Saul v. His Creditors

5 Mart. (N.S.) 569
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Mart. (N.S.) 569 (Saul 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
Saul v. His Creditors, 5 Mart. (N.S.) 569 (La. 1827).

Opinion

Porter, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The tableau of distribution filed by the syndics of the insolvent, was opposed in the court of the first instance; and the opposition being sustained, an appeal has been taken to this court, by the syndics, by the bank of the United States, the bank of Orleans, and the bank of Louisiana.

The claims admitted by the judge a quo, and which are now contested here, are:—

First. That of the children of the insolvent, who claim as privileged creditors, for the amount inherited by them from their deceased mother.

Second. That of John Jacob Astor, of Hew York, who avers that he is a creditor of the insolvent for the sum of $64,000, and that he has a privilege on 751 shares of stock of the bank of Orleans, which were pledged to him, and now make a part of the estate surrendered.

Third. That of Alexander Brown and Sons, of Baltimore, who also assert a privilege on bank stock, which they state was [570]*570pledged to them by the insolvent, for the security of a loan of $9,000, and upwards.

Personal statues of the country where a contraset is sought to be enforced, may sometimes controul the personal statues of the country where the contract was made. The law relating to request and gains made during marriage, is a real, not a personal statute and governs marriage made in other countries Where the parties reside in this, as to all property acquired after their removal. But they yield to an express agreement made on entering into marriage in another country. The contract of pledge of incorporeal things wilt not give a preference unless evidenced by an authentic act, or one sous seing prive, duly recorded, at a time not suspicious

[570]*570The different questions of law arising on these claims, have been argued with an ability of their importance. Some of these questions are now presented for the first time for decision: and those which have been already before the court, and acted on, on other occasions, have been examined with so much care by the counsel, and have received such additional light from the laborious investigation bestowed on them, that they come upon our consideration with as much freshness, as if this was the only time our attention had been drawn to them.

We shall take them up in the order in which they have been already stated, and first as to the claim of the insolvent's children.

From the facts admitted by the parties, which admission makes the statement on this appeal, it appears: That Saul and his wife intermarried in the state of Virginia, on the 6th of February, 1794, their domicil being then in that state; that they remained there until the year 1804, when they removed to the now state of Louisiana; that they fixed their residence here, and continued this residence [571]*571Up to the year 1819, when the wife died; that after their removal from Virginia, and while living and having their domicil in this state, a large quantity of property was acquired, which at the death of the wife remained in the possession of her husband, the insolvent.

And this contract sous seing prive, tho made long before insolvency, cannot be recorded, at a time when the debtor would be incapable of giving a preference by any act of his.

The children claim the one-half of the property, as acquests and gain, made by their father and mother in this state. The appellants contend, that as the marriage took place in the state of Virginia, by whose laws no community of acquests and gains was permitted, the whole of the property acquired here belonged to the husband.

This statement of the matter at issue shews, that the only question presented for our decision is one of law; but it is one which grows out of the conflict of laws of different states. Our former experience had taught us, that question of this kind are the most embarrassing and difficult of decision, that can occupy the attention of those who preside court of justice. The argument of this case has this shown, that the vast mass of learning which, the research of counsel has furnished, leave the subject as much enveloped in ob[572]*572scurity and doubt, as it would have appeared to our own understandings, had we been called on to decide, without the knowledge of what others had thought, and written upon it

Until the discussion of this cause, it was generally understood by the bar and the bench in this state, that the question now agitated was well understood in our jurisprudence; and that from the period married persons from other states moved into this, the property acquired became common, and was to be equally divided between them at the dissolution of the marriage. We have not, therefore, been insensible to the argument so strongly pressed on us, that the question being already settled by the decisions of the tribunal of last resort in the state, the subject ought not to be opened again, and that the most important interests of society require, there should be a time when contested points of jurisprudence may be considered as at rest. But these considerations are not in this case of sufficient weight, to preclude a re-examination of the principles on which the doctrine already stayed has been established, A sufficient period has not elapsed to enable it to derive much authority from the acquiescence of others [573]*573The decision of the court cannot be supposed to have influenced parties entering into the marriage contract, or greatly to have affected any important interests in society. It applied only to married persons emigrating from other states, whose exertions or industry cannot be supposed to have been much changed, by the anticipation of the property going in one direction or the other; whose habits were formed before they came here, and no doubt remained the same after their migration, as before. We shall, therefore, proceed to the examination of the question, as if the case was now presented for the first time, and, we trust, without any bias which might be supposed to exist on our minds, from the opinions we have already expressed.

The investigation we are about to make, will be best conducted by first examining our own statutes.

The old Civil Code provided; that every marriage contracted within this state, super induces of right partnership, or community of acquests and gains. Civil Code, 336. art. 63.

Our revised code repeats this provision, and adds another: that a marriage contracted out of this state between persons who after-[574]*574wards come to live here, is also subject to the community of acquests, with respect to such property as is acquired after their arrival. Code, 2370.

If the acquests and gains, in respect to which the present suit exists, had been made under the dominion of the law last cited, there would be an end to any dispute about their distribution; but the marriage of the insolvent and his wife was dissolved by the death of the latter, before that law Was enacted.

It has been contended, that as the article first cited, provides for a community of acquests and gains on all marriages contracted within

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5 Mart. (N.S.) 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saul-v-his-creditors-la-1827.