Arthur v. Chavis

6 Va. 142
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 19, 1828
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Va. 142 (Arthur v. Chavis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur v. Chavis, 6 Va. 142 (Va. 1828).

Opinion

February 19.

JUDGE CARR.

In January, 1821, Milly Chavis exhibited her petition to the County Court of Pittsyl-vania, praying to be permitted to sue Jas. Arthur for her freedom, and stated the facts of her case. The Court proceeded in. the regular way to grant the petition. The case progressed; and after two continuances, came on for trial at the March Term, 1822. Both parties seem to have considered themselves ready, and to have gone willingly to trial; as the record discloses no motion fora continuance. The Jury found a verdict for the Plaintiff, on which the Court rendered Judgment. (The Chancellor states in his opinion, that a motion for a new trial was made to the Law Court, and overruled; but, the Law record attached to the copy of the Chancery record in my possession, shows no such motion. It may, however, have been omitted, as I see that the Declaration itself is left out. It is clear, that there was no motion made, or that it was overruled.) The Defendant at Law then offered to the Chancellor a bill for an Injunction and a new trial, on the allegation of additional evidence discovered since the trial. The Chancellor refused the Injunction, and that refusal was approved by a Judge *of this Court. A second bill was offered to the Chancellor, alleging a further discovery of new evidence. It was refused, and the refusal acquiesced in. A third bill was offered, refused by the Chancellor, and granted by a Judge of this Court. The Defendant answered. A vast volume of evidence was taken, and on hearing, the Injunction was dissolved, and the bill dismissed; from which Decree, the appeal is taken.

The ground on which the pauper claimed her freedom, was, that she was the daughter of one Winny Chavis, a free woman; that between forty and fifty years before, [643]*643when she was a girl of six or seven years old, living with her mother in Brunswick County, she was stolen from her, carried to Pittsylvania by one Davis, and sold by him to Bennett, who gave her to Arthur, his son-in-law. She is claimed by Arthur as a slave, born in Goochland County, the .property of Humphrey Parish, who bequeathed her to his son Moses, who sold her when a girl of three or four years old to Davis, who sold her shortly after to Bennet, who gave her to Arthur. This is the chain of title on each side.

There seems no doubt, that there was a .girl name Milly kidnapped from her mother Winny Chavis, and never after recovered by her. It is also pretty strongly proved, that there was a girl named Milly sold by Moses Parish to Davis, and also that Davis sold a girl of that name, to Bennet. It was, therefore, a question of identity. As grounds for a new trial, the bill states, that since the trial and the adjournment of the Law Court, the Plaintiff has discovered evidence to prove, that Polly M’Kinney, the principal witness of the Defendant, is .unworthy of credit; also to prove the manner in which the Defendant received a scar ■on her thigh, which at the trial was relied on strongly, as identifying her with the stolen child": that he has also, since the trial, discovered the Will of Humphrey Parish, bequeathng to his son Moses a girl named Milly; the inventory of Humphrey Parish’s ^estate, in which Milly is named; a Bill of Sale from 'Moses Parish to Davis; and the widow of Moses, who gives evidence to the fact of her husband’s owning such a girl, and selling her to Davis. The bill does not .give us any information as to the time or manner, how and when all these discoveries were made.

The answer contests every inch of ground ; puts the Plaintiff on the proof of his whole case; insists that from the nature of the case and the evidence, much of it must, and all of it might, with ordinary diligence, have been known to him before the trial at Law; and that the allegation of these after-discoveries, ought not to be received by the Court, as no particulars of time, place, or manner, are stated, so as to put it in the power of the Defendant to «disprove them.

In ancient times, when the Courts of Low were strict and technical, and narrow in their proceedings, and new trials rarely ■granted by them, Courts of Equity were in the habit of exercising jurisdiction over trials at Law, and compelling the successful party to submit to a new trial, or be -perpetually injoined from proceeding on his verdict. But, even then, they never Interfered, unless a clear case of fraud or -injustice were made out, or upon newly ■discovered evidence, which could not, with due diligence, have been used at the trial. As the Law Courts have become more liberal in granting new trials, Equity has, very properly, receded from the jurisdiction. I will not quote cases on this subject. The English Books are full of them; and our ■own Court has often acknowledged their ■correctness. There is one Authority to which I will refer; it is the case of Bateman v. Willoe, 1 Sch. & Lefr. 201. Lord Redesdale, after laying it down as settled Law, that the inattention of parties in a Court of Law, cannot be made a ground for the interference of a Court of Equity, and that unless where a verdict has been obtained by fraud, or a party has possessed himself improperly of something, by means of which he has an unconscientious advantage at *Law, Equity does not interfere, adds, “But, without circumstances of that kind, I do not know that Equity ever does interfere to grant a new trial of a matter, which has already been discussed in a Court of Law, a matter capable of being discussed there, and over which the Court of Law had full jurisdiction. A bill for a new trial at Law, is watched by Equity with extreme jealousy. It must see that injustice has been done, not merely through the inattention of the parties, but some such reasons as those I have mentioned, must exist.” Let us apply these principles to the case before us.

The first defect in the Plaintiff’s case which strikes me, is, that he states not one fact or circumstance, as to the means by which, or the manner in which, he came to the knowledge of the new evidence; nor does this vast mass of testimony contain one atom of evidence on this subject. The cases all state, that, “it must appear to the Court;” that “the Court must see,” &c. that the evidence has been discovered since the trial, and could not have been produced at it. Appear, how? How must the Court see it? By the bare statement of the Plaintiff, unsupported by proof, though it is called for in the answer? Surely no! It must appear by evidence. The Court must see it by the proofs, If you hold the Plaintiff to state in his bill, how and when he came at the new evidence, and to support his statement by proof, you enable the Defendant to meet this proof; you give him something tangible, something that he can grapple with. But, leave it on the general statement, that the evidence has been discovered since the trial, without specification, without proof; and you not only relieve the Plaintiff from the burthen of proof, but put him beyond the power of disproof. Where is the hardship of requiring him to state and to prove the means by which he acquired the new evidence? They must be within his knowledge, and susceptible of proof. Upon this general ground, then, I think the Plaintiff’s case wholly defective. *But, I will go further, and show (I think) from the nature of the new evidence, either that it must, or that with ordinary diligence that it might, have been known before the trial.

The first ground for a new trial, is, to enable the Plaintiff to impeach the credit of Polly M’Kinney. In the first place, it is a settled rule, that a new trial will not be granted to enable a party to impeach the credit of a witness, examined at a former trial. Huish v. Sheldon, Sayer 27; Ford v. Tilly, 2 Salk.

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6 Va. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-v-chavis-va-1828.