Groves v. Sentell

153 U.S. 465, 14 S. Ct. 898, 38 L. Ed. 785, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2197
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 14, 1894
Docket278
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 153 U.S. 465 (Groves v. Sentell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groves v. Sentell, 153 U.S. 465, 14 S. Ct. 898, 38 L. Ed. 785, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2197 (1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

As Martha Groves and W. J. Groves and Pogue, adminis *476 trator, are the only appellants, the correctness of the decree in their favor and against Mrs. Randolph and Sentell is not before us. In this regard that decree is final. The Stephen, Morgan, 94 U. S. 599.

The first apparent question is the correctness of the decree, holding that certain payments which were made on the note should have been imputed to Mrs. Randolph’s portion, instead of to the note as a whole. The payments which were thus imputed by the lower court were those made subsequent to the notarial act of 1873, in which the parties fixed the principal of the note at $7577.34. As to the payments made prior to this date there is no dispute in the record, as they are all admitted to have been made in' equal proportions from the funds belonging to Mrs. Stark and to Mrs. Randolph.

The first question necessary to be determined is, was the note, under the Louisiana law, a joint or a solidary obligation. A joint obligation under the law of Louisiana binds the parties thereto only for their proportion of the debt, (Civil Code, Arts. 2080, 2086,) whilst a solidary obligation, on the contrary, binds each of the obligors for the whole debt. The note was clearly a joint note, and not a solidary one. Solidarity, under the law of Louisiana, must be expressly stipulated, and is never presumed. La. Civil Code, Art. 2093. We consider it unnecessary, however, to pass upon the question of imputation of payments, because of our conclusions upon another branch of the case. The issue between the parties is not as to the amount of the' payments, but as to the manner in which the payments should be applied. It follows, therefore, that the controversy involves, not the sum due, but the person by whom it is due. As we conclude that the whole debt, irrespective of the question of whether it is due by Mrs. Randolph or by Mrs. Stark, is payable out of the fund, it is useless to determine how much is due by one or by •the other.

Whether. the whole debt was payable out of the whole property, or any part thereof, depends on whether the mortgage was divisible or indivisible under the law of Louisiana. Says the Louisiana Civil Code: “ The mortgage is a real *477 charge on the property bound for the discharge of the obligation. It is in its nature indivisible, and prevails over all the immovables subjected to it, and over each and every portion. It follows them into whatever hands they pass.”’ Art. 3282.

This provision of the Louisiana Code was derived from the Code Napoleon, where its identical language is found, Code Napoleon, Art. 2114. The mortgage in this case contains nothing on its face which takes it. out of the general rule. The parties “severally declare” that they are indebted, etc., and that they do hereby mortgage to and in favor of the said Rosetta Rhea, represented herein by her attorney in fact, the property described in the deed.” There is no stipulation in the act showing in the .remotest degree an intention to mortgage separately an undivided half of the property for an undivided half of the debt. Thus, on the face of the act, it is a mortgage of the whole property for the whole debt. It was in the power of the contracting parties to have stipulated against indivisibility, and that they failed to do so is self-evident. The provision of the Code is that indivisibility is “ in the nature of a mortgage,” therefore not of its essence. The commentators'on the Code Napoleon agree that indivisibility can be avoided, even where the parties join in a common act of mortgage by stipulating that the mortgage is to be divisible. Laurent, in his Principes de Droit Civil Franpais, thus states the rale: “ All the authorities teach the doctrine that the law, in saying that a mortgage is indivisible by its nature, intends simply thereby to declare that it is not so indivisible in its essence. From this it is concluded that parties may by their conventions stipulate to the contrary. The right of the parties to make such agreements in relation to the divisibility of the mortgage as they deem proper cannot be denied, because indivisibility rests upon intention.” (VoL 30, page 159; see also Ródiére On Indivisibility, paragraph 466.) Paul Pont, in his treatise On Privileges and Mortgages, thus states it“ The words ‘ in the nature of ’ have a significance which is applied to them sometimes in other provisions of the law. Thus, the law says that indivisibility *478 is in the nature of a mortgage, in the same way that it is provided that warranty is in the nature, not in the essence, of contract of sale. And because indivisibility is purely a matter of intention, it can be controlled by the will of the parties.” (Yol. 1, page 321, paragraphs 331 and 332.)

These expositions of the civil law writers are persuasive as to the proper construction of the Louisiana Code. Virterbo v. Friedlander, 120 U. S. 707, 728. Indeed, by the strongest possible analogy, they have been adopted by the Louisiana courts. Thus, a vendor’s privilege, under the law of Louisiana, is “ in the nature ” of the contract of sale. The rule there as to this privilege is that, where a sale is made and the privilege is not excluded by express agreement or by implications clearly deducible from the language of the parties, it is implied to exist, as it is of the “ nature of the contract.” Boner v. Mahle, 3 La. Ann. 600.

The parties, then, having had the power, in contracting the mortgage, to exclude indivisibility, and not having done so, indivisibility applies, not alone as a result of their silence, but also because, being the general rule and of the nature of the contract, it exists unless excluded by the express terms or by plain “ implication deducible from the contract.” It is urged, however, that, as the obligation secured by the mortgage was joint, therefore the mortgage itself must necessarily have been joint. The proposition confounds the nature of the principal obligation with that of the accessory contract' of mortgage. That the divisibility of a debt does not necessarily import the divisibility of the mortgage securing it, is unanimously held by the civil law writers. “Under the theory of the law the indivisibility of the mortgage has no reference to the nature of the principal obligation. Thus, there may be a division of the obligation either between joint creditors or joint debtors, or between the heirs of joint creditors a,nd joint debtors.” (Paul Pont, vol. 1, page 33.) Laurent, in speaking on the same subject, says: “ Thus, if the debt is discharged in part, or is divisible, it has no influence whatever upon the mortgage. This will subsist in its entirety, although the debt may be extinguished in part, and although a third *479 possessor of the immovable mortgage may be liable only personally for a portion of the debt. We thus see that the indivisibility of the mortgage does not render the obligation itself indivisible. Where the obligations are joint they may be divided, actively or passively, between the heirs of the creditor and the heir's of the debtor.” (Laurent, vol.

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Bluebook (online)
153 U.S. 465, 14 S. Ct. 898, 38 L. Ed. 785, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-sentell-scotus-1894.