Rainey v. Asher
Rainey v. Asher
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, holder and owner of an overdue promissory note, secured by mortgage, drawn by the plaintiff for $2250, obtained an order of seizure and sale thereon.
Plaintiff, alleging that she is the owner of the property under seizure, and alleging that on the twenty-third of June, 1871, through the improper influences of her husband, who constantly urged her thereto,
The evidence in the record satisfies us that her allegations with regard to improper influence on the part of her husband by which she was induced to create the debt and that the money which she borrowed was used by him for his benefit, are not true.
She borrowed the money to pay two other notes which were secured by mortgage upon the property in question, and the notes were paid with the proceeds of this loan. This is established by the testimony «oí Guyol, the notary who drew up the act of mortgage, and by Cammack, the broker through whom the money was borrowed. The ¡testimony of these witnesses was objected to by the plaintiff, but we think the court properly received it. It was a fact necessary to be established, and could, we think, be established by any witness who knew them. The allegation that before borrowing the money, the return of which is now about to be exacted from her, she was not examined by and authorized so to do, by the judge of the district or parish where she resides, separate and apart from her husband touching the object for which the money was borrowed, is not established. 'This is a fact whieh it was in her power to prove, and she introduced no evidence to establish it. The acts of mortgage under which she borrowed the money upon the note, the collection of which she has injoined and which show her antecedent indebtedness, relate that she had been specially authorized to borrow the money by the judge of the Third District Court of the parish of Orleans. Plaintiff objected to their introduction. We think they were properly received. They were signed by her and were, therefore, her own acts and declarations. Admitting that they could be disproved by parol, the burden of doing «o rested upon her.
The judgment of the lower court was against her.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.