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Sales Books, 1846-1863

 Series

Scope and Contents

Each volume includes records of the sales of both movable and immovable properties as ordered by the civil courts of the Parish. In most cases an individual record includes a clipping of the newspaper advertisement for the sale and manuscript notations as to amount of sale, sheriff's fees, interest, and other charges. Often the clippings are in both English and French; the manuscript notations seem to be exclusively in English. For sales of movables there is usually a detailed inventory of the items being sold, along with the amount paid for each item, and the name of the purchaser. Among the records are sales of the contents of private residences and of businesses such as dry goods stores, coffee houses, and book stores, all with item-by-item or lot-by-lot inventories. There are also several records of hotel sales, including at least one for the St. Charles Hotel, again with room-by-room listings of furnishings and inventories of the contents of the public rooms. Each volume is indexed by the titles of the suits which led to the court-ordered sale.

Also included is one manuscript volume of "account sales" (1838-1840) which show date, name of suit prompting the sale, name of court in which the suit was heard, description of the property being sold (land, slaves, and moveable properties are included), name of purchaser, and amount and terms of sale. The fees charged by the Sheriff are also listed and totaled, and subtracted from the sale price to give the amount of net proceeds.

Dates

  • Creation: 1846-1863

Conditions Governing Access

Available to registered researchers by appointment.

Requesting Materials

Biographical / Historical

Article 83 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1845 provided for the election of a Sheriff in each Parish of the State. This officer served a term of two years. His duties (set by legislative act in 1813 when the office was appointive) included the execution of all judgments and orders of the courts sitting in the Parish from which he was elected. A new act passed in 1847 defined the Sheriffs' duties relative to judicial sales (presumably this responsibility had been included in the general language of the 1813 act). The 1847 legislation charged the Sheriffs to carry out all court-ordered sales, except for succession proceedings, in which the representative of the succession was permitted to choose whether the sale would be conducted by the Sheriff or by an auctioneer. The act also set the amount of commission that could be charged for such sales.

Extent

31 Volumes (available on 6 rolls of microfilm)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

General

Call number: VF800/801, 1830-1863

Processing Information

NOTE: THE INVENTORY INCLUDED ON THE MICROFILM VERSION OF THESE RECORDS CONTAINS ERRORS; THE FOLLOWING IS THE CORRECT INVENTORY FOR THESE RECORDS.

Repository Details

Part of the City Archives Repository

Contact:
City Archives & Special Collections
219 Loyola Avenue
New Orleans LA 70112
504-596-2610