The judgment of the court was pronounced by
Preston, J.The plaintiff and her husband made a marriage contract, by an authentic act, dated the 5th of January, 1839. A community was established according to the laws of the State. The husband brought nothing in marriage. The wife brought in marriage, and constituted her dower, “the capital sum of eight thousand dollars, placed, in commendam, in the commercial house of Bernard Laudumiey, of this city, as is made manifest by her act of association, in commendam, with the house, passed before the notary on the 3d of April, 1837 also, “the capital sura of ten thousand dollars, placed, in commendam, in the commercial house of Joneau, Meloyer Sf Co., of this city, as is made manifest by her act of association, in commendam, with Antoine Joneau, passed before Seghers, notary, the 24th of May, 1838.”
The husband bound himself to collect, take charge of and secure these sums. On the 27th of April, 1839, by a notarial act, he declared, that in pursuance of the clauses in his marriage contract, he had settled with Laudumiey, and received from him $9,500, in full of the capital sum of eight thousand dollars, placed, in commendam, for account of his wife in the co-partnership formed between her and him, and for her share of the profits of the partnership.
On the 28th of June, 1839, an authentic act of dissolution of partnership was passed between the husband and Antoine Joneau, in which he acknowledges to have received, in negotiable drafts, $11,300, the capital and interest placed by his wife,.«w commendam, in partnership with Joneau.
In 1842, Mrs. Blanchard brought suit against her husband, on account of his embarrassments, for a separation of property, and claimed judgment for the above amounts, and also for $8,000, which she alleged she had inherited, and her husband had received from her father, and for which she produced notarial receipts. A. C. Blanchard, the husband, admitted the facts; a judgment for a separation of property was rendered, and also for $31,725, the aggregate amount of the above mentioned claims. An execution was issued and returned unsatisfied.
In 1842, Nugent, Hopkins &¡■ Co. obtained judgment against Blanchard for $1579 90, and, in 1850, issued execution against him and seized a sum of near five hundred dollars due to him by the Second Municipality of New Orleans. They had brought a suit in 1843 against Blanchard and Wife, to annul the judgment in her favor against him, on the ground that he had received nothing on her account; that her suit against him was not defended, but that judgment was confessed, which could not have been obtained if the suit had been defended; and that the judgment was rendered to defraud them, being creditors of Blanchard, at the time. This suit was put at issue by an answer, but has never been disposed of.
Nugent, Hopkins 8f Co. having seized the debt due by the municipality, Mrs. Blanchard also issued an execution and seized it, and then took a rule upon them to show cause why it should not be paid over to her, ns a privileged creditor, for her dower. They answered, that the judgment in her favor was confessed, and could, not have been obtained if the suit had been defended; that they had brought suit to annul it; that they were judgment creditors of Blanchard, and had seized the money due by the municipality to him.
Where the wife claims as her dower, by. marriage contract,1large sums placed by her father in her name, in certain partnerships, in commendam, audit appears, from the evidence, that the money was returned by the partnerships t.o her father and not to her husband, and she fails to show that the money was originally hers, or how; she came into possession of it, the transaction will be, as to creditors, regarded as fictitious.The rule was tiled and made absolute, by a judgment ordering the money to be paid to Mrs Blanchard, in preference to any "other creditor. Nugent, Hopkins Sf Co. have appealed.
It has been fully settled by many decisions, that, as'to the creditors of the husband, the wife must proke the reality of her dower, and that it was received by the husband, by other evidence than the acknowledgment of the husband or the judgment of the court. 2d Ann. 636. Dimitry v. Pollock, 5 R. R. 350. Yet the marriage contract and judgment ofseparation and for the amount of the wife’s claims are admissable in evidence, and, if fully corroborated by other evidence, will establish .the wife’s rights."
The acts in evidence show that eighteen thousand dollars were invested for Mrs. Blanchard, before her marriage, in mercantile firms. By the marriage contract it was constituted her dower.
Laudumicy proves the payment, very soon-afterthe marriage, of $9,500, in full of the principal and interest invested in the partnership with him. He thinks he paid it to Mrs. Blanchard's father; but the partnership was with her, and the account balanced and signed by him on the 31st of March, 1839, was with her and the balance in her favor. Besides, he took a receipt, and none is produced, but a discharge in full, before a notary, signed by the husband the 27th of April, 1839. - . .
The dissolution of the partnership between Mrs. Blanchard and Joneau, is signed by the attorney in fact of Joneau and th'e husband alone, in less than six months after the marriage. H? acknowledges the Receipt of negotiable drafts, in payment of that part of his wife’s dower invested for her in partnership with Joneau before her marriage.
These transactions occurred at a time not suspicious, and before the debt of the defendants in the rule (so far as the record informs us) accrued. They have offered nothing .to impeach the reality of these transactions. From them the district judge concluded that the husband had received more of his wife’s dower than the amount seized, and in controversy with the .defendants in the rule. We areled to the same conclusion by the whole of'the evidence.
The code gives the wife a privilege over the defendants in the rule for the restitution of her dowry, art. 2355, and the district court decreed, that she should be paid in preference to them. We think the judgment should be affirmed, with costs, and so decree.