PROMULGATION OF THE CIVIL CODE.
Extract from an Act passed by the Sixth Legislature, of the State of Louisiana, in their Second Session, entitled "An Act to provide for the printing and the promulgation of the Amendments made to the Civil Code of the State of Louisiana," Approved, April 12, 1824.
SECT. 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Louisiana, in General Assembly convened; That the amendments made to the Civil Code of the State, shall be in force from the day of their promulgation, as hereinafter provided.
SECT. 2. And be it further enacted, That the said Code as amended, shall be printed in the English and French languages, opposite to one another, under the title of " Civil Code of the State of Louisiana.”
SECT. 7. And be it further enacted, That when the said Civil Code shall be printed and received, the promulgation of it shall be made by the Secretary of State, by sending a copy thereof to each of the courts of and within this State, of which transmission the date shall be recorded in the office of the Secretary of State; and one month after said transmission, the said Code shall be deemed promulgated, and shall henceforward be in full force throughout the State.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Approved, April 12, 1824.
TH. B. ROBERTSON,
Governor of the State of Louisiana.
The Ciphers indicate the numbers of the Articles.
ABANDONMENT. Separation may be claimed in case of abandonment of the hus- band by his wife, or of the wife by her husband; in what man- ner, from 139 to 143.
How a master may discharge him- self from the responsibility by him incurred in abandoning his slave, 181.
The abandonment of the land ex- tinguishes the servitudes charged 'on it, 809.
Of the abandonment of property made by a debtor to his creditors, v. cession of properly. ABSENCE.
Of the effects of absence upon the eventual rights which may belong to the absentee, from 77 to 80.
Of the effects of absence respect- ing marriage, 81, v. absentees.
Of the meaning of the word ab- sentee, 3522. no 3.
Of the curatorship of absentees, from 50 to 57.
Of the putting into provisional possession the heirs of the ab- sentee, from 58 to 76.
Of the case of the minor children whose father has disappeared, from 82 to 86.
Curators who have been appoint- ed to absentees, or relations who have been put in possession of the effects of such absentees, can sue or be sued for a parti- tion, 1238.
Of the community between hus- band and wife. Rules relative thereto. v. community.
Of donations inter vivos; forms and effect of the acceptance of these donations, from 1527 to 1533. Such acceptance is not re- quired in donations made by marriage contract, 1732. Of successions; in what manner successions may be accepted ex- pressly or tacitly, 982. At what time succession may be accepted, from 972 to 981. When the acceptance of a suc- cession is implied or not from certain acts, from 990 to 997. Who are the persons who can or cannot accept a succession, from 998 to 1001.
What are the effects of the accep- tation of a succession, from 1003 to 1006.
(Of the right of); what is so cal- led, 490.
Of the right of accession to what is produced by the thing, from 491 to 495. v. fruits.
Of the right of accession to what unites or incorporates itself to the thing, 496.
Of the right of accession in rela- tion to immoveables, from 497 to 511; in relation to moveables, from 512 to 524.
ACCESSORIES. The obligation of delivering the thing sold, includes its accesso- ries and dependencies, 2466. ACCESSORY
contract; its definition in oppo- sition to a principal contract, 1764.
ACCIDENTS.
v. fortuitous events. ACCOUNTS
to be rendered by the tutor of a minor, from 350 to 356 ; by cu- rators to vacant successions and to absent heirs, from 1179 to 1196; by the testamentary exe- cutor, from 1666 to 1668. ACCRETION
(Right of); in succession ab in- testato, the portion of the heir renouncing goes to his co-heirs of the same degree: it is what is called the right of accretion, from 1015 to 1021.
This right does not exist in mat- ter of testamentary dispositions, except in some cases provided by law, from 1699 to 1702.
Which are formed successively and imperceptibly to any soil si- tuated on the bank of a river, to whom they belong, 501. v. alluvions,
ACKNOWLEDGMENT Of natural children by their fa- thers and mothers, in whose fa- vour it may be made, its forms and effects, from 221 to 223. v. natural children.
ACQUESTS AND GAINS. v. community. ACTIONS.
An action for the recovery of an
ACTS under private signature. What contracts may be made un- der private signature, 2237. Of the form necessary for their validity, 2238.
Of the credit to be given to them, 2239.
How the person, who did sub- scribe such acts, must acknow- ledge or deny his signature, 2240. Of the proof to be made when the signature is expressly denied, 2241.
In case of sale or exchange of real property or slaves, the acts un- der private signature are valid against bona fide purchasers and creditors, only from the day on which they are registered in the office of a notary public, 2242. V. authentic, confirmative, con- servatory and recognitive acts. ADJUDICATION.
How the property which minors hold in common with their fa- thers and mothers, may be ad- judicated to the latter, 338. In what manner adjudication at public sales ought to be made, aud of their effect, from 2585 to 2593, 2601.
ADMINISTRATION.
Of the tutor, from 327 to 356. v.
Of vacant successions, v. cura- tors to vacant successions. ADMINISTRATORS OF SUC-
Of the appointment and duties of the administrator of a suc- cession, the heir of which takes time for deliberating, 2387 from
1034 to 1042, 1046, 1052, and from 1055 to1063. ADOPTION.
The adoption is abolished, 232. ADULTEROUS CHILDREN. Who are called so, 201. They cannot be legitimated or acknowledged by their fathers and mothers, 217, 222; but they are entitled to alimony, 262. Adulterous and incestuous chil- dren can in no case inherit the estates of their natural fathers and mothers, 914.
In what manner fathers and mo- thers are restrained from dispo- sing in favour of their adulterous and incestuous children, 1475. ADULTERY.
The husband may claim a sepa- ration in case of adultery on the part of his wife, 136.
The wife may also claim such se- paration in case of adultery on the part of her husband, when he has kept his concubine in their common dwelling, 137. ADULTS.
Males who have attained fourteen years complete, and females the age of twelve years complete, are distinguished by the name of adults, 40.
ADVERTISEMENTS. What is understood by public ad- vertisements, 3522. no 4. AFFINITY
Is not an impediment to mar- riage, 98.
AFFIXING OF SEALS. v. seals.
The persons who have been put into provisional possession of the estate of the absentee, cannot alienate his immoveables and slaves, 70.
When it is necessary to sell any of the slaves of the absentee, in what manner such sale may be made, 65.
Minor's property cannot be alie- nated, except when it is for the interest of the minor to do so; with what formalities such sale must be made, 338, 339. The immoveables settled as a dowry cannot be alienated except in certain cases, from 2337 to 2342.
Children are bound to maintain their father and mother and other ascendants who are in need, and this obligation is reciprocal on the part of the children and other descendants, 245.
What is understood by the word alimony, 246.
In what manner alimony must be granted, from 247 to 250. Fathers and mothers owe alimony to their natural children, and vice versa; and of the rules re- lative to that obligation, from 256 to 261.
Alimony is due to bastards, though they be adulterous and inces- tuous, by their mother and her ascendants, 262.
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