Adie v. Cornwell

19 Ky. 276, 3 T.B. Mon. 276, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 6, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ky. 276 (Adie v. Cornwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adie v. Cornwell, 19 Ky. 276, 3 T.B. Mon. 276, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 52 (Ky. Ct. App. 1826).

Opinion

Chief JuM.ioc Boyle

doth oral the Opinion of the Court.

•This was an action of detinue for four slaves, Carolina ami hor three children. The general issue was pleaded, with leave to give the special matter in evidence, and on the trial in the circuit court, the evidence produced on the part of the plaimilf; established, or at least conduced to establish, the following facts

in IT'S/'. Fetor ¿lord Ren. of Stafford County. ‘Virginio, departed this life, having previously made his will, which was afterwards duly admitted to record in the court of that county, and contains the following clauses:

“I leave to my son Peter fiord, during his natural life, the use of the plantation whereon I now live, with all tiie rest of the land on the same side of the Diain road, also, one negro boy named Cupid; and at his decease l give and bequeath all the aforesaid land and negro, together with all the negroes that may fall to him in dividing my estate and their increase, to be, equally divided among his seven children, vis; Sarah llord, Whitly llord, Margaret llord. Reuben fiord. Elizabeth Hord, Anka llord, and Agatha Hord, and their heirs forever.’-’

“ítem, I give, to my four children, Killis Hord, Peter Herd, Antheret llord, and Sarah llord, all of that part of my brothel’ Ambrose Hordes estate that foil to me by his last will and testament; that part received to stand as it was settled, the 4th day of January, 178(1, at my house; and whereas there are suits depending for that estate of my brother Ambrose Hord, deceased, whatever may be recovered for the said estate, I give my part to be equally divided amongst my children, Killis Hord, Peter llord, Antheret Hord, and Sarah Hord, to them and they,heirs forever.”

Gill in oquiia by the <iovi~' prohibit tim" lonant for life ^‘naVomoviii > y™ -from the bond’requir-. ei!- i,>aoli) appii„ rent inert-' denci'' justnuniwif, for non suit’ for Uons

The will then proceeds, after directing the debts of the testator to be paid, to give all the residue of ins estate to his tour rhilavc» and thou* heirs, appoints them his executors, all of whom qualified.

Caroline was one, or the deseendant of one of those slaves which fell to Peter Hord Sen. under the will of his brother Ambrose, and haring come, to the possession of his son Peter Hord. he claimed the fee simple in her, in virtue of the second clause above recited of his father’s will.'

In 1305, two of liis seven children named in the first clause of the will before recited having departed this life unmarried and without issue, the survivors with their husbands, who are the plaintiffs in this suit, filed their bill in chancery in Stafford county, Virginia, against their father, setting up their claim to Caroline- and other slaves, under the will of their grand father, after the death of their father, and suggesting that he was about to sell or remove them out of the state, prayed for, and obtained, an injunction. To this bill their father answerd, claiming the slaves in fe.e in his own right under the Will of the testator, and on a final hearing the court decreed, that he should be’perpetually enjoined from removing the slaves out of the state, and that lie should give bond and security for the forth coming and delivery of them to the plaintiff, when their right should accrue.

In 1812, on the marriage of his daughter by aseeond wife, Caroline was delivered by tbc father of the plaintiff to his son-in-law, by whom, or some one claiming under him, she was removed to Kentucky, and sold to the husband of the defendant, in whose possession she and her three children were at the commencement of this suit.

Peter Hord, the father of the plaintiff’s died $n 1820, and this suit was commenced in 1824.

On this state of the cause in substance, the circuit court on the motion of the defendant, instructed the jury to find as in case of a non suit, to which the plaintiff’s excepted, and a verdict and judgment baving been rendered against them, they have appealed to this court.

AVIicto instructions for nonsuit maybe given and where not. Deviso to Peter for lifr, of ,specí¡ie<I properly, together wiih all (lie negroes that may falPto him in dividing testator’s estate, With remandor <o Peter’s children by name; those child ron take the remainder in Peter’s part of slaves devised undivided io testator :uid others by one before dead, &, by an after oíanse in ibis will, devised to Voter his iirothers and sister?

It is obvious that the instruction given by the rirruit court to the jury, could bo proper only upon the the supposition that the case made out by the plaintiffs did not shew them to have such a right to the slaves in question as would entitle them to recover in this action; but on what supposed defect in their title the motion to instruct, or the instruction given by that court, was predicated, is not stated in the. record. We are, however, furnished with several objections to their title by the argument on the part of the defendant in (his court, and such of these as are deemed material to tire interest of the parties, we will proceed to examine.

In the first place, it is contended, that as the first clause in the will of Peter Hord Sen. only gives to tiie plaintiffs the remainder after the death of their father, in the slaves, which might fall to him in the division of the testator’s estate, it does not apply to the slaves which were given, by the second clause; the estate thereby bequeathed, being distinguished by the testator as part of his brother Ambrose fiord’s estate, and as Caroline, was one of the slaves which passed by that clause to the father of the plaintiffs, it is infere,d that they cannot bo entitled to the remainder in her or her children.

This argument, though plausible, is not solid. The first clause of the will gives to the seven children of Peter, tfye soil of the testator, the remainder after their father’s death in all the negroes which might fall to him in the division of thq testator’s estate; and, undoubtedly, the slaves which the testator had acquired under hi.^ brother Ambrose’s^ will, were as much and as poroperiy his estate as those were which he had acquired in any other way. ' Indeed, in the, very act of bequeathing' them by his he, íreáts them as his estate, and the manifest purpose of refering to the estate of his brother, in the second clause of the will, was not thereby to pass his brother’s estate, but describe that' part of his own estate which lie intended thereby to bequeath.

The slaves, therefore, given in the second clause of the will to his son Peter and his three other children., being slaves which must fall in part to Peter,. [279]*279on Uie division (of liis estate, come literally within the import of the preceding clause, whereby the remainder over, after the death of Peter, was given to his seven children.

Where (here aro repugnant clauses in a will the latter shall prevail,— , Out— Repugnance in different clauses of the will shall not be made out by the ieclinioal mean, ing oftenn?.- ~For— Where n

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ky. 276, 3 T.B. Mon. 276, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adie-v-cornwell-kyctapp-1826.