6. Of the dissolution of marriage. 7. Of second marriages. Title 5. Of the separation from bed and board. 2. Of the proceedings of separation from bed and board. paration may give occasion. 4. Of objections to the action of separation from bed and 5. Of the effects of separation from bed and board..... Title 6. Of master and servant. Chap. 1. Of the several sorts of servants. 2. Of free servants. 3. Of slaves. Title 7. Of father and child. Chap. 1. Of children in general. 2. Of legitimate children. PAGES. 82 83 lb. 16. ·84 85 86 ль. 87 16. Ib. 90 Sect. 1. Of legitimacy resulting from marriage. Chap. 3. Of illegitimate children. Sect. 1. Of legitimation. 2. Of the acknowledgment of illegitimate children. Sect. 1. Of the duties of parents towards their legitimate children, etc., and of legitimate children towards their parents. Ib. 2. Of the duties of parents towards their natural chil- Title 8. Of the minors, of their tutorship, curatorship and 8. Of the causes which dispense or excuse from the tutor ship. 114 9. Of the incapacity for, the exclusion from and depriva PACES. Title 9. Of persons insane, idiots and other persons incapable of administering their estates. Chap. 1. Of the interdiction and curatorship of persons inca- pable of administering their estates, whether on ac- count of insanity or of some other infirmity. 2. Of the other persons to whom curators are appointed. Chap. 1. Of the nature of corporations, of their use and kinds. 2. Of the rights and privileges of corporations and of their Sect. 1. Of the right of accession in relation to immoveables. 2. Of servitudes which originate from the natural situation 3. Of servitudes imposed by law. Sect. 1. Of walls, fences and ditches in common. 3. How such servitudes are established. 4. Of the rights of the proprietor of the estate to which the 5. How servitudes are extinguished. Title 5. Of fixing the limits and surveying of lands. 3. Of succession falling to descendants. 4. Of succession falling to ascendants. PAGES. Chap. 7. Of the seals and of the administration of vacant es tates, etc. Sect. 1. Of the seals and of the affixing and taking off of the 264 S 2. Of the inventory of vacant successions and others subject to administration. 269 S. 3. Of the appointment of curators of such successions, and of the security they are bound to give. 272 S 4. Of the duties and powers of such curators. 276 281 S 6. Of the sale of the effects and of the settlement of the successions thus administered. 282 S 7. Of the account to be rendered by the curators and the commission due to them. 288 S 6. Of the duties of curators whose administration is pro- 292 Chap. 8. $ 9. Of the appointment of counsel to absent heirs, and of their duties. Of partition and of the collation of goods. Sect. 1. Of the partition of successions. 294 296 Ib. § 1. Of the nature of partition and of its several kinds. S 2. Among what persons partition can be sued for. S 3. In what manner the judicial partition is made. Ib. 299 301 Sect. S 4. How the notary must proceed in the judicial partition. 305 2. Of collations. 313 S 1. What collation is and by whom it is due. 16. $ 2. To whom the collation is due, and what things are subject to it. 2. Of the capacity necessary for disposing and receiving by Ib. 3. Of the disposable portion, and of its reduction in case of excess. 344 Sect. 1. Of the disposable portion and the legitime. Ib. 2. Of the reduction of the donations which exceed the dis- 346 Chap. 4. Of the dispositions reprobated by law in such donations. 349 5. Of donations inter vivos (between living persons). Sect. 1. General dispositions. 2. Of the form of donations inter vivos. 3. Of the exceptions to the rule of their irrevocability. Chap. 6. Of dispositions mortis causa (in prospect of death). 350 § 6. Of the revocation of testaments and of their caducity. $ 7. General rules for the interpretation of legacies. 2. Of the requisites to the formation of a valid agreement. 894 Sect. 1. Of the parties to a contract, and of their capability to 2. Of the consent nessessary to give validity to a contract. 400 S1. Of the nature of the assent, and how it is to be shown. Ib. |