De Ende v. Moore

2 Mart. (N.S.) 336
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1824
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mart. (N.S.) 336 (De Ende v. Moore) 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
De Ende v. Moore, 2 Mart. (N.S.) 336 (La. 1824).

Opinion

Porter, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The petitioner in this case obtained a mortgage from one Joseph Aydelott, now deceased, on certain lots in the town of Madisonville, in order to secure the payment of two promissory notes of $1500 each; and seeks by this action to enforce that mortgage on the property affected by it, which is now in the hands of the defendant.

The defendant sets up title to the premises in virtue of a conveyance from Joseph H. [337]*337Hawkins, now also deceased, who purchased them at a public sale, duly and legally made by order of the court of probates, of the estate of Aydelott, the mortgagor; and he avers that the property has come into his hands, discharged from the liens, with which it was affected previous to that sale.

East'n District. April, 1824.

The evidence introduced on the trial, supports the allegations of the parties, and we have therefore presented for decision, a question of vast importance; not only as affecting rights to property, which has heretofore been acquired, under sales made by order of the probate courts throughout the state, but also as recognizing a rule which in future will have a frequent and important application, in the settlement of deceased persons estates.

We pronounced an opinion a few days since in the case of Lafon’s executors vs. Phillips & al., ante 225, in which we laid down a doctrine, that if confirmed in the instance before us, would be fatal to the pretensions of the plaintiff. We have deemed it however, proper to examine the subject as if presented for the first time: for the very circumstance of our having expressed the opinion just alluded to, has enabled us to derive [338]*338an advantage from the discussion of this cause, which we would not well have obtained on the first argument. The counsel whose duty it was to impugn that opinion, having the grounds before him on which the court decided, instead of waiting his attention on minor questions, has been able to direct the whole of it, to the points on which the case really turns, and by these means has greatly assisted us in the discovery of truth. In the present unsettled state of our jurisprudence, too great pains cannot, be taken, in settling principles which have an extensive bearing on the transactions of men: and discussions which contribute to a correct understanding of these principles, when conducted with the learning, ability, and temper, which distinguished the argument at the bar, are extremely grateful to us, and highly beneficial to the public.

The system established by the Legislature in regard to the succession of deceased persons, has been eulogized by one of the parties, as the best that legislation has produced,- harmonious in its several parts,-admirably calculated to insure a speedy and equitable payment of the debts due,-to guard and protect the interests of absentees and minors, and [339]*339secure the rights of all concerned. By the other side it has been denounced, as unsound in principle,-confused; and contradictory in its details, and inadequate to the purposes for which it was created. The truth we apprehend, in this case, as in many others, lies between these extremes. We certainly think the principle of attaining an early and complete settlement of the estate, by compelling all the creditors to present their claims to one court, a sound one; but the means necessary to give effect to the system introduced into our code on this principle, have not been furnished with the clearness that might be desired, and hence great inconvenience and delay, frequently result from its operation.

It would be sufficient perhaps, to refer to the opinion in the case already alluded to, for the reasons on which we there came to the conclusion, that the purchaser at a sale made by order of the probate court, took the property free from the liens existing on it; ant proceed at once to the further considerations, which the argument of the appellee has furnished. But it will enable us to take a more connected, and satisfactory view of the subject; to repeat here, at least in part, the [340]*340grounds on which that decision was made, and the authorities by which it was supported.

Referring however to so much of that opinion, as went to show, that it was a necessary consequence of the general system established in relation to the settlement of successions, that the mortgagee creditor, should be compelled to come in, and receive payment out of the proceeds of the sale, and not suffered to enforce his claim by a separate suit before the court of probates, or any other tribunal; we proceed to state, that the decision there made, was principally founded on three distinct, and positive provisions of our code, which present no ambiguity in their language, and nothing equivocal in their meaning. The first was that, which declares, that it shall be the duty of the judge to sell all the property of the deceased. The second, that which provides, that on the proceeds of this sale, the court shall settle the order of privileges and mortgages; and the third, that which directs, that any creditor, who after notice given in the manner prescribed, does not come forward, and obtain payment out of the fund in the hands of the curator, shall, (in the language of the law,) be without further resource, or [341]*341remedy. Civil Code 174, art. 128, ibid 178, art. 138 a 139.

From these positive declarations of the Legislative will, we made in the former cases the following deductions. First, that the property which was subject to mortgages must be sold, as well as any other; for if it were not, all the property would not be disposed of. Second, that this property was sold without being subject in the hands of the purchaser to the mortgages previously existing on it, because the mortgagees had a right conferred on them to take the proceeds in preference to chirograph creditors; a right wholly inconsistent with the idea that these proceeds were only the balance of what the property sold for, over and above the amount for which it stood hypothecated. And lastly, that as there was neither resource, nor remedy, for the creditor who did not present his claim, to be paid out of the fund in the hands of the curator, that we could not sanction his right, to recover the amount due him, by a separate action.

After having again most carefully compared these conclusions, with the law from which they were drawn, we are unable to see, in what respect we have erred, or how any other [342]*342interpretation could have been given to the commands of the legislature. We had not authority to say that only part of the property should be sold, when the law expressly directs it all to be disposed of: nor could we declare that the mortgagees should not be paid out of the proceeds of that sale, when we find the judge expressly directed to settle the rank and, order, of their claims, on these proceeds.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mart. (N.S.) 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-ende-v-moore-la-1824.