Nimmo v. Allen

'The judgment of,the court was pronounced,by

Rost, J.

The defendants purchased at a sale, made under execution by the .marshal of the United States, a plantation and slaves with the improvements .thereon, and a sugar mill and kettles then on the land. The plaintiff now claims .from them the restoration of certain moveable property, which she alleges was «taken possession ofby them under that sale, and converted to their use, or the value thereof. The defendants claim title under the marshal’s sale. They .allege that the sale under which the plaintiff,claims is frudulent. and collusive, and to the injury of creditors. They ask to be maintained in their possession. There was a judgment against the ^plaintiff in the .court below, and she has .appealed.

The plaintiff sets up no claim to the land, and the ascertainment cf what passed with it under the marshal’s sale, is the only question presented by thi? .controversy. Unless the defendants have acquired a title to the property .claimed they are without capacity to contest that of the plaintiff, white it is admitted to be valid by Edioard L. Nimmo, her vendor. If that title was made m fraud of the creditors of Edward L. Nimmo, those creditors, or their repre*452sentatives, must resort to a direct action to set it aside; and if the defendants are entitled, as they allege, to be paid by preference, that right must be established contradictorily with the other creditors of the insolvent. All that was immovable passed to the defendants, under the judicial sale of the laud and improvements.

The Civil Code defines the things, which are immovable by their destination aud the objects to which they are applied. C. C. arts. 4.54, 456, 457, 459. These.dispositions of law include all the articles which the plaintiff claims, except the corn, the staves, and the building materials. These last are expressly-excluded by art. 468 of the Civil Code.

Toullier, commenting upon a similar disposition of the french Code, says ; •“ Les matériaux qui n’ont point encore été employés, quoiq.ue amenés sur 1© lieu, quoique taillés, conserv.ent leur nature de meubles, j.usqu’á ce qu’ils aient été employés etposés dans le batiment.” 3 vol. no. 19. The same rule applies ,to household furniture not attached permanently to the house. In this case no furniture is .claimed except a .stove, which appears to have been attached to the house and in use.

The defendants have acquired no title to the .corn, the hogshead staves, the .covering boards and pickets, the grate bars, the cypress logs, the sugar house frame, the brick, the oyster shells, the coolers, .troughs and the timber for a mill bed, not in use at the time of the sale.

The defendants have converted this property to their own use, and its aggre. gate value is proved to be $566. For this sum the plaintiff is entitled to a j udg. ment, with legal interest from the day of the conversion. See the case of the New Orleans Draining Company v. Lizardi et al., lately determined, ante p. 281.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment be reversed, .and that the plaintiff recover from the defendants the sum of $566, with interest at the rate of five ■per cent per .annum, from the 19th September, 1844, till paid, with costs in ¡both courts.