Petetin v. His Creditors

26 So. 471, 51 La. Ann. 1660, 1899 La. LEXIS 606
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1899
DocketNo. 13,200
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 So. 471 (Petetin v. His Creditors) 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
Petetin v. His Creditors, 26 So. 471, 51 La. Ann. 1660, 1899 La. LEXIS 606 (La. 1899).

Opinions

The opinion of the court on the application for rehearing was delivered by Watxujs'S, J.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

The firm of II. & 0. Newman, who are creditors of Jules Petetin, attack a dation en paiement made by him to his wife, on the following grounds:

1st. That the dation en paiement has no consideration, being a debt of the husband, which the creditor of Jules Petetin donated to his wife, Mrs. Petetin.

2nd. That the subsequent transfer or dation by the husband to his wife, in satisfaction of the debt, was a prohibited preference shown by the husband, who was an insolvent; that the facts are, that on the 3rd day of May, 1895, Ilermina Petetin, maiden sister of Jules Petetin, made a donation inter vivos to Cora Renaud, wife of Jules Petetin, of a debt due by J ules Petetin to her.

It appears, May 13th, 1895, Jules Petetin made a dation en paiement ' to his wife of property he owned, (valued at the amount put down as a consideration for the dation), in satisfaction of the indebtedness held by the wife.

October 25, 1895, Jules Petetin made a cession of his property to his creditors. The usual order was issued accepting the surrender and staying proceedings against the insolvent.

The insolvent acknowledged the amount of his indebtedness to H. and 0. Newman, and carried their claim on his statement of indebtedness.

The insolvent did not carry, on his statement of assets, the real estate transferred to his wife, on May 13, 1895.

A meeting of the insolvent’s creditors was held on December 9th, 1895, at which H. and 0. Newman voted against accepting the cession; against the discharge of the insolvent, and against the appointment of a syndic.

[1662]*1662The proceedings were homologated on December 24th, 1885, without opposition.

Jules Petetin, the insolvent, qualified as syndic on December 30th, 1895.

On December 31st, 1895, H. and 0. Newman filed their present suit.

Mrs. Jules Petetin having died and left minor children, issue of her marriage with Jules Petetin, he was appointed tutor ad hoc, to represent them. He qualified as tutor ad hoc on September 19, 1896.

Jules Petetin, personally, and as syndic, accepted service of the petition of IT. and 0. Newman, on the 2nd day of January, 1897.

It is conceded that the dation en paiement was a real contract, in the sense of not being simulated, and that Mrs. Petetin took possession of the property transferred to her, and that after her death, her heirs went into possession.

IT. and 0. Newman claimed to be paid by preference over the other creditors of the insolvent in case of the annulhnent of the dation en paiement.

The record informs us that the trial judge pronounced judgment annulling the dation en paiement. He decided, also, that the property should be restored to the mass of the insolvent's estate for the benefit of all the creditors, but that IT. and C. Newman should be paid by preference from the proceeds of the property.

From the judgment, Jules Petetin, syndic, appealed to the Court of Appeals. ‘The plea óf pvesciption was filed on appeal before the Circuit Court.

The plea of prescription was rejected by the court, the court finding that service of the petition of II. and C. Newman had been accepted on the 2nd day of June, 1896, ánd that the dation was made on the 13th day of May, 1895, within the year. This was manifestly an oversight of the Court of Appeals.

The court found in the second place, that, after cession, no creditor can obtain a preference; that the wife is entitled to recover the amount of -her claim as an ordinary creditor; and it amended the judgment to some extent.

On the application for a rehearing, the court reversed its opinion, and held that the wife and the heirs could interpose prescription. Owing to an error of dates of filing suits, and of acceptance of service, growing out of some oversight in listing the documents submitted on appeal, the court deemed it proper to grant a rehearing.

[1663]*1663After the rehearing was granted, the court sent up to this court a statement of facts made by counsel and certified to by the court as correct; and requested our opinion on the following questions:

1st. Was Mrs. Petetin an ordinary creditor, without privilege?

2nd. Had the husband the right to transfer his property to his wife in satisfaction of his debt to a third person, of which the wife became the transferee and donee?

3rd. Can the creditors, H. and 0. Newman, attack the dation for fraud, and if successful, are they entitled to preference ?

4th. What prescription is applicable?

5th. Had H. and 0. Newman the preference over the proceeds of the property, under 0. 0., 1977?

1st. Primarily, we deem it proper to state in answer to the foregoing that, in our view, Jules Petetin was indebted to his wife in the amount of the claim, of which his wife became the donee of one of her husband’s creditors.

This claim was one in commerce. Whatever value it had, the creditor chose to make a donation of it to the wife of the debtor, who was a free agent and able to accept donation to her, even of debts due by the husband.

In our view, she unquestionably was capable of receiving donations made to her, by a creditor of the husband.

There is no other incapacity to receive as a donee than an incapacity resulting from the text of the law.

It cannot be extended so as to embrace cases not clearly within the incapacity declared.

The Code, as relates to donations, contains dispositions on the subject : “All persons may dispose or receive by donation inter vivos or mortis causa, except such as the law declares expressly incapable,” as to the latter; “all persons may buy and sell except those interdicted by law.” C. C. 1470. Ib. 2445.

Regarding the wife, we have not found any text of the law by which she is excluded from receiving in an honorable transaction, a claim for the payment of which the husband is responsible.

There being no prohibitory law upon the subject, it follows that she may become the husband’s creditor, as donee of a claim against him.

In Slatter vs. Tete, 4th Ann., 465, the principle involved on this point, we think, was similar to the principle involved in the case [1664]*1664here, in that a claim was transferred to the wife, which was a preexisting' debt of the husband. The court said that it bore neither privilege nor mortgage; that it seemed to be a paradox; that by the transfer of his note to his wife and its delivery to the husband, this debt should bo invested with the real security of a mortgage, to the detriment of other creditors. “A construction which would operate this injustice, we cannot adopt. The abuses to which it would give rise are an insuperable objection to its soundness.”

“The object of the law is to protect married women and not enable them to wrong their husband’s creditors.” The circumstances of the ease were such as to throw upon Airs.

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Related

Nuss v. Nuss
36 So. 345 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 471, 51 La. Ann. 1660, 1899 La. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petetin-v-his-creditors-la-1899.