Successions of Webre

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Todd, J.

The facts underlying this controversy are briefly these :

Jean Webre died in the Parish of Lafourche in 1874, leaving a sur-, viving widow in' community, Dorothée Deslattes, and twelve children, of whom Leonard Webre was one.

On tlie 25th of January, 1882, Dorothée Deslattes, the surviving widow, also died. An inventory of the two successions was made on. 1-lt.h February following. , _

On the Kith of same month Leonard Webre, one of the children and lieirs of the two deceased, as stated, by an act of elation en tenement conveyed to his wife, Mary A. Frost, his interest in bis mother’s succession, as a beneficiary heir thereto, the delivery of -which was acknowledged and the act duly recorded on same day.

, The consideration of the transfer was a debt owing by the husband to the wife—of which there is no dispute—-and the price stipulated ■ was the estimated value of the interest sold, according to the inventoried appraisement.

On the 2d of March following, an administrator was appointed to the two successions.

After having caused a sale of the plantation—-which constituted the principal property of the successions—on the 30th of December, 1882, the administrator filed a provisional account and tableau of distribution of the funds in his hands.

In the account he recites that Leonard Webre had sold his right and interest in his mother’s succession to his wife, Mary A. Frost, and proposed to pity this interest, to the extent of the funds to he distributed, to her.

*270After the filing of this account, and on the same day, Herwig, a judgment creditor of Leonard Webre, caused to be seized under a writ of fi.fa. this interest of Webre purporting to have been transferred to his wife, and on the 9th of January, 1883, filed his opposition to the account, wherein he claimed- that this interest, or the fund representing it in the administrator’s hands, should be paid to him by virtue of his said seizure.

There was judgment recognizing this claim of Herwig, and ordering the fund designated to be paid to him, in preference to Mrs. Webre) and from this judgment Mrs. Webre has appealed.

The grounds of opposition urged in the court of the first instance and in this Court to the claim of Mrs. Webre to the fund in question by Herwig, and of his better right thereto, under his seizure, are substantially these:

1. That the dation of Leonard Webre to his said wife was invalid and inoperative, because there was no delivery to her of the thing or right sold; and that the same -was not susceptible of any kind of delivery.

2. Because, by the purchase of her husband’s interest in his mother’s succession, she, the wife, by legal implication, assumed the payment of her husband’s debts therein, which rendered the act null and void.

3. That no notice of the transfer of the right in question was given to the debtor.

4. Because the price or consideration of the transfer was inadequate.

Mrst. The Code in the 2d chapter, under the title of “ sale,” author- - izes a contract of sale between husband and wife under circumstances shown to exist between the spouses in this instance. It treats of, or virtually designates, the transfer therein mentioned as a sale. C. C. 2446 ; 5 An. 493.

' Not only corporeal objects may be sold, but incorporeal things, such as a debt, an inheritance, a servitude, or any other rights. C. C. 2449.

It cannot be controverted, that whatever may be the subject of a sale may also be the subject of a giving in payment, for the main difference that the law recognizes between the two contracts is, that the former is perfect by mere consent of the parties, whilst the latter “is made only by delivery.” C. C. 2655 ; 20 An. 282.

It may also be regarded as axiomatic, that whatever the law permits or authorizes to be sold can be delivered, that is, is susceptible of some mode of delivery.

Where the thing sold is corporeal, a tangible, movable thing, there can arise no difficulty in understanding and fully appreciating the meaning of delivery with respect to it) for the Codei declares “that *271this tradition (delivery) is the transferring of the thing sold into the power and possession of the buyer.”

Where the thing sold consists of an incorporeal right, as in this instance, a “right of inheritance,” an interest in a succession, the only delivery that can he made is a constructive delivery; but such delivery when made is as effective as the actual delivery of a tangible object.

Art. 2481 declares: The tradition ' of incorporeal rights is to be made either by the delivery of the titles and of the act of transfer or by the use made by the purchaser, with the consent of the seller.” In this case the delivery was acknowledged in the act; the act was passed before a notary and duly recorded, which involves the delivery of the act; it sets out at length of what the succession consists, with a description of the property composing it, and of the vendor’s claim thereto by inheritance, and defines his share. There was no other title, under the terms or meaning of the Code, to be delivered.

No express proof of any use made by the purchaser of the right transferred, as- the Article suggests, appears in the record, bat it is shown that the administrator of the succession, who might he regarded as the custodian of the right, recognized the purchaser as the owner of it, and so reported in his account, and it is to he presumed at the wife’s instance; and this might he construed as a use made of the right—the procuring its recognition.

If the delivery is to be governed by C. C. Article 2643, cited by op- ’ ponent’s counsel, which, in referring- to transfers of rights or claims, provides “ that the transferree is only possessed, as regards third persons, after notice has been given to the debtor of the transfer having taken place,” whilst the applicability of the Article to the instant case might be questioned, from the doubt that naturally arises as to the existence of a debtor, with reference to a right of this kind, still the administrator, rather than the heirs, might more properly be regarded as such debtor, since the fund in dispute is in his keeping and is to be paid out by him.

There is no evidence of the service of a notice of this transfer upon the administrator, but he did have notice of it, and notice before it purports to have been seized, for he makes express mention of it and fully recognizes it in his account, as before stated.

•Our conclusion on this point is, therefore, that the right sold was susceptible of being conveyed by a elation en, paiement, and that there was a tradition or delivery of the right, within the meaning and intendment of the Code, before any seizure of the same was made by Herwig, the opponent.

Second. It is true that Article 1002 of the Civil Code declares that a *272sale, made by one of the co-heirs of a succession of his right thereto, is considered to be, on his part, an acceptance of the succession ; and inasmuch as by Article 1013 of the Code, a simple acceptance of a succession by an heir binds him personally to pay the debts of the succession, it is argued that the purchaser of the right assumes the liability of the heir, From this it is further argued, that as the wife in the instant case was the purchaser, such purchase involved the assumption on her part of the husband’s debts or liabilities, and such assumption being in contravention of a prohibitory law, is void, and renders the purchase a nullity.

This entire argument pre-snpposes that this sale or conveyance by the heir in this instance, from which his acceptance of the succession pure and simple is deduced, was made when no act or proceeding had taken place that entitled him to the benefit of inventory; but that upon the opening of the succession he had assumed the quality of an heir, unconditionally and without qualification, by going forward and selling his interest in the succession. The authorities cited by the counsel refer to the liabilities of an heir who thus unconditionally’ accepts and the obligations of the purchaser who buys under these circumstances.

In the instant case we find, however, that one of the heirs had applied for an administration of the succession, and that an inventory of the same had been made before the elation from Leonard Webre to his wife was passed, and that a few days thereafter the administrator was appointed and qualified. In the act in question Webre declared himself a beneficiary heir and conveyed only his rights as such. The previous application for an administration and the taking of the inventory entitled him to the benefit of inventory and fixed his status or capacity as that of a beneficiary heir. As such ho was not bound for the debts of the succession beyond the assets thereof, and his transferree, of course, was not bound to a greater extent.

The wife simply purchased the right or interest of her husband in the succession subject to the payment of its debts—his residuum, in other words—and bound herself for nothing. There is, therefore, no force whatever in this ground of the opposition.

Third. From the remarks we have made on the first point of this opposition it will appear, that if any notice of the conveyance of Webre’s interests to his wife was necessary, it was to be given to the administrator, as custodian of this interest, and that the account of this administrator explicitly declared that the fact of such transfer had been made known to him, and was duly recognized by him. A notice to his co-heirs would have been without meaning or significance.

Fourth. The evidence does not show that the consideration of the *273transfer was wholly inadequate and out of proportion to the value of the interest conveyed 5 on the contrary, the transfer appears to have been made at the valuation fixed by the sworn appraisers who made the inventory, and whose estimate is not contradicted by opposing evidence.

There has been a great deal of discussion by counsel on both sides, as to whether this interest sold was a movable or an immovable; but 'under the views we entertain of the matters in controversy, as already expressed, we do not think this question properly arises, or is necessary for our determination.

Por these reasons our conclusion is, that the opposition of Herwig' was improperly maintained.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the lower court, in maintaining the opposition of Philip P. Herwig to the provisional account and tableau of Edmund Webre, administrator of the Successions of Jean Webre and Iris wife, Dorothée Deslattes, be annulled, avoided and reversed; and that the claim to the fund, proposed in said account to be paid to Mrs. Leonard Webre, preferred by the said Herwig, be rejected, and his opposition dismissed at his costs 'in both Courts.