When, by the will of only one of the owners, but in good faith, two things of equal or different kinds are mixed or confounded, the rights of the owners shall be determined by the provisions of the preceding section.
When the person making the mixture or confusion acted in bad faith, he shall lose the thing thus mixed or confounded belonging to him, besides being obliged to indemnify the owner of the thing with which he made the mixture for the damage caused thereby.
History —Civil Code, 1930, § 317.