Lafitte v. Delogny

33 La. Ann. 659
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7727
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 659 (Lafitte v. Delogny) 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
Lafitte v. Delogny, 33 La. Ann. 659 (La. 1881).

Opinion

[662]*662The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Todd, J.

The plaintiffs, mortgage creditors of the defendant, Widow E. R. Delogny, seek by this action to annul a sheriff’s sale of a plantation, situated in the parish of St. James, made on the 4th of April, 1874. This sale was made in a proceeding to foreclose a special mortgage on the property, executed by Mrs. Delogny on the 29th of November, 1865, in favor of N. R. Delogny, her son, who was the purchaser at said sale, and is also a defendant in the action.

It is charged in the petition that the debt for which the property was sold was not the debt of Mrs. Delogny; that if it ever had any existence at all, it was a debt of her husband, for which she obligated herself in contravention of a prohibitory law; and it was, therefore, an absolute nullity; and further, that it was prescribed before the date of the sale.

It was alleged, also, that the sale was a nullity owing to certain irregularities and illegalities in the proceedings, under which it was made — -which irregularities are specifically set forth in the petition.

This action of nullity was coupled with a suit for the debt claimed to be owing the plaintiffs by Mrs. Delogny, and for a recognition of the mortgage securing the same.

The defendant, N. R. Delogny, answered; first, pleading the general issue, and then averring the reality and validity of the mortgage debt under which the property acquired by him at the sheriff’s sale was sold, and the legality of that sale, alleging that the consideration of the debt inured to the benefit of Mrs. Delogny, his co-defendant, who, at the time it was contracted, was the owner of" the plantation mortgaged, and separated in property from her husband, and finally, he denied the right of the plaintiffs to attack this mortgage or demand the nullity of the same, for the reason that plaintiffs were not the creditors of Mrs. Delogny at the date of the contract, nor till long afterwards.

No answer was filed by Mrs. Delogny. There was judgment by default against her for the debt sued on, with a recognition of the mortgage on certain property not embraced in the act of mortgage to N. R. Delogny, and'rejecting the demand for the nullity of the sheriff’s sale. From this judgment the plaintiffs appealed.

The mortgage was executed by Mrs. Delogny in favor of N. R. Delogny, on the 29th November, 1865, and the one in favor of the plaintiffs, together with the notes which it was given to secure, on the 29th of December, 1872.

It is plain that, if the mortgage in favor of N. R. Delogny was given to secure a real and valid debt of Mrs. Delogny, and it was a subsisting debt at the time of the sale in question, it could not be attacked by the plaintiffs, who became her creditors long after its execution. This, we [663]*663understand, is conceded. The plaintiffs, however, deny that it was given to secure a legal or valid debt of Mrs. Delogny. On the contrary, they aver that the alleged debt and mortgage never had any existence, that they were absolute nullities, because given for the debt of the husband of Mrs. Delogny, then living, in contravention of the express provision of the Oode, declaring that-a wife cannot bind herself for the debt of the husband. They further charge that this debt, if it ever existed, was extinguished by prescription before the sale was made under it.

It is shown that the plantation mortgaged was the separate prop» erty of Mrs. Delogny, and had been long prior to the date of the mortgage in favor of her son. Much testimony was taken to show that Mrs. Delogny had the separate administration of her property, and that the ' debt in question inured to the separate benefit of her property under her exclusive administration, and that, therefore, the debt was her debt not the husband’s, for the payment of which she legally bound herself in the act of mortgage.

The view we take of this ease, after a thorough investigation of the issues presented in the pleadings and the law bearing on the same, renders it unnecessary that we should decide this question of law and fact, in regard to and bearing upon the original liability of Mrs. Delogny for this debt. We are strongly inclined to believe, from the evidence, that the debt, or a large portion of it, was contracted for the benefit of Mrs. Delogny’s separate property, and administered by her, and, therefore, a valid and subsisting debt against her; but, as stated, the decision on this point is not necessary to the conclusion to which .we have arrived.

As shown above, the act of mortgage in favor of N. E. Delogny was passed in November, 1865. The husband of Mrs. Delogny died in 1866 On the 6th of January, 1872, Mrs. Delogny formally and in writing acknowledged the debt, and promised to pay it, thus fully ratifying the contract, and interrupting prescription upon it. In December, 1872, she executed the mortgage and notes in favor of the plaintiffs.

The mortgaged property was sold in April, 1874, under executory process taken out on the mortgage in favor of N. E. Delogny, and by her silent acquiescence in the proceedings and sale, she again'ratified the contract in which they were based.

Admitting that the debt originally was the debt of her husband, which she thus ratified and promised to pay and permitted the sale of her property to pay, did such ratification create any legal obligation on her part, and make the debt a valid debt against her from the time it was contracted ? In other words, was the mortgage given by her for the debt of her husband, conceding it to be such, a nullity so absolute and radical as could not be ratified by her, after the death of the husband and after she was thus freed from marital power and influence ?

[664]*664The question of the nullity of contracts has been a subject of profound inquiry to civilians, in the discussion of which they have displayed a great deal of legal acumen and ingenuity — sometimes presenting distinctions respecting the different classes of alleged nullities so refined and attenuated as to be almost beyond the power of the human mind to grasp them. Out of these discussions we can, however, deduce certain general rules or principles bearing on the subject, which, from frequent recognition and adjudication, may now be regarded as almost elementary.

While we find that the best known and most marked division of nullities is that of absolute and relative nullities, yet the former have been subdivided into two kinds or classes.

Eor instance, if the cause of nullity in a contract rests on motives primarily or exclusively of public policy or social order, or has its origin in the respect due to good morals, it is a nullity so absolute and radical that the law always and continually resists it and makes and declares it as non-existent and not susceptible of ratification. Among contracts thus tainted are cited contracts by the father or husband to surrender the paternal or marital power, contracts to pay money for the commission of a crime, a partition of a succession b'efore it is open, and such like contracts.

This principle is thus enunciated by Dunod, a writer of acknowledged distinction:

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Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lafitte-v-delogny-la-1881.