(dissenting). This suit is brought 10 years after the death of Ferdinand Beer to revive a judgment obtained against him in his lifetime. It is against, his children and heirs for one half and against his widow, as survivor in community, for the other half. Because the petition does not contain an allegation that the heirs have accepted the succession of the decedent, and the widow the community, an exception of no cause of action was sustained below, and, after having been at first overruled by this *695court, lias on rehearing been sustained. From that conclusion I respectfully dissent.
I cannot better open the discussion than by reproducing here the following from Mourlon’s commentary on articles 775 and 777 of the Code Napoléon, the system of heir-ship there considered and ours being the same:
“In the manner of acquiring the succession the ancient Roman law recognized two classes of heirs: (1) Necessary heirs; and (2) voluntary heirs.
“The necessary heir acquired the succession from the moment it was opened; he acquired it without his knowledge and even against his will; from the moment it is open, it is irrevocably acquired.
“This theory is advantageous in one respect and fatal in another. The necessary heir who has survived the decedent even for one moment transmits the succession to his heirs, confounded with his own. This is the favorable side of the system. But, the necessary heir not being allowed to repudiate the succession and having to pay the debts ultra vires suecessionis, it is easy to understand how grievous is his position when the succession has more debts than property.
“The voluntary heir acquires the property only if he so desires, and by manifesting the intention to do so; until then he is entitled to become heir, but is n.ot yet such. In other words, he acquires from the moment of the opening of the succession not the inheritance itself, but only the right to acquire it by accepting. It is not the inheritance that comes to him, but he who goes to it.
“This theory has its good and its bad aspect; it allows the heir to reject the succession that is burdensome; in that connection it is more useful than the other; but in another connection it is less so. The voluntary heir who has survived the de cujus and who dies before having accepted does not transmit the inheritance to his own heirs, since he has never acquired it by accepting.
“The Code, by a felicitous combination, has conceived an intez-mediate system which guards against all the dangers and unites all the advantages of the two opposite systems which the Roman law followed.
“The heir is made similar to the necessary heir in that he acquires the inheritance the moment it is opened, even without his knowledge; le mort saisit le vif. If he survive the decedent even for a moment only, he transmits the succession to his heirs along with his own. He differs from the necessary heir in this, that he is at liberty to repudiate, that is, to abandon, the inheritance with which the law has invested him. No one is heir who wishes not to be.
“He is made similar to the voluntary heir in the sense that he is not heir despite his will to the contrary. He differs from the voluntary heir in that he acquires the succession even without his knowledge and without needing to accept it.
“The system may be thus formulated: The heir acquires the succession from the moment it is open; he does not need to accept it in order to acquire it; the law accepts it for him; but it allows him not to retain this inheritance which it has thus placed in his patrimony. He is heir etiam ignorans, sed non in vitus.
“He is heir not under the suspensive condition of accepting, but under the resolutory condition of renouncing. If he accepts, the resolutory condition under which he was heir having failed, the heirship becomes fixed; the seizin is now definitive, iri-evocable. If he renounces, the resolutory condition under which he was heir being accomplished, he is reputed having never been heir; the seizin, the acquisition of the inheritance, is annihilated, not for the future alone, but also for the past. Hence the accepting renders the seizin irrevocable; the renouncing destroys it retroactively.”
The foregoing is what article 1014 of the Civil Code means when it says:
“Art. 1014. He who is called to the succession, being seized thereof in right, is considered the heir, as long as he does not manifest the will to divest himself of that right by renouncing the succession.”
And the system itself expounded in the foregoing extract is embodied in the following articles of the Code:
“Art. 940. A succession is acquired by the legal heir, who is called by law to the inheritance, immediately after the death of the deceased person to whom he succeeds.
“This x*ule applies also to testamentary heirs, to instituted heirs and universal legatees, but not to particular legatees.
“Art. 941. The right mentioned in the preceding article is acquired by the heir by the Operation of the law alone, before he has taken any step to put himself in possession, or has expressed any will to accept it.
“Thus children, idiots, those who ai-e ignorant of the death of the deceased, are not the less *697considered as being seized of the succession, though they be merely seized of right and not in fact.
“Art. 942. The heir being considered seized of the succession from the moment of its being-opened, the right of possession, -which the deceased had, continues in the person of the heir, as if there had been no interruption, and independent of the fact of possession.
“Art. 943. The right of possession, which the deceased had, being continued in the person of his heir, it results that this possession is transmitted to the heir with all its defects, as well as all its advantages, the change in the proprietor producing no alteration in the nature of the possession.
“Thus the extent of the rights of the deceased regulates those of the heir, who succeeds to all his rights which can be transmitted, that is, to all those which are not, like usufruct, attached to the person of the deceased.
“Art. 944. The heir being considered as having succeeded to the deceased from the instant of his death, the first effect of this right is that the heir transmits the succession to his own heirs, with the right of accepting or renouncing, although he himself have not accepted it, and even in case he was ignorant that the succession was opened in his favor.
“Art. 945. The second effect of this right is to authorize the heir to institute all the actions, even possessory ones, which the deceased had a right to institute, and to prosecute those already commenced. For the heir, in everything, represents the deceased, and is of full right in his place as well for his rights as his obligations.”
Article 1014 merely expresses the logical deduction from these articles 940-945, and as the logical deduction from this article 1014 and these articles 940-945 we have articles 1000, 1417, and 1418, which read:
“Art. 1000. The person called to the succession does an act, which makes him liable as heir, if, when cited before a court of justice as heir for a debt of the deceased, he suffers judgment to be given against him in that capacity, without claiming the benefit of inventory or renouncing the succession.”
“Art. 1417. Titles which carry execution against the deceased are also executory against the heir personally; nevertheless the creditors cannot obtain execution on them, until ten days after the notification of them be made to the person, or left at the domicile of the heir.”
“Art. 1418. The heir, on being notified thereof, may oppose the execution, before the tribunal having cognizance of the matter, on his simple motion; and if he prove that he has claimed the delays for deliberating, the execution shall be suspended until the delays have expired.”
This article 1000 says that the heir becomes, “liable as heir,” i. e., unconditionally, if, “when cited before a court of justice as heir,” he does not claim the benefit of inventory or renounce the succession. Therefore he may be sued as heir before he has accepted or become Unconditionally bound.
Article 1000 provides for suits via ordina-ria ; articles 1417 and 1418 for suits via ex-ecutiva. And these articles contemplate suits brought against the heir before he has accepted.
Cross on Successions, the really only comprehensive analysis of our law of successions we have, says at page 333:
“The rule le mort saisit le vif applies to the passive estate of the deceased, that is to say, his debts, as well as to the aetif, or his property. Although the liability of the heir may be destroyed by his renunciation of the succession, or suspended by his acceptance under benefit of inventory, yet the law looks upon him as the debtor at the moment of the opening of the succession. So C. C. 1417 and 1418 provide that titles which carry execution against the deceased are also executory against the heir personally.”
Most of the articles composing chapters IV and VI of Book III of our Code, whose headings are “In What Manner Successions are Opened” and “In What Manner Successions are Accepted, and How They are Renounced,” which are the articles which govern the matter now under discussion, weije taken verbatim from the Code Napolfion. What has been added may be said to have been taken from Toullier on Successions, tit. 1, c. 1, § 3. For, becoming satisfied that while adopting said articles our codifiers had the text of Toullier under their eyes, we need only refer to this text, as, for instance, the following:
*699“The seizin which the maxim le mort saisit le vif produces is the decodent’s right of possession. which continues in the person of the heir. This right, at the instant of the death, and by sole Operation 'of law, passes to the person called to the succession; it passes immediately and without interruption, along with the right to possess, independently of the fact of possession, even before the heir knows of the opening of the succession.
“But the seizin of the heir being only the continuation of the possession of the decedent, it has the same vices as well as the same advantages. * * *
“82. The legal seizin produces two remarkable effects. The first is that at the instant of the death of the decedent it gives to the person called to the succession the right to transfer the inheritance to his own heirs, so that, if he died one instant after him to whom he has succeeded, his heirs would receive the succession of which he is thus seized, oven without his knowing it, and they would be thus seized from the moment of his death.
“The second effect is to authorize the heir to institute all the actions, even possessory ones, which the decedent had a right to institute, and to prosecute those already commenced. He is possessor of everything the decedent was possessor of, owner of everything he was owner of, creditor of everything he was creditor of.”
I need not translate further, as the first sentence of this last paragraph is reproduced verbatim in the first sentence of article 945 of the Code, and the exact substance of the second sentence is reproduced in said article by the second sentence of the article, read ing;
“Eor the heir, in everything, represents the deceased, and is of full right in his place as well for his rights as his obligations.”
This close connection between the text of Toullier and that of the said chapters of the Code throws a direct light on our question: for in the very next section, section 83, Toul-lier adds:
“The legal seizin which the law thus vests in the heir is not solely for his benefit, but also equally for that of the creditors of the succession. They may, immediately after the death of the decedent, institute against the presumptive heir all the actions they had against the decedent. A11 the heir can do is to suspend momentarily their effect, or even, by renouncing the succession, put an end to them entirely.”
In the majority opinion it is said:
“If the framers of the Civil Code had intended that an heir who had neither accepted nor renounced the succession should be deemed liable for the debts of the succession, such a provision would have been written in the Code.”
Article 945 says:
“The heir, in everything, represents the deceased, and is of full right in his place as well for his rights as his obligations.”
Satis verborum.
The majority opinion is founded on the theory that article 946 of the Code suspends the operation of the hereinabove transcribed articles of the Code, and that articles 1036-1055 of the Code and articles 977 and 979 of the Code of Practice modify them.
It would be strange if, after having taken the trouble to provide with meticulous particularity as it has done in said articles 940-945 and 1000, 1014, 1417, and 1418 for a system by which the heir steps into the shoes of the decedent without any interregnum whatever, our law should have added a provision by which all this system should be suspended in the sense of being absolutely stayed in its operation until set in motion by acceptance.
The word “suspense” is defined by Webster’s New International Dictionary as rol-lows:
“1. State of being suspended.
“2. State of uncertainty; indecision.
“3. Cessation for a time; pause; suspension.”
We cannot attribute to this article 946 the meaning of saying that these other articles áre in a state of cessation or pause, for a law neither ceases nor pauses in its operation, but operates continuously. The meaning must be simply that the right, while already acquired, is not irrevocably fixed, so *701that it is yet in a state of imioermanence, or, if you will, uncertainty, or indecision, until acceptance. Thus read, the article harmonizes with the articles of the Code which immediately precede it; otherwise it stands in flat contradiction with them.
Early in our jurisprudence the apparent conflict between these articles came to the attention of this court. In the case of O’Donald v. Lobdell, 2 La. 299, the court, at page 303, said:
“The 940th article of the Louisiana Code declares that the right of the heir is in suspense until he accepts or renounces. Such is also the French jurisprudence on the No-poléon Code; but it is considered in that country that, while the heir is deliberating whether he will irrevocably take the title, he may sue and be sued, on account of the succession, save that in the latter ease judgment cannot be rendered against him until the time given by law for his decision expires. The provisions in our Code authorizing the appointment of an administrator do not appear to us to change, in anything, this right in the heir, unless steps are taken by the creditors to have such an officer appointed. Toullier, loco citato, Nos. 83 and 84; La. Code, 1031, 1046, 1034, 1048.”
Article 946 of our present Code was number 940 in the Code of 1825.
In Calvit v. Mulhollan, 12 Rob. 258, this court, at page 263, said:
“But it has been urged that, by article 940 of the Civil Code, the right of the heir to the succession is in suspense until he accepts or renounces; and hence it is argued that his right is incomplete, that is to say, that he is not vested with the inheritance so as to entitle him to keep it, unless he declares that he accepts it absolutely. This article immediately follows those which are the basis of our opinion, and which declare, that the heir acquires the succession by the mere effect of the law; and we cannot suppose that the lawmaker ever intended to" destroy the effect of the previous provisions, particularly as article 940 recognizes again in positive terms that ‘the succession is acquired by the heir from the moment of the death of the deceased.’ We understand this article to mean that, although the heir represents the deceased as fully as if there had been no interruption, his right to the inheritance shall only become definitive after he has accepted it, but that he shall also be at liberty to reject it.”
In Davis v. Elkins, 9 La. 135, a contrary view was expressed. But tlie case was one governed by the Code of 1808, as appears by the following:
“It does riot appear that the fictitious being-created by the Civil Code of 3808 has been kept alive by any provision of that of' 1S25. But in our opinion it lived long enough, and represented the ancestors of the plaintiffs a length of time sufficient to give the defendants, a title to the property in litigation by prescription.”
The provision of the Code of ISOS here referred t9 is article 74, p. 162. It reads:
“Until the,acceptance or renunciation, the inheritance is considered a fictitious being, representing in every respect the deceased, who was the owner of the estate,” etc.
Although the very opposite of this is provided for in the most express, explicit terms by the Code of 1825 and by our present Code, the court in that case goes on to hold that the estate does not vest in the heir until acceptance, but is vested in this fictitious being. If this were so, no change would have been wrought by the articles hereinabove transcribed, which, be it noted, were adopted for the very purpose of making a change. The reasoning of the court (entirely academic, by the way, for the case, as shown by. the extract supra, was governed by the Code of 1808) is that if the heir continued the person and possession of the decedent, such a thing as a vacant succession would be an impossibility. Hence, argues the court, the effect of article 946 is to paralyze all the other articles by which the heir is seized, etc. The court lost sight of the fact that in the Code Napoleon, upon which our succession system is modeled, there is no provision corresponding with this article 946, and yet that our present codal provisions regarding vacant successions were taken from the Code NapolSon. If any inconsistency ex*703isted between tbis seizin of the heir and the vacancy of successions within the meaning of the Code, it would' be strange that the searching analysis of the French commentators had never found it out. This suffices for demonstrating the utter fallacy of this argument of the supposed inconsistency between the seizin- of the heir and the provisions regarding vacant successions. To. go into any further consideration of the nonexistence such supposed inconsistency would but incumber unnecessarily the present opinion.
In the passage reproduced by the majority opinion in the present case from the decision in Citizens’ Bank v. Heirs of Jorda, 45 La. Ann. 184, 11 South. 876, this court expressed the view that—
“An heir cannot be treated as such until he has evidenced in some form his intention to accept the inheritance.”
That case does not seem to have been particularly well considered. The object of that suit was to annul a judicial sale made in executory process proceedings carried on contradictorily with the agent of the heirs. The contention was, among others, that the heirs could not thus be proceeded against personally. The executory process proceedings in question had been in foreclosure of a Citizens’ Bank mortgage, a form of mortgage well known to hat'e been the most iron-clad executory title ever devised by the ingenuity of man. The law applicable to the liability of the heirs to be thus proceeded against on such a title was article 1417, supra, which in so many words authorizes the proceeding to be against the heir “personally” when the title is executory, and, as shown by article 1418, so authorizes it before he has accepted. All the court would have had to do for disposing of that point would have been to cite this article. So devoid of all difficulty was this point that Mr. Henry Denis, the very able lawyer of the Citizens’ Bank, apparently did not consider it necessary to cite any authorities upon it, as none are cited in the syllabus of his brief, reproduced in the report of the case.
Another circumstance which shows that the said proposition was announced by the court without very careful consideration having been given to the matter is that the matter was not reasoned out, and no other foundation was laid for the proposition than the citation of article 99’8 of the Code and the case of Mumford v. Bowman, 26 La. Ann. 417. No other authority was cit'ed in support of it. Now, there was no question in Mumford v. Bowman of an heir being suable or not before acceptance. The sole issue in that case was as to whether a certain intervention which Mrs. Bowman had filed in the proceedings of her father’s succession constituted a tacit acceptance. And, so far as the said article 998 is concerned, it simply formulates the principle that conservatory acts do not constitute tacit acceptance. All this, needless to say, has nothing to do with the question of whether or not an heir may be sued before acceptance subject to his right to stay or defeat the suit by claiming the delay for deliberation or by renouncing.
At all events, for reaching -the conclusion to which the court arrived that an heir can be sued as the representative of the succession before he has accepted, there was no necessity of announcing the said proposition: for the fact that an heir is liable to be sued as representative of the succession is no reason for his not being liable to be sued personally.
Indeed, if he can be sued at all as representative of the succession, it is only for the reason that he may be sued personally. And in this Jorda Case the court, without realizing what it was doing, gave no other reason. This I say because for the sole reason of its said conclusion the court cited article 1014, *705supra, which does not show that the heir may be sued as the representative of the succession, but does show that he may be sued personally, and article 874, which has no relevance. It reads:
“Art. 874. Finally, succession signifies also that right ¿y which the heir can take possession of the estate of the deceased, such as it may be.”
When article 940, supra, says that the succession is acquired by the heir immediately after the death of the deceased, and article 941, supra, says that he so acquires by operation of law alone before he has expressed any .will to accept, and article 942, supra, says that, he being thus considered seized of the succession, the right of possession continues in him without interruption, and article 944, supra, says that he is considered to have succeeded to the deceased from the instant of the latter’s death, and article 945, supra, says that he may bring all actions even possessory ones, and article 1014, supra, says that he being thus seized (i. e., having the seizin) of the succession is considered to be the heir until he renounces. The meaning is not that all this happens to the heir in a representative capacity, as the legal representative of the abstraction called succession, constituted of the rights and obligations of the decedent, but the meaning is that all this happens to him personally; that he thus succeeds to the decedent and is vested with the seizin in his proper person and for his own self.
Very evidently, then, if because the heir is thus considered to be heir he may be sued as the representative of the succession, a fortiori, for the same reason, may he be sued personally.
How illogical and unreasonable it would be on the part of our law to consider the heir to be the., heir before he has accepted, and not to allow all parties in interest so in like manner to consider him, and bring suit against him accordingly.
The whole trouble with the said proposition announced (more or less obiter) in this Jorda Case, and with the conclusion arrived at by the majority opinion in this present case, results from the distinction not being observed between holding the heir unconditionally liable for the debts of the decedent before acceptance and allowing him to be sued subject to his right to.stay the suit or defeat it altogether by claiming the delay for deliberating or renouncing.
So long as the debts of the decedent have not been paid, his succession presents two aspects — one in which it is vested sub modo (subject to renunciation) in the heir; and one in which it is an ideal being, an abstraction, constituted of the rights and obligations of the decedent, something after the fashion of a corporation. Tulane University v. Board of Assessors, 115 La. 1029, 40 South. 445. If the heir eventually accepts, the acceptance “goes back to the opening of the succession” (C. C. 987), and the heir “is considered as having succeeded to the deceased from the moment of his death” (O. C. 946). If he eventually renounces, the renunciation relates back in the same way, and “he is considered as never having received it.” See same article, C. C. 946. Meantime the succession is vested sub modo in the heir for all purposes. Soye v. Price, 30 La. Ann. 93. If at the desire of the heirs or of the creditors the succession is to be dealt with as a legal abstraction or ideal being, then the law provides who shall be the agents or legal representatives of the succession to have charge of it. The law so provides both when the succession is vacant, i. e., when the heirs are unknown or renounce (O. C. 1095 et seq.) and when the heir desires to accept with benefit of inventory (O. C. 1032 et seq.). This court held in Succession of Lamm, 40 La. Ann. 312, 4 South. 53, that the succession *707may be administered by the heir who has accepted with benefit of inventory. In so holding the court went very far; for the Code, in article 1082 et sect-, would seem to require that an administrator be appointed whenever the heir claims the delay for deliberating. Article 1041. However, by allowing the heir who has thus accepted to represent this ideal being or abstraction called succession, no complications can be brought about in actual practice; for he is then holding really for the creditors, and may well, therefore, serve as their legal representative in what concerns the succession. But to allow the heir who has not yet accepted the succession to represent it is to allow a person to do so who will, in the event of renunciation, turn out to have been a stranger to the succession at the time he was acting as its legal representative. It is to allow the succession to be dealt with both as an abstraction, i. e., something representing merely the rights and obligations of the decedent, and therefore not yet passed to the heir, but to be in charge of some agent of its own, and as something which the law has vested in the heir, of which he has the seizin, and may personally represent in piossessory actions. The two situations are the antipodes of each other; they cannot coexist. It is not difficult to foresee how complications may arise from allowing an heir who has not yet acceptéd to act as the legal representative of this abstraction or ideal being called succession. If he is the representative of the succession, the succession may' be sued contradictorily with him. Now, let us suppose that a judgment on a moneyed demand has been obtained against the succession s.o represented, and has been so obtained by default, the heir paying no attention to it, and that the heir has subsequently renounced ; would such a judgment be res judicata as against the other creditors of the insolvent succession, and entitled as such to participate pro rata in the proceeds of the sale of the property of the succession? If a valid judgment, it would be so entitled; and it would be a valid judgment if obtained contradictorily with a representative of the succession, and, being res Judicata, the door would be closed to any attempt on the part of the other creditors of the succession to show that the debt upon which it was rendered was not due.
Again, a suit cannot be brought on ,a moneyed demand against a succession without the claim having first been presented to the legal representative of the succession for acceptance or rejection. Now, if an heir, acting as heir, represented the succession in such a matter would he not necessarily be doing so in his quality of heir, and not as a mere conservatory measure, and would he not, therefore, be taking the quality of heir, and as a consequence tacitly accepting the succession?
My conclusion is that, until the heir has accepted, with or without the benefit of inventory, he cannot act as the legal representative of the succession except for purely conservatory acts. O. O. 997. What acts are or are not purely conservatory I need not go into. Suffice it that—
“The power to represent a principal in the defense of actions is not one of administration.” Hennen, Dig. p. 833, No. 9.
The heir is considered the heir because “the succession is acquired by him immediately after the death of the deceased” (le mort saisit le vif), “by operation of law”; he is “considered seized of the succession from the moment it is opened,” i. e., from the moment of the death of the decedent; “the right of possession which the deceased had continues in the person of the heir, as if there had been no interruption;” “this right authorizes the heir to institute all the actions, even possessory ones, which the deceased had a right to institute, and to prose*709cute those 'already commenced; for the heir-in everything represents the deceased and is of full right in his place as well for his rights as his obligations.”
It is because of these legal provisions that tlie heir is “considered to be the heir”; but the purport of these provisions is that the heir has stepped into the shoes of the decedent, “continued his person,” and that as a consequence there is no succession (i. e., no ideal being or abstraction) for him to represent. He simply represents himself. He has become vested with the property, and subject to all the obligations. The existence of a succession (in the sense of an ideal being, or abstraction, constituting the rights and obligations of the decedent) presupposes that the heir has not thus stepped into the shoes- of the decedent, “continued his person,”. etc. By being considered to be the heir is here meant considered to have stepped into the shoes of the decedent and continued his person. This has nothing whatever to do with representing the succession of the decedent, the very existence of which succession presupposes, I repeat, that the heir has not stepped into the shoes of the decedent.
My understanding is that this ideal being or abstraction called succession is a pure fiction, coexisting with the investiture of the heir, in no way conflicting with it; that by accepting with- benefit of inventory the heir ipso facto constitutes himself the legal representative of this abstraction, subject to the right of the creditors to require .that an administrator with bond be appointed or that the heir himself give bond.
My understanding of the legal situation is, further, that the heir in undertaking to act as the representative of the succession in his quality of heir before acceptance cannot go beyond mere conservatory acts; that, if' he does, he ipso facto accepts the succession tacitly, and becomes unconditionally liable as heir. And my understanding is, further, that to represent the succession in a judicial proceeding, except temporarily as a mere conservatory measure until a regular representative may be appointed by the court, would necessarily constitute an acceptance, no matter how much the heir might protest to the contrary. .The situation would be one where actions spoke louder than words. It not being possible to eat your cake and have it, too.
Recurring to the view taken by the majority opinion that the hpir is not liable to be sued personally because by operation of article 946, supra, his heirship is in suspense until he has accepted, I will add to what I have already said that the position of this article in the Code, following article 940 et seq., supra, clearly indicates that what is meant by being “in suspense” is merely that the heir is not unconditionally bound, not that he does not continue the person of the decedent, stand in his shoes, become vested with the property, etc., and therefore liable to be sued. . To give this article any other interpretation would place it in flat contradiction with article 940 et seq., supra, immediately preceding it.
If by being “in suspense” was meant a complete abeyance of the heirship, the situation would be that as long as the suspense lasted there would be no heir — a consequence which would be as fatal to the. proposition of the heir being qualified to represent the succession as to the proposition of his being liable to be sued. The majority opinion is therefore inconsistent with itself when it holds that the suspension of the heirship prevents the heir from being sued for a debt of the decedent, and yet does not prevent him from representing the succession.
The majority opinion reads article 1000, supra, of the Code as having reference to a suit merely to compel the heir to accept or renounce. The article says: When an *711heir “is cited before a court' of justice as heir for a debt of the deceased” and “suffers judgment to go against him in that capacity,” etc. If by this is not meant that in the suit itself brought by authority of this article (before the heir has accepted) for a debt of the decedent judgment may be rendered for the debt, I do not understand the English language, or I do not understand the meaning of words.
The majority opinion would attribute to said article no wider scope than to articles 979 and 980 of the Code of Practice, and the articles of the Civil Code corresponding with them. These articles read:
“Art. 979. Where the presumptive heir of a person deceased has not prayed for time to deliberate, every creditor or legatee of the deceased may, ten p days after the opening of the succession, cite such heir to appear before the judge of probate, and call on him to declare whether he accepts the succession or refuses it.
“Art. 980. If the heir thus cited declares that he accepts, or if he be silent or mate default, he shall be considered as having accepted the succession purely and unconditionally, and may be sued as if he had done so.”
The suit which the creditors are authorized by these articles to bring is a suit to compel declaration on the part of the heirs to accept or renounce. It is not a suit to compel them to pay the debt. Eor bringing the latter kind of suit the creditors stand in no need of special authorization; no more so than any other creditor against his debtor. This right to bring suit to compel a prompt declaration of acceptance or rejection is a special right which would not exist without having been specially conferred. Its utility is in clearing the atmosphere for the creditor, in order that he may be advised without unnecessary delay how matters stand. He may not want to sue the heir personally, or to have the property of the succession commingled with the patrimony of the heir. He may want an administrator to be appointed with bond. And this suit to compel prompt acceptance or rejection is merely an additional means afforded him for the protection of his claims. To turn this provision against him for depriving him of the right to sue the heir which he would otherwise have would be to turn against him a provision devised in his favor. These articles do not say that the creditor may not bring the suit which article 1000, supra, clearly indicates he may bring. What they say is that by acceptance or by default in the kind of suit they authorize the heir becomes unconditionally bound. This is not saying that the heir may not'be sued subject to his right to renounce or claim the delay for deliberating.
Up to now I have dealt with the case only as affecting the heirs. I will now consider it as affecting the widow. It may be done briefly. The community of acquets and gains “is' a right of partnership or community of acqudts and gains.” O. 0. 2399. It consists not only of the profits, but also of the debts. O. C. 2403. While the husband administers this partnership as its head, the wife is partner and half owner. Succession of Popp, 146 La. 473, 83 South. 765. This ownership is, however, altogether contingent so long as the community exists. At the dissolution of the community by the death of the husband, this ownership becomes fixed, though subject to the payment of the debts of the community. The widow is allowed to renounce the community, and' thus liberate herself from its debts. 0. 0. arts. 2410 and 2411. But she is presumed to have accepted, and thus is presumed to be liable for her half of the debts. And,, acting on this presumption, the creditors of the community may sue her for her half of the community debts, and if she does not in defense to such a suit plead that she has not accepted; and claim the delay for deliberating whether to accept, or to accept with benefit of inventory, judg*713ment must go against her. C. C. art. 2417. That the surviving widow is thus presumed to have accepted, see authorities cited in original opinion. That her ownership of one-half of the community property thus becomes fixed results as a necessary deduction from the said articles of the Code. And see, also, in that connection Succession of Dumestre, 42 La. Ann. 412, 7 South. 624, and authorities there cited, where it is said:
“When the community of acquéts and gains was dissolved by the death of the wife, the respective interest of the surviving husband and of the deceased wife attached at the moment of its dissolution to the property of the community, subject to the payment of the community debts.”
See authorities there cited to effect that at death of husband wife’s ownership becomes thus fixed, subject always to payment of debts. For the purpose of the settlement of the debts the community continues to exist as a fictitious being, in the same way that the succession of the decedent exists as a fictitious being for the settlement of the debts of the succession; but no more here than in the case of the heir does this fiction, which is a mere fiction, interfere with the reality of things. It exists only potentially, to be made use of if necessary for the purposes of the settlement of the debts of the community — i. e., in the interest of the creditors. This fiction does not displace the fact of the survivor in community being vested with the ownership of one-half of the property, and of being thus vested cum onere — i. e., subject to liability for the debts. She takes her half of the property and her half of the debts together, with the privilege on her part of renouncing, and thus liberating herself.
The opinion in Titche v. Lee, 22 La. Ann. 435, cited in the majority opinion, being short, may be reproduced here in full:
“The plaintiff instituted this suit against the defendant as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, and also asked for a judgment against her personally, upon the allegation that she ‘is partner in community, that the notes (in suit) are debts due by the community, which existed between the deceased and Mrs. Amanda M. Lee, at the time of their execution, and that therefore she is bound for one-half of petitioner’s claim.’
“There was judgment for plaintiff upon one of the notes, for the full amount against the defendant in her representative capacity, and for the half thereof individually; and she has appealed.
"The succession of Lee was opened in 1863 by the appointment of the defendant as admin-istratrix, and an inventory was regularly made. So far as we can perceive she has managed the estate as administratrix only, and has not, as widow, concealed or made way with any of the effects of the partnership or community of gains. C. 0. 2387. But the plaintiff contends that she is personally liable, because, up to the time this action was instituted, she had not renounced the community. It would seem, however, that the surviving wife has the thirty days allowed to á beneficiary heir, to make a choice between renunciation and acceptance. After the expiration of this delay she may be forced, by suit, to make her decision, in the same manner as an heir, and then judgment may be rendered against her personally if she does not renounce. Thus she has, for thirty days, a right of deliberation, and her deliberations cannot be disturbed by the action to compel a choice. But after this delay has expired she still has a right of renunciation, for, in the action to compel, a judgment is to be rendered against her personally ‘unless she renounces.’ The phrase implies a continued power of renunciation. C. C. 2383; C. P. 980, 982; Succession of Richardson, 14 Ann. 1.
“The pleadings and the evidence do not justify the personal judgment appealed from, nor do we feel authorized in this form of action to render the judgment contemplated in article 2383, C. 0.
“It is therefore ordered that the judgment, so far as it is a personal one against Amanda M. Lee, be avoided and reversed; that in all other respects the said judgment be affirmed; and that the plaintiff pay costs of appeal.”
What the contention was in that case is stated by the court. Says the court:
“Plaintiff contends that she, ‘the widow,’ is personally liable, because up to the time -this action was instituted she had not renounced.”
*715The case was not presented on exception of no cause of action, invoking a deficiency of pleading, but was presented on the question of whether under the evidence and under articles 2413 and 2414 of our present Code (articles 2382 and 2383 of Code of 1825) the widow had lost her right to renounce, and therefore was unconditionally liable. The court recited what the evidence consisted of, and adverted to the said articles of the Code, and held that under this evidence and under these articles the widow had not lost her right to renounce, and that therefore personal judgment could not be rendered against her.
True, the court incidentally remarked that neither the heir nor the widow can be sued before the expiration of the delay for deliberation. But this was said only incidentally, and is only one of those observations which courts make sometimes without much thought as to what foundation there may be for thorn. I believe I have demonstrated hereinabove that there is no foundation for it in so far as the heir is concerned; and the foundation which the court assigns for the proposition as to the widow is that the proposition is true as to the heir.
I do not question at all that when sued before acceptance the widow may, like the heir, defeat or delay the suit by renouncing or claiming the time for deliberating. But, as in the case of the'heir, this does not mean that she may not be sued, subject to this right on her part. Of course, the creditor could rebut this defense by showing that she had accepted, either expressly or tacitly by having done acts importing acceptance. Her mere denial of acceptance would overcome the presumption of acceptance: for this denial would be one of those negatives not susceptible of proof, and therefore not required to be proved.
The exception of no cause of action based upon the absence from the petition of an allegation of acceptance amounts to a contention that a thing which the law presumes to exist must be alleged to exist; in other words, that what the law itself establishes as a legal fact must be alleged as a fact. So that, if instead of assuming that the court would take judicial knowledge of this presumption the plaintiff in the present case had alleged it, the petition would have been good. To my mind, such a contention is not only not well founded, but, with all due dof-erenee, is hardly worthy of being dealt with seriously. The allegation would have had to be something like the following, to wit:
“Petitioner further alleges that the law presumes the defendant widow to have accepted the community, and therefore petitioner alleges that she is so presumed to have accepted and alleges accordingly.”
The object of pleading is to advise the adversary of something which would not otherwise be known, so that the adversary may be in a position to defend. In what way an allegation such as the above would advise the widow of something of which she stood in need to be informed for making her defense I fail entirely to see.