Voorhies v. DeBlanc

12 La. Ann. 864
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedAugust 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 12 La. Ann. 864 (Voorhies v. DeBlanc) 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
Voorhies v. DeBlanc, 12 La. Ann. 864 (La. 1857).

Opinions

Spofford, J.

Alexander Declouet being a judgment creditor of Jean Adolphe Dumiartrait levied an execution upon “ all the hereditary rights, actions and pretentions of said J. A. Dumartrait in and to the property, real and personal, by him inherited, for one undivided fourth, from his father Adrien Dumartrait, deceased, whose succession is opened in the Parish of St. Martin,”

The property thus seized being sold, produced a fund of four thousand dollars, which Declouet sought to apply to the satisfaction of his judgment, by virtue of his seizure. '

Cornelius Voorhies filed an opposition in which he claimed a preference on all the proceeds of this sale by virtue of a judicial mortgage upon the seized property, resulting from the registry of a judgment against Jean A. Dumartrait in the Parish of St. Martin, which took rank of all other claims by priority of inscription, and was sufficient in amount- to absorb the fund in court.

P. J. Pavy & Co. also filed an opposition. They had the eldest judicial mortgage against Jean A. Dumartrait recorded in the Parish of St. Mary, the parish of his domicil.

The succession of Adrien Dumartrait was composed of movables, slaves and immovables, in the Parish of St. Martin. Some time after the sale of Jean A. Dumartrait’s one fourth interest in the succession, under Deelouet's judgment, the property of the whole succession was sold, and the relative value of the movables, slaves and immovables was thereby determined. The value having been thus ascertained, and shown on the trial of these oppositions in the court below, the District Judge divided the fund in court into three parts having the same ratio to each other as the respective products of the movables, the slaves, and the immovables of the entire succession of Adrien Dumartrait.

Of these three parts, he awarded to the seizing creditor, Declouet, the portion corresponding to the proceeds of the movables ; to Voorhies, the portion corresponding to the proceeds of the St. Martin immovables ; and to Pavy c6 Co., the portion corresponding to the proceeds of the slaves, as ascertained by the sale of the entire property of A drien DumarbraiCs succession.

[865]*865The theory upon which this judgment was based seems to have been this : that the common debtor, Jean A. Bumcirt/rait, was seized at the death of his father, Adrien Duma/rtrait, of one undivided fourth of all the movables, immovables, and slaves belonging to Adrien's Succession, (O. C. 1214, 934,988) ; that thereupon Voorhies' judicial mortgage attached at once to the undivided one-fourth interest of his debtor in the succession lands with their accessories, situated in the Parish of St. Martin, where his judgment was the first of record; that, at the same instant, the judicial mortgage of Ferny & Go. attached to the undivided one-fourth interest of the same debtor in all the slaves belonging to the succession, because they had the first recorded judgment in the Parish of St. Mary, the debtor’s domicil; and, lastly, that Beclouet, by virtue of his seizure, under Article 722 of the Code of Practice, was invested with a privilege on the undivided one-fourth interest of the common debtor in all the property of the succession, which privilege, however, was overridden, quoad the lands and their accessories, by the prior judicial mortgage of Voorhies, and, quoad the slaves, by the prior judicial mortgage of Fa/oy & Go.; that the fund in court represented one-fourth interest of Jean A. Bumartyrait in all these kinds of property, composing the active mass of the succession of his father, as if the succession had been partitioned and he had taken one-fourth of each of these three classes of property in kind; that the mortgages and privileges which attached to the property itself were transferred to the fund; and that the only practicable mode of ascertaining the relative proportion of each class was to take as a basis the subsequent sale of the whole property of the succession.

From this judgment Voorhies alone has appealed; Pmy & Go. only have joined in the appeal, and they merely pray for an amendment allowing them, in addition to what they got below, one-third of the portion allotted to Beclouet as representing the value of the debtor’s interest in the movables of his father’s succession.

The sole ground of the appeal by Voorhies, as presented by the brief of his counsel, is that Jean A. BwmoyrVraiÜs interest in the succession was an entirety, and an immovable situated in the Parish of St. Martin, where Voorhies held the first recorded judgment against the heir; that his judicial mortgage, therefore, bound the whole interest of the debtor in this succession, regardless of the nature of the property belonging thereto, and entitles him to be paid by preference out of all the proceeds of the sale.

If the entire interest of an heir in a succession which has fallen to him is susceptable of mortgage, irrespective of the nature of the property which comprises the active mass of the succession, it follows, we think, that the appellant would he entitled to relief.

The question must, therefore, be solved at the threshold of the case.

Our lawgivers have thought it wise to restrain the power of hypothecating property, which is one of the rights of dominion, by the following general and sweeping rule:

“ The mortgage only takes place in such instances as are authorized by law.” O. O. 3250.

The mortgage right then is to be measured, in every case, by the express grant of power in our Codes and other statute books.

The following objects alone are susceptible of mortgage:

“ 1. Immovables subject to alienation, and their accessories considered likewise as immovables.
[866]*866“2. The usufruct of the same description of property with its accessories during the time of its duration.
“ 3. Slaves.
“4. Ships and other vessels.” O. O. 3256.

Now it is contended that, because, in Article 463, it is declared that “ an action for the recovery of an immovable estate oran entire succession” is “ considered as immovable from the object to which it applies,” such an “action” is embraced under the disignation of “ immovables subject to alienation” in the first class of the objects which, according to Article 3256, are alone susceptible of mortgage.

Closer investigation will, we think, show- this interpretation to be inadmissible.

The word “ immovables” is used in various senses in the Code.

“ There are things immovable by their nature, others by their destination, and others by the object to which they are applied,." O. O. 454.

Slaves are considered as immovables, the operation of law." O. O. 461. It appears to us that the word “immovables,” as employed in Article 3256, Was intended by the lawgiver to be limited to its first and literal sense, embracing only such things as are immovable by their nature, as lands, buildings, &c.

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Bluebook (online)
12 La. Ann. 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voorhies-v-deblanc-la-1857.