Beatty v. Benton

135 U.S. 244, 10 S. Ct. 747, 34 L. Ed. 124, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2018
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 28, 1890
Docket279
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 U.S. 244 (Beatty v. Benton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatty v. Benton, 135 U.S. 244, 10 S. Ct. 747, 34 L. Ed. 124, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2018 (1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 3d of'May, 1854, one Carrie executed and delivered to Elijah D. Robertson, a white man, a warranty deed of a'lot of land in Augusta, Georgia, 82 feet 6 inches in width by 200 feet in depth. Thé consideration expressed in the deed was $600, and it conveyed to Robertson, his heirs and assigns, forever, the lot in question, in trust, nevertheless, to and for the arda na» hanafif. and behoof of the following free Dersons of *245 color, of Augusta, “ to wit, Fanny Gardner, the wife of Thomas Gardner, and their daughter, Frances Gardner, and any future issue of the said Fanny by the said Thomas, and, in case of the death of the said Frances and Fanny, in trust for the next of kin of the said Thomas Gardner.” The deed also authorized Robertson, in case it should be deemed advisable and to the interest of all concerned that a sale of the property should take place, to sell and make titles to it, provided the consent of the said Frances and Fanny, their guardian or guardians, should be first had and obtained.

In March, 1879, Fanny Gardner filed a bill in equity, in the Superior Court of Richmond County, Georgia, setting forth the purchase of the lot of land by Gardner from Carrie, for $600, and the making of such deed; that Gardner, who was her husband, and the father, by a former wife, of Frances Gardner, who had intermarried with one Beatty, died in 1865; that all of those persons were free persons of color; that, on the 3d of May, 1854, Gardner and the plaintiff and Frances took possession of the property; that afterwards, Frances having married, Gardner divided the lot and erected a house on a part of it for Frances; that the parties thus continued, in possession of the property until the death of Gardner; that from that time Frances had remained in the possession of the portion of the lot on which the house was erected for her use, and the plaintiff had occupied the remaining part of the lot; that the deed to Robertson was void, because at that time all conveyances of real estate in Augusta to or for the use of free persons of color residing therein were prohibited by law ; that the plaintiff acquired title to the property occupied by her, by actual adverse possession of the same for twenty years, and Frances had acquired, title in the same way to the premises occupied by her; that the plaintiff desired to sell her part of the property, but could not do so, because Frances claimed that, under the terms of the trust deed, she owned a remainder interest in the whole of the property, and the plaintiff had only a life estate therein; and that the property could not be sold except with the consent of Frances.

The bill prayed for a decree that the plaintiff owmed a fee- *246 simple title to the portion of the lot so occupied by her; that •the trust deed be cancelled; that, if the court should ;hold that the title of the plaintiff and of Frances was derived from seven years’ possession under the trust deed, as color of- title, it would decree that the terms of such deed did not bind the plaintiff or limit her title in the -property; that, if the plaintiff did not have a fee simple title to the part in her possession, she and Frances might be decreed to be tenants in common 'of the entire property, ■ and the same might be divided by commissioners, or be sold and the proceeds divided, share and share alike, between the plaintiff apd Frances, and for general relief.

The bill was-afterwards amended by inserting an allegation that the plaintiff furnished to Gardner at the time of the purchase one-half of the purchase money of the property, the. same being the proceeds of her labor as a free person of color; - and further; that if the court held that the plaintiff acquired .no legal interest under-the division of the lot by Gardner,- in the part which he gave to her and on which she had since lived, and no interest that could ripen by prescription; then Gardner died in possession'of all of the lot, leaving the plaintiff .and Francés as his only heirs; that such heirs .had,' by tacit consent, actually occupied, held and. claimed the portions so divided to them by Gardner, from the time of his death; and that Gardner made no will and left no other heirs.

■ Frances, being then the wife of one Davis, answered the bill, denying that the property was ever divided between her and the plaintiff by Gardner, or since' his death, otherwise than that Gardner built another house for her on the property, for convenience, because she was married and had many children ; and that her title and that of the plaintiff was that of eo-cestuis que trust for life, with remainder over to the children of Frances who should be living at the termination of such equitable life estate.

By way of cross-bill, the answer averred, that, before January 1, 1863, no proceedings were ever instituted' to escheat the property as being conveyed for the benefit of free persons of color; that, by section 262T of the Code of Georgia, becom *247 ing of force on January 1, 1863, it was declared that escheat should lie only on failure of heirs; that by the act of Georgia of March 17, 1866, free persons of color were vested with all the property rights of white persons; that among those rights was that to a prescriptive title by adverse possession for seven years under written evidence of title; that by.'possession adverse to all the world, under the trust deed, for seven years and more prior to the bringing of the bill, the plaintiff and .Frances had a good prescriptive title to the property under .the limitations of the deed, and had an equitable life estate in common, with remainder in fee, on their death, to the next of kin of Gardner; that Frances had six childreii\then living, two of them by her first husband, Beatty, one of whom, wad an adult and the other a minor, and four of them by ner husband, Davis, all of whom were minors, such six children being the next of kin after Frances to Gardner,' their grandfather; and that Gardner had no issue by the plaintiff.

The answer prayed that the court might declare the trust to - be valid, and appoint a trustee, to hold the property for the' joint use'and benefit of the plaintiff and the defendant during, their lives, or the life of either of them, and, at the termination of such lives, to convey the property to such children of the defendant as might then be living,, and, should there be none such,'then to whoever .should be next of kin to Gardner; and that the.adult son.of the defendant be made a defendant, with a guardian ad litem to be appointed for her minor children.

The answer was afterwards amended by averring that Gardner died in November, 1865; that from the date of the trust deed to that time the plaintiff and the defendant and Gardner resided together on the lot, being in occupation of it under and by .virtue only of bhe trust deed; that, from the time Gardíier diéd until the bringing of the suit, the plaintiff and the defendant continued to occupy the lot; that more than seven years elapsed from the death of Gardner to the bringing of the suit; that under the laws of Georgia, as they existed from the date of the trust deed, any instrument in writing purporting to convey- -a title to land, even if void, was good as *248 color of title, and.

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Bluebook (online)
135 U.S. 244, 10 S. Ct. 747, 34 L. Ed. 124, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-benton-scotus-1890.