The Confiscation Act of July 17, 1862, 12 Stat. 559, c.195,
construed in connection with the joint resolution of the same day
explanatory of it, 12 Stat. 627, makes no disposition of the
confiscated property after the death of the owner, but leaves it to
devolve to his heirs according to the
lex rei sitae, and
those heirs take
qua heirs, and not by donation from the
government.
A mortgagee, in Louisiana, under an act containing the pact
de non aleiando, can proceed against the mortgagor after
the latter's expropriation through confiscation proceedings, as
though he had never been divested of his title.
The holder of a mortgage upon real estate in Louisiana ordered
to be sold under a decree of confiscation may acquire the life
interest of the mortgagor at the sale, and may possess and enjoy
that title during the lifetime
Page 124 U. S. 352
of the mortgagor without extinguishing either the debt or the
security, by reason of confusion as provided by the code of that
state.
The heirs of a person whose property in Louisiana was sold under
a decree of confiscation succeed after his death by inheritance
from him, and, being in privity with him, are bound equally with
him by proceedings against him on a mortgage containing the pact
de non alienando.
If a mortgage debtor in Louisiana, in a suit to foreclose a
mortgage containing the pact
de non alienando, waives the
benefit of prescription, those who take from him are estopped from
pressing it as effectually as he is estopped.
The case and the federal question are stated in the opinion of
the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Catherine Shields, a sister of Eustace Surget, deceased, and the
children of two other sisters of his, claiming to be his nearest
relatives and only heirs at law (he having left neither ascendants
nor descendants), filed a petition in the Civil District Court for
the Parish of Orleans against Arthur Shiff in March, 1883, alleging
that said Eustace, in 1860 and thereafter, owned certain property
in New Orleans consisting of certain lots of ground and buildings,
particularly described, acquired by purchase from R. P. Hunt, by
Act passed April 18, 1860; that, by proceedings in the United
States district court, said property was condemned and confiscated
as property of said Surget, under the Act of Congress of July 17,
1862, and sold at marshal's sale on the thirtieth of May, 1865, to
Arthur Shiff; that Surget died on the first of February, 1882, and
that Shiff had continued in possession since that time, receiving
the rents and revenues. The petitioners prayed to be declared
owners of the property and entitled to the possession thereof since
the death of Surget, and for a judgment against Shiff for the rent
and damages.
Shiff, by his answer, claimed to be the owner and possessor of
the property by lawful title acquired at public sale made by the
Civil Sheriff of Orleans on the third day of August, 1880,
Page 124 U. S. 353
under and by virtue of a writ of seizure and sale for the
foreclosure of a mortgage given upon said property on the
twenty-eighth of January, 1860, by the former owner, R. P. Hunt, to
one Edward Shiff, to secure $24,000, payable in notes which matured
in January, 1862, which mortgage the said Eustace Surget, in his
act of purchase from Hunt, assumed to pay as part of the price, and
that the defendant, Arthur Shiff, was holder of the notes secured
by said mortgage.
Under these pleadings, the parties went to proof, and the
statements of both petition and answer were verified. The act of
mortgage given by Hunt to Shiff January 28, 1860; the act of sale
by Hunt to Surget, April 18, 1860; the confiscation proceedings and
sale; the foreclosure proceedings and sale, and testimony of
witnesses as to the family of Surget, were given in evidence. The
mortgage from Hunt to Shiff contained the clause agreeing not to
alienate, called the pact
de non alienando. The act of
sale by Hunt to Surget contained a statement that the amount of the
notes secured by the mortgage was part of the purchase price, and
an assumption by Surget to pay the same, and a promise to fulfill
and comply with all the conditions and clauses therein
contained.
It appears that Arthur Shiff intervened in the confiscation
proceedings for the protection of his mortgage upon the property,
and at the sale became the purchaser for the sum of $22,000, the
residue of which, after payment of costs and expenses, was duly
credited on his notes. From the time of said sale (May 17, 1865),
Shiff had possession of the property.
There remained a large sum due to Shiff on the notes, amounting,
on the twenty-second of June, 1880, to over $30,000. On that day he
instituted proceedings to foreclose his mortgage by seizure and
sale, making Eustace Surget, the debtor, party to the proceedings.
Surget, being then in France, could not be personally served with
the notice of demand of payment, and it was served upon a curator
ad hoc appointed by the court, and a writ of seizure and
sale was issued, and, on the third of July, 1880, the property was
sold, and Shiff became the purchaser for the sum of $19,000.
Monition proceedings were afterwards had homologating the sale.
Page 124 U. S. 354
It appears by a certificate of the authorities of the City of
Bordeaux, France, that Surget died in that place on the first of
February, 1882. He left a will, dated July 11, 1872, with a codicil
thereto dated November 12, 1879. By the will, he gave all his
property to his wife, Mary Atwell Surget, who survived him, and
made her his sole executrix, and the codicil was in these words,
to-wit:
"I hereby forcibly enjoin upon my dear wife, or, should she not
be living at the time of my own demise, upon my natural heirs, to
make immediately unto Arthur Shiff, of the City of New Orleans,
Louisiana, a clear and valid title to certain property situated on
Rampart Street, in that city, and conveyed to him by me by notarial
act executed by me before T. O. Starke, Notary Public, in the City
of New Orleans, on the eighteenth of July, 1866, the confiscation
laws of the United States government having deprived Mr. Shiff up
to the present time of the full enjoyment and possession of said
property, which is justly his, it having been my fixed and honest
intention to make him a good and valid title to the said
property."
It is understood that the property referred to is the same
property now in question in this suit.
The Civil District Court of New Orleans, in accordance with the
decisions of this Court in
Bigelow v.
Forrest, 9 Wall. 339;
Day v.
Micou, 18 Wall. 156;
The
Confiscation Cases, 20 Wall. 92, and
Waples v.
Hays, 108 U. S. 6, and
also in accordance with the decision of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana in
Avegno v. Schmidt, 35 La.Ann. 585, which has
since been affirmed by this Court,
113 U. S. 113 U.S.
293, held that the confiscation of Surget's estate did not affect
the mortgage which his grantor, Hunt, had given to Shiff, and that
a sale of the property under that mortgage in 1880 was perfectly
valid, and that it made no difference that Shiff, the purchaser of
Surget's life estate under the confiscation proceedings, became
also the purchaser under the mortgage.
It was objected by the plaintiffs, against Shiff's title under
the foreclosure proceedings, that the notes to secure which the
mortgage had been given had been long prescribed, and that the
mortgage had lapsed for want of reinscription. But
Page 124 U. S. 355
the civil district court overruled this objection and said:
"Like the mortgage in the case of
Avegno v. Schmidt,
Shiff's mortgage contained the pact
de non alienando. As
we have seen above, the confiscation proceedings did not disturb
the contractual relations existing between Surget and Shiff. And as
long as the debt was not prescribed, or, if prescribed, and the
debtor did not plead it, the foreclosure was in time."
The court also held (though this was not necessary to the
decision) that Surget's instituted heir, and not his natural heirs,
was entitled to succeed to the estate upon his death. Judgment was
given in favor of the defendant. This judgment was appealed to the
Supreme Court of Louisiana, and was affirmed. 36 La.Ann. 645. The
judgment of the supreme court is now before us for revision, and
substantially the same questions are raised here which were made in
the courts of Louisiana.
The opinions of the Justices of the Supreme Court of Louisiana
are presented to us in the record, and seem to us satisfactorily to
dispose of every question which is necessarily involved. The
leading opinion states the point to be decided, and the
propositions on which the decision should rest, as follows:
"Under our views of the controversy, in the light of the
established jurisprudence on the true and correct meaning of the
Confiscation Act, the pivotal issue in the case hinges upon the
validity of the sale effected under the executory process
instituted against Surget by the defendant Shiff in June, 1880. A
proper solution of that issue involves a consideration of the
question of the effect of the confiscation on the perpetual
ownership or fee of the confiscated property."
"In the recent case of
Avegno v. Schmidt, 35 La.Ann.
585, we had occasion to consider some of the effects of proceedings
instituted under that legislation."
"Under the guidance of numerous decisions by the Supreme Court
of the United States, we established in that case the following
propositions, which are to some extent involved in the present
controversy, and which we shall therefore abstain from discussing
in this opinion:"
"1st. The Act of Congress of July 17, 1862, generally
Page 124 U. S. 356
known as the 'Confiscation Act,' and the joint resolution of the
same day explanatory thereto, must be construed together."
"2d. In a sale of property confiscated thereunder, all that
could be sold was a right to the property seized, terminating with
the life of the person for whose offense it had been seized."
"3. Such proceedings and sale do not affect the rights of
mortgage in favor of third persons on the property, which goes to
the government or to the purchaser
cum onere."
"4th. A mortgagee under an act containing the pact
de non
alienando, can proceed against the mortgagor, after the
latter's expropriation through confiscation proceedings, as though
the latter had never been divested of his title.
Bigelow v.
Forrest, 9 Wall. 339;
Day v.
Micou, 18 Wall. 156,
85 U. S.
160;
Waples v. Hays, 108 U. S.
6."
"Under the principles thus laid down, resting on the high
authority of the first tribunal of the land, and which we do not
understand to be contested by either party in the case at bar, we
conclude that the following propositions can be considered as fully
established in the present controversy:"
"1st. That the title which Shiff acquired at the confiscation
sale in May, 1865, expired with Surget at his death, in 1882."
"2d. That the mortgage rights of Shiff on the fee of the
confiscated property for the security of the unpaid balance of his
notes were not affected by that sale, but remained in full force
notwithstanding his acquisition of a life estate in the property,
and his possession and enjoyment of the same under his title, and
that in this case there was no extinction of either the debt or the
security by reason of confusion, as provided in our Code."
There seems to have been some difference of opinion between the
judges on the question whether, after the confiscation proceedings
and sale, the fee was in abeyance, or in the United States, or in
Surget, divested of the power of disposition; but all agreed that,
however it was, the heirs succeeded by inheritance from Surget, and
not by donation from the generosity of the government, and hence,
being in privity with their ancestor, they were bound, equally with
him, by the proceedings
Page 124 U. S. 357
on the mortgage, which contained the pact
de non
alienando.
Chief Justice Bermudez says:
"It is true that the proceeding is
in rem, but the law
of the situs requires it to be conducted contradictorily with the
owner, in order that the judicial sale may operate a valid
divestiture of the title or fee, if the defendant were not the
owner of the fee at the date of the proceeding and sale following.
But even assuming and conceding that the offender, Surget, was
actually divested of his entire ownership, perfect and imperfect,
and that the fee vested in the United States, the divestiture would
not be entitled to more effect than it would have if Surget had
himself, in the absence of any condemnation and sale, voluntarily
parted with his ownership of the property."
"In such a case, under the terms of the contract of sale, on
which Shiff bases his claim, the alienation of the property by
Surget could not have prejudiced him, as it contains the clause
de non alienando, which, under the laws of this state,
authorizes him to proceed in the enforcement of his debt against
the original debtor and mortgagor regardless of the transfer and
ignoring it, the property passing to the transferee or purchaser
cum onere, or subject to that clause."
"From that standpoint, it is therefore immaterial whether the
fee remained in Surget or passed to the government. It was divested
by the proceedings of 1880 and vested in Shiff."
"Prescription is a means of defense created by the law for the
necessity of things to which the individuals, in whose favor it
exists, may have recourse or not, as they may deem better. They are
under no obligation to set it up. When, therefore, they are sued in
a case in which they could urge it and do not do so, they are
deemed to have waived the benefit of it. Under such circumstances,
those who take from them, their heirs or assigns, are as equally
estopped from pressing it, as effectually as the debtor
himself."
"As Surget did not set up prescription or preemption prior to
the sale of the property, but, on the contrary, waived it
Page 124 U. S. 358
and recognized title in Shiff, as is shown by his silence and
his will, the claim of Shiff continued in existence, was legal and
valid, and the expropriation became complete in his favor, as
creditor, purchasing as if there never was any prescription
law."
"Those and any other defenses which could have been and were not
set up by Surget before the sale, the plaintiffs, who are Surget's
heirs and successors, and who have acquired no rights which he did
not possess, and could not have exercised, cannot be permitted to
assert and urge after his death."
Mr. Justice Fenner says:
"For the purposes of this controversy, it matters not where the
fee resided. Wherever it was, the supreme court has unequivocally
settled the doctrine that it remained subject to prior mortgages
and privileges in favor of third persons, which were entirely
unaffected by the confiscation proceedings."
"Neither did those proceedings affect the debt due by Surget to
Shiff, which was secured by the mortgage."
"The object and effect of the pact
de non alienando
under our laws are to secure to the mortgage creditor the rights to
foreclose his mortgage by executory process directed solely against
the original debtor, and to seize and sell the mortgaged property
regardless of any subsequent alienation."
"We make a long step toward eliminating irrelevant questions and
exposing the real and pivotal question in this case when we
announce as an indisputable proposition that if the executory
proceedings against Surget were regular; if at the date thereof,
the debt subsisted; if the mortgage securing the same were valid,
and had been preserved by proper inscription and reinscription, the
purchaser at the sale under these proceedings would have acquired a
valid title against all the world, regardless of who owned the fee
at the date thereof."
"Indeed I do not understand that the learned counsel of
plaintiffs would dispute this proposition. They claim that the
title is invalid, as against plaintiffs, on two grounds,
viz:"
"1. That at the date of the foreclosure proceeding, the debt of
Shiff had been extinguished by prescription. "
Page 124 U. S. 359
"2. That his mortgage had lapsed as to them by the failure to
reinscribe it within the term prescribed by law."
"At this point we encounter other elementary propositions, too
plain for dispute, establishing that whatever force the above
objections might have if urged by third persons, they have none in
favor of the mortgagor or his heirs. As to prescription, the
mortgagor having failed to plead it, its effect is forever lost as
to him and his heirs. As to the want of reinscription, neither
inscription nor reinscription is necessary to preserve the mortgage
as against the mortgagor and his heirs."
"By this process of elimination, we reduce this controversy to a
single question,
viz., are the plaintiffs heirs of Surget,
claiming title by virtue of inheritance through him, or are they
third persons as to him, deriving title from the bounty of the
United States conferred upon them under the merely descriptive
quality of heirs of Surget? They have their right upon the latter
hypothesis. If we confine ourselves to the plain language of the
acts of Congress, it is difficult to discern any foundation for
such a theory."
The learned justice then proceeds to demonstrate from the words
of the Act of Congress of July 17, 1862, and the explanatory
resolution, that they make no disposition of the property
confiscated after the death of the owner, but leave it to devolve
to his heirs according to the
lex rei sitae, and that
those heirs take
qua heirs, and not by donation from the
government.
These opinions express precisely our own views with regard to
the effect of the Confiscation Act upon the devolution of title at
the death of the owner in whose hands the property was confiscated.
Indeed, we expressed our concurrence in the judgment of the Supreme
Court of Louisiana in this case in the opinion delivered by Justice
Woods in
Avegon v. Schmidt, 113 U.
S. 293,
113 U. S. 300.
As this is the only federal question in the case, and as we concur
in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Louisiana thereon, we accept
the views of the state court as to the validity of the proceedings
for foreclosure under the local laws of that state. In fact, nearly
every point raised in the present case was decided in the case of
Avegno v. Schmidt, above cited.
Judgment affirmed.