Simon, J.
The object of this action, which is instituted by the testamentary executor of the late George B. Milligan, is threefold : He seeks, first, to obtain the partition, in kind or otherwise, [354]*354of a sugar plantation, slaves, &c. which, he alleges, belong for one third to the succession of the deceased, the other two thirds belonging to the defendant. 2d. To compel said defendant to account for the crops of sugar and molasses made on the said plantation since the decease of the testator, and also for'the nett proceeds of the crop on hand at the time of said decease, received by defendant, and never accounted for. 3d. To obtain a settlement and liquidation of the partnership concerns, and of all the transactions growing out of the same, and a judgment against the defendant for the portion thereof due to the succession, &c.
The defendant, after pleading the general issue, admitted the existence of the agreement alluded to, and set up in the plaintiff’s petition as the basis and origin of his title, as executor, to the one third by him claimed, bearing date the 16th of March, 1828, but denied that the deceased derived any right under, or by virtue of the same, except that of calling for its completion by an act of sale, on the terms, and on the fulfilment of the conditions therein contained. He further averred that those conditions have never been complied with by the testator; that the latter acquiesced in the sale of the premises to the respondent; and that it was well understood that his said rights should be perfected on the fulfillment of his part of the said agreement. That said deceased is indebted to him, defendant, as vendee of Alexander Dennistoun, assignee of Dennistoun & Co., on this account, in the sum of $37,650 29, with interest; that he never disputed the testator’s right to call for title to his portion of the plantation, &c, on the payment of the balance due on the price, but, on the contrary, is ready, on such payment, to- make the necessary conveyance. He, therefore, prays for judgment against the succession for the balance due; for a partition of the property, by a sale thereof, &c.; and for satisfaction of his claim out of the proceeds of such sales, &c.
The widow and heirs of David Urquhart, deceased, stating themselves to be creditors to a large amount of Milligan’s succession, intervened in the action for the protection of their rights, alleging that the plaintiff, who sues as executor, has, in his own personal name, an adverse interest in the issue of the cause, he [355]*355being a partner of the defendant. They assert: 1st. That the agreement of the 16th of March, 1828, was a perfect and complete sale, binding on the vendors and on the defendant, who acquired subsequently, having been duly recorded in the office of the judge of the parish of Plaquemines, on the 24th of June, 1830. 2d. That the deceased has been in the open and undisturbed possession, as owner, of his undivided third of the property, ever since the date of the contract; that he always complied with the conditions of the agreement, resided on the place, and devoted his attention to its cultivation and improvement; and that the sixteen hands, referred to in the second article of the contract, were constantly kept on the plantation, and still remain there, to assist in its cultivation, &c. 3d. and 4th. That the matters in controversy relative to any claim set up by the defendant, or his vendor, against the estate of the deceased, as also to the settlement of the balance alleged to be due by the deceased on the price of the sale, are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Probates of the parish of Plaquemines, which court alone has the right to settle and liquidate such claims, to enquire into their validity, and to order their classification on the tableau of distribution of the assets of the estate according to their rank. 5th. That the defendant, for his own benefit, has incumbered the property with three several mortgages in favor of the Union Bank of Louisiana, amounting together to $81,420, with interest; and is bound to clear, at his own expense, the succession’s third part of the said property from the incumbrances by which it may be affected. The intervenors further say, that they join in the averments of the plaintiff’s petition, and pray that a partition of the whole property may be made by a sale thereof, &c.; that by the same judgment the defendant be ordered to account to the succession for its interest in the crops; and that the defendant’s claims set up against said succession be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, reserving to the defendant the right of having his said claims settled and liquidated by the Court of Probates, contradictorily with the other creditors of the deceased, &c.
This intervention was answered by the defendant, pretty much on the same grounds as those set forth in his original answer, but further alleging that the agreement referred to was intend[356]*356ed for the contracting of a partnership between the parties thereto; that said partnership was dissolved by the death of the deceased; that the mortgages with which the estate is incumbered, were given with the knowledge and consent of Milligan; and that, by the terms of the agreement, the deceased had a right, at the expiration of seven years, to call for specifíc performance on securing, by mortgage of the partnership premises, any amount which might be still due, or to dissolve the partnership itself. He admits his liability to account for the profits up to the period of the testator’s death, but denies his being bound for profits subsequently accrued; and, finally, avers that he is still willing to make title to the succession, on being paid the amount which, at the time the partnership was dissolved, was to be contributed by the deceased.
Under these pleadings, the case was tried contradictorily with the intervenors, and the judge a quo being of opinion that one third of the premises in partnership belonged to Milligan’s succession, but that the defendant must be referred to the Probate Court of Plaquemines for a settlement of his claims against said succession, declaring, however, in the mean time, that they constitute no lien upon the property, ordered a division thereof to be made between the parties, in proportion to their respective interests, the mode of partition to be subject of an ulterior decree; and from this judgment the defendant has appealed.
The intervenors have prayed in their answer to this appeal, that the judgment appealed from may be so amended as to allow to the succession of the deceased, its proportion of the crop existing' at the time of the death of the testator, as per inventory made at the time of its opening; as also its proportion of all the subsequent crops raised on the plantation since the decease of Milligan until the present time.
The facts exhibited by the record, are mainly these: In a letter addressed by the deceased to Alexander Dennistoun, bearing date 27th December, 1826, after the death of one Hill, the former partner of the firm of Dennistoun, Hill & Co., the deceased communicates his ideas upon the nature and extent of an arrangement which had been contemplated by the parties, but which had never been executed; and he expresses his readiness [357]*357to acquiesce in whatever views the change of circumstances resulting from Hill’s death may have induced in the mind of Den-nistoun, He says he was to be interested one third in the purchase of the plantation at what it cost, allowing five per cent interest, &c., and expresses his views upon the interest he was to have in acquiring a proportion of the property, &c. See letter, p. 359 post.
Nothing was done, however, on these propositions until the 16th of March, 1828, when an act under private signature was executed by Dennistoun & Co. on the one part, and G. B. Milli-gan on the other, in which it was stipulated: 1st. That Dennis-toun & Co. agree to sell to Milligan, one third of the sugar plantation they own &c, with all the slaves, &e. for fifty two thousand dollars, payable in one, two, three, four, five, six and seven years, in equal instalments, without any interest until the end of the contract; and on whatever sum may be then unpaid, Milligan to pay six per cent interest per annum, with special mortgage on the. property, until the whole is paid. 2d. Ten slaves and six manumitted negroes, owned by Milligan, to remain on the estate to assist, &c. 3d. Mil-ligan to reside on the place, and to manage it for a salary of $1,000 a year. 4th. The supplies to be furnished by Dennis-toun & Co. &c; the crops of sugar to be sold by them, and the proceeds of the sales, after deducting the expenses, to be considered the annual product of the plantation, one third of which to be placed to the credit of Milligan, &c. 5th The contract to exist for seven years, at the end of which period, if agreeable to all parties, to be renewed; but if a dissolution should take place, the value of the property to be fixed for settlement, by mutual appraisement, or by public sale. 6th. Milligan to pay one third of whatever sums may be laid out, in case the proposed sugar house and other buildings are erected and additional negroes purchased, said third to bear interest at six per cent per annum, from the date of the money being ad. vanced by Dennistoun & Co., until his share is paid. And 7th. This agreement will be regularly completed before a notary public as soon as possible. This act was regularly registered in a notary public’s office in New Orleans, on the 30th of October, 1828, under the declaration on oath of a witness proving the signatures of the parties; and was also recorded in the office of the judge of the parish of Plaquemines, on the 24th of June, 1830.
[358]*358The partnership went on according to the contract, and continued even after the expiration of the seven years; but, during its existence or operation, the defendant, and M. M. Thomson, being the attorneys in fact of their partners, passed and executed a notorial act, on the 24th of May, 1836, in which they gave to each other a mutual power of attorney and a mutual substitution to the powers of their constituents, by virtue of which the defendant, on the 30th of August, 1836, sold to himself, by authentic act, the plantation, slaves, &c., for the sum of $120,000.
In February and April, 1837, and in January, 1839, the defendant executed three acts of mortgage on the whole premises, in favor of the Union Bank of Louisiana, to secure large amounts loaned to him by the bank, the last of which mortgages was accepted by Milligan, as president of said bank, and who was an officer of the Union Bank, either as president or director, through the whole period embraced by the three mortgages.
Milligan died in March, 1841, and an inventory of his estate having been made in April following, his third interest in the premises was put thereon as a part of his succession, as also his proportion of the preceding crop of sugar and molasses. The same had also been put on the inventory made after the death of his wife, in 1832.
It is further admitted in the record, that Milligan resided on the premises since the 16th of March, 1828, till the time of his death. That during this period, he superintended the cultivation and improvement of the plantation. That the sixteen hands mentioned in the second article of the agreement, or the survivors, have been constantly kept there since its date, and still continue there, for assisting in grinding the crop. That the deceased resided on the said plantation long anterior to March, 1828, acting as manager for the defendant’s vendors. That Mil-ligan’s succession is insolvent. That both parties claim under the same title, and that the claim of the contracting party with Milligan is not contested, nor that of the defendant to the remaining two thirds; and that the defendant received the crop mentioned in the inventory, and those made on the plantation since.
The record contains also two accounts current, produced in [359]*359evidence by the defendant, the first of which, beginning 16th March, 1829, and ending 16th of March, 1835, shows that, during that period, Milligan was credited with his third of the proceeds of the crops, in deduction of the seven instalments by him due for the price of his portion of the property, leaving a balance then against him of $37,506 58 ; and the second, showing also the credits allowed to himjfor his third of the proceeds of the crops from the year 1835, up to the time of his death, in deduction of said price; which proceeds, after 1840, ceased to be placed to his credit as heretofore, but were replaced by sums allowed for the yearly wages of his negroes till the 30th of June, 1844, leaving abalance due by the succession on the said day, of $35,000.
Under this state of facts, our first enquiry necessarily is into the title set up by the testamentary executor of the deceased to the one third part of the property which he seeks to recover for the benefit of the succession, and to divide contradictorily with the defendant, who pretends that the agreement above recited is not a complete sale, and that Milligan never acquired under it any other right but that of calling for its completion, on his complying with the terms and conditions therein stipulated.
It seems to us that it cannot be doubted that, when Dennis-toun & Co. executed the agreement under consideration, they intended to contract a partnership with the deceased for the term of seven years, and that, for that purpose, it was deemed important and necessary that Milligan should become the owner of a portion of the property. Indeed, from the very letter of December, 1826, relied on by the defendant, it is manifest that, at that time, though intimating that he would agree to any arrangement which Alexander Dennistoun should think proper to adopt, Milligan’s main object was clearly to become the owner of a part of the plantation, and to be interested one third in the purchase ; and that said letter was written with a view of proposing to the firm to execute the same arrangement that had been originally contemplated-between him and the deceased partner.
Now, art. 2414 of the Civil Code requires that three circumstances should concur to the perfection of the contract of sale, to wit, the thing sold, the price, and the consent. By art. 2431, “ the sale is considered tó be perfect between the parties, and the property is of right acquired to the purchaser with regard to the seller, as soon as there exists an agreement for the object and for the price thereof, although the object has not yet been delivered, nor the payment made.” And with regard to third persons, such sale, under arts. 2417 and 2242, has its full effect against them from the day of its being registered in the office of a notary and the actual delivery of the thing sold. Here, the parties had agreed upon the thing sold, and on the price to be paid by the purchaser; they had consented to the purchaser’s considering the property sold as his from the date of the act, and to his applying to the payment of the price the proceeds of its annual product; the act was duly recorded as required by law, and the tradition or delivery of the thing sold had clearly taken place, by the stipulation that the vendee was to reside on the plantation and devote his attention wholly and exclusively to its cultivation and improvement. He was, therefore,' possessing the property for two thirds for his co-partners, and for one third for himself, and continued to possess it in the same manner until the time of his death. The agreement was not a simple promise to sell, but was a perfect sale; in which, again, the vendors, agreeing to sell the one third of the property, the purchaser agreed on his part to pay the sum of $52,000 as the price thereof. But could it be considered only as a “promesse de vente,” art. 2437 of our Code, informs us that it amounts to a sale when there exists a reciprocal consent of both parties, as to the thing and. the price; and, therefore, it must have the same effect. See Troplong, vol. 1,'pp. 193, 194, no. 130, in which this doctrine is fully reviewed; and Merlin, Répert. verbo Vente, § 7. There is a vast distinction to be made between this case and that of Millaudon v. Silvestre, 8 La. 262, relied on by the defendant’s counsel, and to the record of which we have been referred. There, the object of the action was to dissolve the partnership, to liquidate the partnership affairs, and to recover [364]*364whatever sums of money might appear to be due to the plaintiff on such liquidation and settlement; the sale of one half of the partnership properly from Millaudon to Silvestre was maintained, with the vendor’s privilege; the sale subsequently made to a third person of the same property, was declared collusive and fraudulent; and the plaintiff was allowed to recover the sum due him, out of the proceeds of the sale in block of the whole partnership property, without any regard to the collusive sale made in consequence of the omission to record the act of partnership under which the property was claimed. Here, there is no fraud alleged against any of the parties; the intervenors only seek to maintain the sale for the benefit of the creditors of the deceased: the contract was a bona fide one, and it must be. governed by the ordinary rules.
In corroboration of the impression which the agreement under consideration has made on the minds of this court, let us enquire a little further into the subsequent acts of the parties. What do we find? From 1828, the partnership premises were placed under the control and administration of the deceased; and the partnership continued to be in operation, not until the expiration of the seven years, but until the death of Milligan, who, during the whole of this period, superintended the cultivation and improvement of the plantation under the contract; his slaves and other hands were kept there all the time ; and, his vendors, and subsequently the defendant, having charge, under said contract, of the sale of the crops, one-third of the nett proceeds thereof, continued, even after the expiration of the time, to be placed to his credit, so as to be imputed to the payment of the purchase money. This course was pursued until 1840. In March, 1841, the partnership was dissolved by the death of Milligan, and then the credits ceased, although the defendant continued to raise crops on the partnership plantation, with the same slaves and hands, and acted in the administration and management thereof as the negotiorum gestor of the representatives of the deceased. If the sale was not complete, why was one-third of the crops yearly accounted for to the deceased? Why was he charged in the accounts,, not only with the instal-ments of the price, but also with his third of the balance of the [365]*365money advanced for improvements? The defendant became, in 1836, the purchaser of the property, but he could not acquire any greater interest or right than his vendors had, to wit, two-thirds of the premises; and he only paid $120,000, which is really a value adequate to the extent of said interest. Every thing shows that the title of the deceased to the one undivided third of the property, far from having ever been contested, was always recognized and respected by his co-partners, and even by the defendant, until the' institution of this suit.
With regard to the fact that the whole property was mortgaged by the defendant to the Union Bank, to the knowledge and with the consent of the deceased, we cannot see how this could in any manner affect his title to the third portion of the premises claimed in this action. The mortgagor was his partner ; he was largely indebted to the Union Bank; the share of the deceased was undivided; and it is not extraordinary that he should have- consented to mortgage his own property to secure a debt which he did not owe, but which had been contracted by a person in whose welfare and prosperity he was greatly interested. It is true, the doctrine has been often recognized, that, if a man, having a title to an estate, which is offered for sale, and knowing his title, stands by and encourages the sale, or does not forbid it, and thereby induces another person to purchase the estate, his silence may, under the circumstances, have the effect of making the sale binding upon him. 1 Story on Equity, § 385. 3 Rob. 332. 5 Rob. 518. This doctrine is not applicable to the situation of the parties to this suit. It would only be applicable if an attempt was made by the representatives of the deceased to dispute the mortgages, when sought to be enforced by the Union Bank; and we are not prepared to say that the silence of the deceased when the mortgages were given, ought to be so construed as to infer from it that it was, on his part, a renunciation of his title, or an acknowledgment of the defendant’s right and title to the whole.
With this view of the principal question, we must come to the conclusion that Milligan, on the 16th of,March, 1828, became the owner of one undivided third part of the premises; that said third formed and constituted his interest, or share, in the part[366]*366nership stock, then, subsequently, and until his death, under his management and administration for the benefit of the concern; that the price thereof was to be paid, and was partly paid, out of the nett proceeds of the crops; that he never ceased to be the owner of his interest, which belonged to him at the time of his death; and that, the same being now a part of the property belonging to his succession and inventoried as such, the plaintiff and the intervenors have a right to demand that a partition of the partnership property, until now in a state of indivisión, be made in the manner provided for by law. This was ordered by the court below, and, we think, very correctly.
But the present action goés further, and it now becomes our duty to enquire into the plaintiff’s and the intervenors’ demand for the ’settlement and liquidation of the partnership concerns. It is clear that the partnership was dissolved by the death of Milligan, and that, at that time, its assets and general affairs were subject to be divided and settled according to-the rights of the parties thereto. The defendant and surviving partner continued, however, to manage the property., to make crops on the plantation, and to receive the proceeds of these crops; he acted as the negotiorum gestor of his deceased partner’s representatives, and, as such, became bound to account to them for the product of their share in the crops. He has no right to keep these proceeds, but should impute the portion thereof belonging to Milligan’s succession to the extinguishment of the balance which may be due on- the price of the property; and, for that purpose, we think the court a qua has sufficient jurisdiction; and that this case ought to be remanded, to liquidate the amount which the succession may be entitled to, as proceeding from the crop which was inventoried after the death of the deceased, as also from all the subsequent crops made on the plantation until the partition of the property.
With regard to the defendant’s claim against the estate of his deceased partner, for the balance which may remain due on the price of his share in the premises in partnership, we cannot agree with his learned counsel, that- it should be considered as a partnership debt, to be satisfied out of the partnership property. It is true that article 2704 of our Code says, that part[367]*367nership assets are liable to social debts, in preference to individual creditors, and that, by the 2835th article, a partner may be a creditor of the partnership; but here the defendant is not a creditor of the partnership; he is merely the creditor of his deceased partner, entitled to exercise the rights which he may have against his property, contradictorily with all the other creditors of the insolvent estate. It is true, also, that the share of the deceased in the partnership property was purchased from the defendant’s vendors, with the view of its forming a part of the partnership stock; but. such undivided portion was Milligan’s separate property, with regard to his co-partner, though held in partnership with him, and could only be liable by preference to the payment of the debts due to the creditors of the firm, who, under art. 2794 above quoted, have a right to be paid out of the partnership assets, in preference to the creditors of the individual partner. This is the purport of the case relied on, in 5 Mart. N. S. 630, where the question was presented in support of a claim set up by intervention by one partner against the other, in a suit instituted by attachment against the latter, and which claim was based upon the fact of the intervenor’s having advanced the funds with which the adventure had been undertaken; and it was decided, that said intervenor was the creditor of the firm for whose benefit the funds had been advanced, and that he was entitled to his right of preference. The distinction is a very obvious one. Here, again, the property was.not purchased for the benefit of the partnership, but only for the individual benefit of Milligan; and it seems to us clear, that his vendor, as such, cannot pretend to set up his claim as being a debt of the 'firm to be paid out of the partnership assets. In the case of Nathan v. Gardere, 11 La. 265, a similar question was presented, and it was held, that notes given by one of the partners for his share of the price of slaves purchased by the partnership, was not a partnership, but a private debt. So, it was decided in the case of Bernard v. Dufour, 17 La. 596, where the question was fully investigated; and in the case of Millaudon v. Silvestre, so much relied on, 8 La. 262, the plaintiff was allowed to recover after payment of the partnership debts, and after having set aside a fraudulent [368]*368sale and mortgage of a portion of the partnership property. See, also, the case of Morgan v. His Creditors, 8 Mart. N. S., 609.
It results, therefore, that the defendant, as an individual creditor of the deceased, is entitled to oppose his claim as a recon-ventional one, against the plaintiff’s demand for the proportion of the crops due to the succession; that, as we said in the case of Bayne v. Fox, 5 Rob. 2, the jurisdiction of the District Court may extend to the liquidation of claims against successions set up by reconvention or compensation, so far as the two claims set up against each other may be extinguished; but that, after having ascertained and liquidated the balance, if any, that may be due to the defendant, his said balance ought to be referred to the Court of Probates of the parish of Plaquemines for classification according to his rights, and there to be ranked on the tableau of distribution of the insolvent estate, contradictorily with all the other creditors. The court a qua was without jurisdiction in such matters, and properly refused to pronounce judgment thereon.
We shall, therefore, abstain from expressing any opinion upon the question, whether the balance that may be due to the defendant is, or is not, secured by mortgage and privilege on the property sold to the deceased, and whether his said mortgage and privilege have been duly preserved, as this question must first be brought to its solution before the Probate Court, contradictorily with the creditors of the deceased, on the filing of the tableau of distribution by the testamentary executor.
It is, therefore, ordered and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court, so far as it goes, be affirmed; but it is further ordered and decreed that this casé be remanded to the court below, for further proceedings in the partition of the partnership property, and in the settlement and liquidation of the partnership concerns, and of the crops which the defendant is bound to account for as negotiorum gestor, for the purpose of liquidating the balance, if any, that may be due to the defendant, according to the legal principles recognised in this opinion; reserving to said defendant his right to prosecute his claim for such balance before the Probate Court, in due course of law; [369]*369the costs of this appeal to be borne by the appellant, and those in the court below to be paid by the parties interested in the partition, in proportion to their respective interests.*
The material parts of Milligan’s letter are subjoined:
In adverting to the death of Mr. Hill, he says -. “ His communications, I take it for [360]*360granted, hayo fully appriséd you of the nature of my engagement, and will very much lessen the delicacy of the situation in which X am aware of being now placed. My object, therefore, in addressing you, at present, is not only to repeat with the utmost frankness what that understanding was, but to enable you also to form an opinion as to the present situation, and probable revenue that may be reasonably expected hereafter from this property. With regard to the original purchase nothing can be suggested, I am sure, that is not already known to you. It was made immediately after the two fine crops of 1819 and 1820 — the most productive yet known in Louisiana, and which, by coming in succession and united with the high prices of sugar at that period, had the effect of pushing property of this description far beyond its value; added to which, the moment was additionally inauspicious, as the proprietors of fine estates were then too well satisfied with the cultivation to think of abandoning it, and all others that changed owners were at most extravagant rates, and, where revenue was necessary from the purchase to complete the payments, have long since ended in ruin.
“ I arrived here a few months only after Mr. Hill had taken possession of the plantation, but long enough for him to have discovered the trouble and inconvenience of directing such property at a distance — indeed, without residing on on it, and the impossibility of finding an overseer who could supersede the necessity of his devoting to it a large portion of his time and attention. I was here with a few negroes, with a view of purchasing land and attending to its cultivation. The peculiar position in which were respectively placed made an arrangement desirable to both, and there was no difficulty in our coming at once to an understanding, which we believed was founded upon reciprocal benefit and could not fail to prove advantageous to all parties. I was to be interested one-third in the purchase, at what it cost, allowing interest at five per cent for the first year on account of the smallness of the crop— which was then from the unusual severity of the winter, but without our knowing it, nearly destroyed — and afterwards at seven, till the whole amount was paid; placing my negroes on the property at a valuation to be agreed upon, with the exception of six I reserved, but who were also to be put into the crop, and for whose labor $500 per annum was to be allowed — and devoting myself exclusively to the direction of its management, for which, in lieu of expenses, I was allowed by the concern an annual salary of $1,000, the agreement to continue five years. I went immediately to work, and certainly under the impression that crops could at once be made ; and had the place answered my expectations, I am very certain, notwithstanding the unfavorable seasong that followed, the result would have been widely different. At that time Mr. Hill and [361]*361myself were wholly unaware how much was required, both in labor and money, to put the plantation into proper operation; it had been established for the cultivation of sugar only the year before, and although everything was new everything was unfin-shed and incomplete,” &c. After going into details of difficulties, he says: “It was of course soon evident to me, after becoming"acquainted with the extent and resources of the plantation, that although in the end it might affordja good interest for the capital invested, yet, as it was impossible to extend it on the scale we had in contemplation, it could offer no inducement as a speculation to a person situated as I was, relying almost entirely upon personal exertions to malee property productive, and expecting a result which, under the existing arrangement, I plainly foresaw in no event could be realised. Being perfectly persuaded that the motive which had dictated the offer to me had nothing in view but what was founded on mutual adventage, I had no hesitation in communicating my impressions to Mr. Hill, who was too just not to admit their force; but he was unwilling that any change should take place till all the improvements were completed and the estate further tested, hoping that more was to be placed to unfavorable seasons, than to want of resources and extent. He however proposed recommending its being disposed of, and, if approved of on your side, a moro desirable pinchase made. In the meantime he assured me, I might feel no apprehensions with respect to the interest I had agreed to take, which was an affair of entire indifference, the arrangement having no other object than to secure my personal attention to its management; that if the property was not sold, I should always he at liberty to take the interest already offered me at a fair valuation, or, if more desirable, a compensation should be made for the labor of my negroes, as well as for my personal services. With this understanding I was satisfied ; the original agreement was therefore never executed, no valuation of the negroes took place, and things have since remained on that footing.”
After stating his disappointments in the purchase of additional land, he goes on. “ This, therefore, was the moment we had looked forward to as offering a good opportunity lo realize our intentions; and I have no doubt a speculation could have b.een made in the course of this spring, by which not only all losses would have been retrieved but a bright and almost certain reward offered for future exertions. Such hopes and calculations on my part are of course entirely defeated by the untimely death of Mr. Hill. I can no longer indulge ¿the expectation, that without him you could think of embarking further in a business from which hitherto you have had so little reason to be satisfied, and which alone would have been authorised upon ths [362]*362sanction of his judgment and the importance of his presence. As long as there was a prospect of extending our planting interest and of making our operations profitable to you, and an object to me, I have remained satisfied and contented in my employment The connection was one so highly respectable as to afford both pride and gratification, and the personal intercourse that grew out of it was not only attended with pleasure but had long been cemented by the most intimate and disinterested friendship. Had fate not ordained the melancholy event which I shall long deplore, you would have been spared the pain, and I the embarrassment, of this communication. But as it is impossible for me to know what may now he your intentions with regard to this property, I have only to express my hope that, in any arrangements you may think proper to make, you will be satisfied so far as I am concerned, with the understanding I have endeavored to explain.”
After details of the then state of the plantation, he concludes:
“ I shall feel extremely anxious until I am acquainted with your intentions, and until I have made some permanent arrangements for the future. I must request as early a reply to this letter as your convenience will permit. I am aware the subject is one with which you cannot be familiar, and I am therefore far'from asking or expecting of you any positive decision my sole motive is to call your attention to the subject, as I can have no hope of seeing you here, that such instructions may be given as you may consider just and proper. In the meantime you may rest perfectly assured that your interest under my charge will receive the most unremitted attention.”