de Lalande v. Bormeau
de Lalande v. Bormeau
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs allege, that their ancestor, Julien Poydras, by his will, ordered that all his slaves should be-considered *as attached to one or other of his plantations, and sold therewith on the condition, that the purchaser should emancipate them at the expiration of twenty-five years after the sale ; and that such of them .as should he sixty years of age, should be free after reaching that age, and have a right to live on the plantation, free from labor, and should further receive a stipend of twenty-five dollars per annum. That one of the plantations was sold to Madame Bormeau and Madame Mourain, which was afterwards partitioned between them, and that six of the statu liberi fell to the share of Madame Bor-meau, and that they were abo've the age of sixty on the 1st of January, 1833, and were entitled to the benefit of said stipulations in the contract of sale, in conformity with the testament. They aver, that Madame Bormeau, represented by her agent, the defendant, had refused to pay the said stipend, and that the statu liberi, aided by one of the plaintiffs, had failed in an action to recover the amount of the stipend thus due to them. They further allege, that the said stipend formed a part of the price of the slaves sold, and that said portion of the price is unpaid, and is due to the estate of Julien Poydras. They therefore pray judgment against Delamare, as the agent of Madame Bormeau, for the arrearages of said stipend, to wit, nine hundred dollars, and the further annual sum of twenty-five dollars for each of the statu liberi, from the 1st of January, 1839.
The plaintiffs are appellants from a judgment against them.
It appears to us, that the petition does not disclose a right of action in the plaintiffs. Admitting their construction of the will to he correct, and that by the conditions of the sale the purchaser bound
Judgment affirmed,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.