Court Opinion

ID: 3670403
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:19:03.75755+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:53.130795
License: Public Domain

This bill was filed on 11 April, 1837, in the Court of Equity for the county of Caswell, by Lucy Griffin against James Pleasant, the administrator with the will annexed of William Pleasant the elder, John Pleasant, Dolly Pleasant and others, the next of kin of the said William. The plaintiff charges *Page 120 
in her bill that in 1811 a boy slave was born, the property of the said William, to which was given the name of Wesley, and this boy was, by the said William and under a parol gift, put into the possession of the plaintiff, the daughter of the said William and then the wife of William Griffin; that in 1817 her husband removed with his family from the county of Caswell to the county of Rockingham, carrying with him the said negro boy; that it being feared that the said boy might be seized for her husband's debts he was, by the agreement of the plaintiff and her brother John, one of the defendants, carried back to her father's, in Caswell County, and that soon thereafter her father executed and delivered to her said brother John a deed of gift or bill of sale of the said boy, or other sufficient instrument to pass title, the precise nature whereof she knows not, whereby the said boy was conveyed, either directly to her or to the said John, as a trustee for her sole and separate use; that her sister Dolly, one of the defendants, was a (153) subscribing witness to the said instrument, and that the said instrument was deposited by the said John after its delivery in his chest at his father's house, where he and all the other defendants who were then unmarried resided. The bill further sets forth that the plaintiff's husband afterwards died, and that subsequently, in 1836, her said father died, having previously made a last will and testament which, since his death, was duly admitted to probate; and the executor therein named being dead, administration with the will annexed was granted to her brother, the defendant James. The plaintiff further charges that on 20 September, 1836, since the death of the testator, the defendant John executed unto her a deed wherein he recites that a deed had been made by his father transferring to him the said slave in trust for the plaintiff, and whereby the said John conveys unto her the said slave and all his (the said John's) interest therein. The plaintiff then complains that subsequently to his conveyance, and while she was in the quiet possession of Wesley, the defendants James and William tortiously took him from her under pretense that she had no title, and shows that thereupon she instituted her action of replevin against them in the Superior Court of law of Caswell County by a writ returnable to the last term of said court; that the said James and William, upon the said writ being executed, delivered to the sheriff their bond with surety, payable to the plaintiff, conditioned as the law directs for the performance of the final judgment in the said action; and thereupon were permitted to retain and yet do retain the said slave. The plaintiff charges *Page 121 
that she has applied to the said John and to the other defendants, who resided with her father at his death, for the deed so executed by her father to the said John, to deliver the same to her in order that it might be perfected by registration, but that on various pretenses they have refused and declined to comply with this application; that the said John, admitting that the deed was so delivered to and deposited by him, declared that it has been lost or taken from his chest without his knowledge, and that he knows not where it is; that the said Dolly admits that it was delivered to the said John and attested by her as a witness; that the defendant William has offered $500               (154) to her daughter, Martha Griffin, to get the said deed and deliver it to him; and she further charges that some of the said defendants, all of whom are interested in depriving her of this muniment of her title, either now have the deed and fraudulently withhold it from her, or have voluntarily destroyed it to prevent its registration, and thereby destroy her title. The prayer of the bill is that all the defendants shall answer to the matters charged; that they may be compelled to produce before the Court and deliver to the plaintiff the said deed, if yet in existence, or if the same has been destroyed, that the defendant James, the administrator as aforesaid, may be decreed to execute a conveyance of the title to her, and for such other relief as the nature of her case requires.
All the defendants, except John Rascoe and his wife Martha and Martha Vaughn, who reside beyond the limits of the State, have answered the bill. As to these nonresident defendants the bill has been taken pro confesso.
The defendant John declares in his answer that no deed or bill of sale or other instrument for the conveyance of title to him or to the plaintiff of the boy Wesley was ever executed by the deceased to his knowledge or belief, nor does he know or believe that a parol gift was made to the plaintiff as by her charged. He states that the boy was permitted by his father to stay with William Griffin and his wife, and went with them when they removed to Rockingham; that after this removal this defendant's father understood that the boy was levied upon under execution for Griffin's debts, and procured the said John to go to Rockingham in order to release the boy from this levy and bring him back to him, this defendant's father; that on that occasion his said father executed an instrument to the said John, the precise purport of which he cannot recollect, but which he knows was intended to be a mere warrant or authority to the said John, in behalf of his father, to claim and take *Page 122 
possession of the boy and bring him back to the defendant's father; and that in pursuance of this authority he went to Rockingham, found the boy Wesley in the possession of an officer, and producing his authority demanded the boy, but the officer refused to surrender him until the execution was (155) satisfied; that this was done and the boy brought back to Caswell and delivered to his father, who repaid him the money so advanced, and continued in the possession of the boy ever afterwards until his death, notoriously claiming and holding the boy as his absolute property. He states that the instrument which he carried to Rockingham was the only one ever executed to him by his father in relation to the said negro; that to the best of his recollection and belief the name of his sister, the plaintiff, was not therein mentioned; that the said instrument after his return was probably, as he supposes, deposited in his chest, but that what has become of it or where it is he is utterly ignorant, for that he paid no attention to the preservation or custody of it since his return, not deeming it a paper of any value.
This defendant admits that he did, at the request of the plaintiff, execute an instrument which she brought to him and which she represented had been written "to stand against a bill of sale said to be lost"; that he was told that his attaching his signature thereto could not subject him to any cost or trouble; that he was unable to make out distinctly, being a very indifferent scholar, the contents of the paper; that it was not read over by any person present, and that if this instrument speaks of any paper executed to him by his father different from that set forth in his answer it does not speak the truth, and his signature thereto has been obtained by imposition.
The defendant Dolly Pleasant states in her answer that she never witnessed but one instrument of writing executed by her father; that this was done when her brother John was about going to Rockingham to reclaim the boy Wesley; that she does not know nor ever did know the contents of it, but that when she attested it she was told by the parties that it was an instrument to authorize John to bring home the boy; and that she has no reason to believe nor does she believe that her sister's name was mentioned in the instrument.
The defendants James and William say that after the death of their father the boy Wesley ran away; that they found him in the employment of one William Warren; took him home and now claim him as part of their father's estate. The (156) defendant William admits that after he heard that the *Page 123 
plaintiff set up title to the slave he was solicitous to know under what instrument such title was set up, and in order to find out, if he could,jocosely proposed to Martha Griffin, the plaintiff's daughter, not to give her $500 if she would deliver the bill of sale to him, but to get it from her mother, and they would go halves in the negro. He adds that it is absurd to suppose that he could in earnest have made such a proposition as that stated in the bill, as he is personally interested in only the one-eleventh undivided part of said slave.
All the defendants severally swear that they do not know what became of the instrument, whatever it might be, which was executed unto John Pleasant; say that they suppose it must have been long since lost, as not being deemed of value; deny that any of them have it or have intentionally destroyed it; state that their father lived twenty years after its execution; that during all that time the plaintiff never set up any title to the negro, nor asked for any conveyance of the title from their father; that he during all that time claimed, held and possessed the negro as his own; that he occasionally lent the use of the negro to his other children as they needed it, and that the negro was in his possession up to the day of his death. They deny any gift or conveyance from their father to the plaintiff by parol or otherwise.
To these answers a general replication was entered, and the parties, having completed their proofs, removed the cause by consent to this Court for a hearing, where it has been heard accordingly.
The case made by the bill is not a plain case for relief. The gravamen of it is that the defendants have withholden or destroyed a deed whereby the negro Wesley was conveyed either directly to the plaintiff, then the wife of William Griffin, or to the defendant John, in trust for her sole and separate use. If a deed of the former character were made then the entire legal interest passed thereby to the plaintiff's husband, and she has no right to require the surrender of the deed, or if it be destroyed, a conveyance of the title to her. But if we are to understand the bill as charging that a conveyance of the negro was made to the defendant John, in trust for the plaintiff (157) as though she were a feme sole, it is to be seen whether this charge is established by proofs. Were the controversy solely between the plaintiff and the defendant John perhaps we should find less difficulty in coming to a conclusion. His deed of 20 September, 1836, has been exhibited. It recites that in the lifetime of his father, William Pleasant, Sr., the said William *Page 124 
executed to him a good and lawful right to a negro boy Wesley, for the use and benefit of his sister Lucy, then the wife of William Griffin, and declares that in order to carry into execution what he knows and believes was the intention of his deceased father he thereby conveys to the said Lucy all the right, title and interest in said boy conveyed to him by his said father. The execution of this instrument is proved by both the subscribing witnesses, who testify that they were present when the plaintiff asked the defendant John to make her a right for the negro man Wesley, which her father had conveyed to him for her benefit; that he answered that if he had known that she wanted such a conveyance he would have given it to her before; that thereupon she handed to him the instrument, which had been previously prepared, and he read and signed it; and that he further said she ought to have the negro, for his father had made the right to him, in trust for her benefit, with an understanding that he would make a right to her at his death. And one of the witnesses adds that he further said that his father had given him the right in trust for her; that the chest in which he kept his papers had been broken open and that he had not seen the writing since. Now if this testimony is to be credited, and we see no reason why it should not be, then is the explanation which he has attempted to give of the language of this instrument exceedingly lame. It may indeed be that he did not carefully examine nor fully understand all the expressions in the instrument; but he cannot pretend that these give a character to the transaction, materially different from the account of it then related by himself, nor that his signature was procured by misrepresentation or fraud.
But he is not the only defendant, and it is not quite (158) clear that his declarations, verbal or written, are any evidence against his co-defendants. The bill does not show that he has any common interest with them. It does not state what testamentary disposition of this negro was made by the elder William Pleasant, nor is his will exhibited in evidence. But we do receive it as evidence (though not with full confidence) because we infer from what the defendant William states in his answer about the undivided shares in this negro that he was bequeathed, either by express terms or by general words, to all the testator's children, or has become theirs by reason of his partial intestacy.
A witness for the plaintiff, John Miles, testifies that since this suitwas pending he heard the defendant John say that Lucy had had the negro in possession, and that if she did not recover *Page 125 
he could, and she should have him; and afterwards heard him say that "he had a bill of sale or some writing conveying the title or to go after him."
Nothing can show more clearly the danger of relying too confidently on the accuracy with which witnesses give the tenor of casual conversations than the deposition of this witness. Everything seems to substantiate the allegation of a writing conveying the title of the negro to John except the few last words, or "to go after him." If John said this it was consistent with what he has sworn.
George Smith is introduced by the plaintiff to testify to a conversation which he had with the defendant William when returning with him from the April Term, 1837, of Caswell County Court. In consequence of the accidental omission of some very material words in the deposition, we cannot be certain that we have collected the meaning of the witness. We understand him to say that in this conversation William stated as a fact that his father, after John's return with the negro from Rockingham, conveyed the right of the negro to John in trust for the plaintiff, but the deposition will also admit of the sense that he stated that it was alleged that his father so conveyed the negro. But we place no reliance on this testimony. Independently of the ambiguity of the deposition, the witness is shown to be unworthy of credit, and it can scarcely be deemed possible that, after the defendant William had taken the negro from               (159) the plaintiff as part of his father's estate, after he had been sued for the act, had undertaken to justify it by averring that the negro was part of his estate, and but a few days before he put in the present answer on oath, he should have declared that it was not a part of that estate, but belonged to the plaintiff. We either misunderstand the witness or he misunderstood or misrepresented the defendant.
The main reliance of the plaintiff for the support of her case is on the testimony of Margaret Warren and Martha Griffin. The former, without any explanation of the circumstances leading to the conversation, neatly and roundly states that, about a year before old Mr. Pleasant died, she heard him say (no other person being present) that he had given John a bill of sale of Wesley for Lucy, but what had been done with it he did not know. Martha Griffin, who is the plaintiff's daughter, deposes that, in July, 1836, very shortly before her grandfather's death, she heard him say that he intended soon to make his will, and then his sons, with whose management he seemed dissatisfied, should see how he would dispose of his property, remarking that Wesley belonged to her mother, for he had several years before *Page 126 
given John a bill of sale of him in trust for her mother's benefit, conditioned to make her a good title after his death; that she had frequently heard her grandfather say that Wesley belonged to her mother after his death, and has frequently heard her uncle John say that he had a bill of sale of Wesley for her mother's benefit; that the bill of sale was in his chest; that the lock of his chest was injured; that he did not know whether the bill of sale was there, but that he would make search for it; that her uncle William, since her grandfather's death, asked her whether her mother had found it, and stated that he would give her $500, which was more than she could get from her grandfather's estate; that she has heard her aunt Dolly say that there was a bill of sale, to which she was one of the subscribing witnesses, and Brice Collins the other, and that if they should take her to the courthouse she would swear it was sham work; and, further, that she was at her grandfather's, in 1829, when her uncle (160) James returned from the West, and was looking over John's papers, and he said, "There is a bill of sale for Wesley."
Now, upon this testimony, if it were unimpeachable and uncontradicted and unexplained, it would be difficult for the plaintiff to get a decree. The bill, in the point of view wherein we are now regarding it, charges a conveyance of the slave to have been made to John for the sole and separate use of the plaintiff, then the wife of William Griffin — such a conveyance as passed the entire legal interest to him and secured the whole beneficial interest to her as though she were a feme sole — and alleges this to have been done by way of consummating or perfecting an invalid gift to her by parol theretofore made. Does this testimony show such a gift? Ann Warren's statement is of a conveyance to John simply in trust for the plaintiff. Even the recital in John's deed to her is of such a conveyance. Now, if this were the purport of the deed, its operation would be to vest the whole beneficial interest in the late William Griffin. To prevent his taking, there must have been terms in the instrument toexclude him. But the residue of this testimony shows, or tends to show, a conveyance, not immediately in trust for the plaintiff, whether exclusive of her husband or not, but upon a trust for her after her father's death. Such certainly seems to be the result of Martha Griffin's representation on the subject. This would be a trust variant from that stated in the bill.
But this testimony is neither unimpeached nor uncontradicted. The witnesses, Ann Warren and Martha Griffin, we are obliged to say, are shown to be persons of such tainted character that if *Page 127 
their testimony is not altogether undeserving of credit, it is to be received with much caution. It comes in conflict, too, with the answers of at least eight defendants who must have been cognizant of such a conveyance, if it had been made, and who, nevertheless, on oath, deny it. But, besides, there were twenty years from the date of this pretended conveyance until the death of the elder William Pleasant, and eleven of these after the plaintiff became a widow and resided in her father's neighborhood, and during all this time he used, enjoyed and claimed the negro as his own. The testimony of William Bigelow                 (161) and John Vaughan indisputably establishes this. No claim of any title is in the meantime set up by the plaintiff. On 4 July, 1836, he entered into negotiation with Bigelow for a sale of Wesley, and this was only broken off by his death. We hear of no inquiry in the meantime, after the alleged conveyance, or of any interest expressed in relation to its preservation, or of any effort to perfect it by having it acknowledged or proved for registration. All this seems to us irreconcilable with the supposition of there being a valid document of title in the plaintiff to property of such great value to one in her straightened circumstances. It seems to us a little extraordinary that Brice Collins, who is mentioned in Martha Griffin's deposition as the other subscribing witness with Dolly Pleasant to the alleged deed of old Mr. Pleasant, and who has been brought forward as a witness for the plaintiff as to other matters, has not been examined on this point. We cannot with confidence pronounce how the facts were, but upon the whole we have come to a conclusion, which, while it gives some plausibility to the plaintiff's claim, denies to it a sufficient foundation. Two respectable witnesses have testified that the mother of Wesley died soon after giving birth to the infant; that the elder Mr. Pleasant offered the infant to any of his children who would undertake to rear it, and that they all declined the offer, except the plaintiff, then the wife of William Griffin. Thus Wesley came into Griffin's possession, and by Griffin was carried off to Rockingham. In his embarrassment the boy was seized for debt, and his father-in-law, being advised that the title was yet in him, sent John to save the property from Griffin's creditors. He no doubt gave John some instrument, in writing, authorizing him to demand possession of the negro. These transactions, constituting a very important occurrence in the family, were, of course, known to all of its members; and it was understood that the object of their father's interference, of their brother John's mission, and of the instrument of writing was to save Wesley for the benefit of their sister. They knew *Page 128 
that Wesley was promised to her, and regarded him as intended for her and to be hers at their father's death. Not long (162) before the old man's death, it is in proof by William Miles, a witness for the plaintiff, that he spoke of getting Mr. Anderson to write his will, and professed a determination thereby to bequeath Wesley to John and the plaintiff. The notion that the negro was to be Lucy's, having become connected with the act of the instrument executed to John, and the old man having died without bequeathing the negro, as was expected, an effort was then made, in support of this vague claim of the plaintiff, to give it a stronger character by converting the instrument into a conveyance in trust for the plaintiff. A little too much zeal in some of the witnesses, some inaccuracy of recollection in others, and perhaps a willful distortion of the facts in one or more of them, have imparted to the effort the plausibility it wears; and even that has derived strength from the want of candor in the defendants, who, it appears very plain to us, have kept back all that they feared might operate in the plaintiff's favor, which they believed could be suppressed without committing perjury.
But, whether this view be correct or not, we do not find ourselves justified in declaring that the plaintiff has established her case, and therefore we direct the bill to be dismissed, but we do not give the defendants, or any of them, a decree for costs.
PER CURIAM. Decree that the bill be dismissed, but without costs to any party.
(163)