In the early part oi 1 67 Arnaud Li-Bourgoois. Florian LeBourgeois and Emma LeBourge is were the owners, each, of one undivided third of a plantation in the parish of St. James. On the fourth April, 1867, under a judgment against them, the property was-sold by the sheriff and purchased by Louis Chenet, the husband of the defendant, Emma LeBourgeois. In settlement therefor it appeared, by the return of the sheriff, that Chenet paid the costs, the claim of the seizing creditor and sundry other claims, and the proportion of surplus going to Arnaud LeBourgeois and Florian LeBourgeois, and retained in his hands the pro rata of such residuum due to his wife„ Emma LeBourgeois.
On the thirteenth November, 1867, a judgment of separation was-rendered against Louis Chenet in favor of his wife, Emma LeBourgeois, and he was decreed to be indebted to her in the sum of $6247 20,. with certain interest. On the second December, 1867, by act of datienen paiement, Chenet conveyed the property to his wife, the price being fixed at $7000, and the latter assuming a mortgage which had in the-meantime been imposed by Chenet on the property in favor of a third party for $3800.
On the twenty-first day of October, 1868, Mrs. Emma LeBourgeois, being still the owner oí the plantation by the act lastly recited, appeared before the recorder, assisted by her husband, Chenet, and *758declared in substance that her husband did not pay in cash at the sheriff’s1 sale of April 4, 1867, the share of surplus coming to Arnaud LeBourgeois (the plaintiff at bar), but gave his note for it; that this note amounted to $3000, principal and interest, and was still held by Arnaud. The portion of the act referred to reads as follows:
“La dito dame comparante dóclare de plus, qu’en réglement et en priiement de la part ou portion revenant au dit Sieur Arnaud LeBourgeois dans le produit de la dite vente du 4 avril 1867, le dit Sieur Louis Chenet, son époux, lid avait fournie un simple billet tiré et souscrit par lui pour la dite somme de deux mille deux cent soixaiate-treize 27-1 piastres, payables á l’ordre de M. Arnaud LeBourgeois, au bureau du recorder de cette paroisse, a vuc.
“ Que ce billet s’óléve aujourd’kui, en capital et intéréts, á la somme de trois mille piastres; n’a pas encore été payé, et est toujours la propriótó du dit Sieur Arnaud LeBourgeois.”
She then recites the separation of property and the conveyance to her of the plantation; her desire to recognize the validity of the debt and to assure its payment; and proceeds to assume the amount of it and gives her notes therefor, with the authority of her husband, which notes are accepted’ by the plaintiff and are those on which this suit is brought.
The answer admits the execution of the notes, but alleges that they “ were executed by the defendant to represent a debt contracted, by her husband during the marriage, which debt was assumed by respondent, who bound herself by means of the notes.sued upon to pay the same, in direct violation of a prohibitory law, under marital influence and in ignorance of her rights.
To this delense the plaintiff, in argument, replies that a portion of the price bid by Chenet at the sale of April 4, 1867, remained unpaid; that the sale was liable to be dissolved ior this non-payment; that the resolutory condition thus implied would operate against the land in the hands of the defendant and deprive her of it, unless she came forward and paid the amount herself; that in the language of this court in Sorrell v. Cox, 10 R. 72, “though the debt was originally contracted by the husband, it bore upon the property purchased by the wife, * * and that the debt sued on was contracted for her private benefit.”
We think the case is with the plaintiff. Chenet had not paid the price of the land and it was subject in his hands to the operation of the dissolving condition. On the principle that a man can not transfer more than he himself has, and in accordance with the rules laid down in Jones v. Crocker, 1 An. 440, and Bloodworth v. Jacobs, 12 An. 699, the land was liable in the defendant’s hands to the same formidable attack. By giving the notes in suit she postponed this attack, and their payment would perfect her title as against this claim.
*759We do not understand tile decision in Spurlock v. Mawer, 1 An. 301, to control this case.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment in favor of defendant be reversed, and that the plaintiff have judgment against the defendant, Mrs. Emma LeBourgeois, wife of Louis Clienet, for the sum of $3000, with interest at eight per cent, per annum on $500 from January 1, 1869; on $1250 from September 1,1869; and on $1250 from September 1, 1870, until paid; and costs of suit in both courts.
Rehearing refused.