based upon presumed ignorance of the law by the contracting parties, is inadmissible.

Some stress was laid by the counsel upon the words of the act — “and, in order ,t.o secure the payment of said note.” From these expressions it was argued [604]*604that the parties are tobe considered assaying, “the lands shall be the security and nothing else shall be encumbered.” This conflicts with the rules of inter pretation we have already noticed, and, if sanctioned, would destroy the vendor’s privilege in every act of sale on credit that has come under .our observation, ■when a special mortgage was granted on the property sold. For the usual formula is: “ Now in order to secure the payment of the said notes, the -vendee mortgages, etc.”

In conclusion, we may add, that although .the doctrine that a renunciation of a mortgage or privilege may be implied, is fully sanctioned by authority, the illustrations found in the books, are .cases where the implication is cogent, and its rejection wo.uld be against good conscience. Thus, in the roman law, the wife was considered as making a tacit renunciation of her mortgage, by uniting with her husband in a contract of sale, avec promesse d’eviction. So in the same law, .a wife w,ho appears with her husband in a contract, by which he constitutes a dowry for his child on a property subject to her legal mortgage., was .considered .as releasing her mortgage on that property. S.o of a mortgage creditor consenting .that .the property encumbered in his favor should be mortgaged to another creditor. So of the lien of a factor under the law merchant: It is founded ¡upon a tacit agreement of the parties, which the law implies, but will consider as waived if, while the. property is in the hands of the factor with a lien attached to it, he agrees .to hold the property exclusively for, or as the property of, a third person.

Merlin expresses, with his .usual accuracy, the j.ust rule for the interpretation .of renunciations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Landry v. Broussard
177 So. 403 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)
Hunter v. Sandel
160 So. 87 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1935)
Groves v. Sentell
153 U.S. 465 (Supreme Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 La. Ann. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boner-v-mahle-la-1848.