delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is founded on a contract, entered into between the plaintiff and the ancestor of the defendants. He obtained judgment for the principal sum claimed, and also for interest, &c., from which the defendants appealed.
The principal debt is not contested before this court, but the counsel for the appellants, complains of the allowance of interest, which was adjudged to have commenced from the death of the obligor. The interest was allowed in pursuance of the 989th article of the Code of Practice, which is expressed in the following terms; “ As the creditors of estates administered by curators or testamentary executors, &c., can only obtain payment after certain delays, interest shall be allowed on their debts, if the estate be sufficient, from the death of the debtor, if they were due at the time, or from the date *362when they became due, if it were after that event, although no judicial demand may have been made.”
The Oode of Practice fixes the period when interestshould commence to run by the death of the debtor, but indicates no period when it ought to cease: consequently, it must be considered as a legal accesary, accompanying and supported by the principal until payment.The succession of Withers was administered by a testamentary executor, from whom payment of the debt claimed in the present suit, was demanded, but it was not paid. After the executor had settled his accounts, and been discharged from further administration of the succession, payment was amicably demanded from some of the heirs, and the demand not having been complied with, the present suit was commenced.
The Code of Practice fixes the period when interest should commence to run, by the death of the debtor, but indicates no period when it ought to cease; consequently, it must be considered as a legal accessary, accompanied and supported by the principal until payment. Contrary to this plain proposition, it is argued in favor of the' appellants, that delay, which impedes the recovery of debts from a succession administered by a curator or testamentary executor, is limited to three months, and in proof of this we are referred to the article 1167 of the Louisiana Code. This article prohibits a curator of a vacant succession from the payment of its debts, (except some which may be privileged by law,) until three months after the succession may have been opened, and then only in the manner prescribed in subsequent articles.
The argument is, that as interest is granted in consequence of impediments imposed by law to the recovery of the debts, and that as such impediments cease after the expiration oí three months, interest ought, also, to cease, and be recovered only after judicial demand. It is the argumentum cessante ratione cessat ipsa lex. It is certainly entitled to consideration, but in our opinion, ought not to prevail in the present instance. Three months is the time limited, within which a curator of a vacant estate is not permitted to pay its creditors, (and we shall consider the office of testamentary executor in the same light,) but much greater delays may occur by operation of law, in the classification of the debts, collecting ■ those due to the succession, in acquiring the funds necessary to make payments, and various other ways, all which, we *363presume, it was the intention of the legislature to cover by the article of the Code of Practice. It is general in its terms, giving only the commencement when interest shall begin to run, without limitation to its course; it must, therefore, as in all other cases, where debts carry legal interest, continue , until payment.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed with costs.