Blackburn v. Morton

18 Ark. 384
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 Ark. 384 (Blackburn v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackburn v. Morton, 18 Ark. 384 (Ark. 1857).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hanly

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of detinue, commenced in the Crawford Circuit Court, on the 5th February, 1855, for a slave, at the suit of Allas J. Morton and Harriet his wife, and Elizabeth Alice Smith, an infant, by Wm. Walker her next friend, against the appellant. Plea, non detmet, and issue. Trial by a jury, and a verdict and judgment for appellees. Motion for a new trial, assigning for grounds: 1st. That the Court permitted illegal evidence to go to the jury. 2d. That the Court misdirected the jury. 3d. That the verdict was contrary to the instructions of the Court, and excessive.

The motion for a new trial was overruled, and appellant excepted, setting out the testimony and the instructions given to the jury.

The following is the testimony:

John Shields, of Dallas county, Alabama, by deed of the 16th October, 1846, in consideration of the natural Ipve and affection he bore to his son-in-law, Girard J. Smith, and his daughter Harriet, wife of Girard J., conveyed the slave sued for, among others, to the said Girard J. — but in trust as follows:

“ 1. The said party of the second part (Girard J. Smith) is to hold possession of said slaves, and be entitled to the management and control of them, and to receive their labor and the profits arising from their labor for the support and maintenance of the said party of the second part, and Harriet his wife, during their joint lives, and during the life of the party of the second part, should he survive his said wife; and in case she should survive him, then for her support and maintenance, and that of her children by the present, or any subsequent husband during her life.

2. That the said party of the second part (Girard J. Smith) is to hold the legal title to said negroes, in trust for the use and benefit of Elizabeth Alice and Felix, the children of the said party of the second part, and Harriet his wife, and any other children which the said Harriet may have, either by the present or any subsequent marriage, to be equally divided between them, share and share alike, at the death of the said party of the second part, should he survive his wife, or at the death of Harriet, should she survive her husband.

Girard J. Smith left Dallas county, Alabama, in 1848 or 1849, and came to this State, bringing with him the slave in controversy, together with several others of the slaves mentioned in the deed of trust, and died in the city of New Orleans, in the latter part of 1849, or in the early part of 1850, leaving Harriet, his wife, in the deed of trust named, and three children, viz: Elizabeth Alice, Felix and Hermion, him surviving. In July, 1851, Harriet, the widow, intermarried with the appellee, Morton, and in 1852 Felix and Hermion, the Uyo youngest children of Girard Smith and Harriet, died before they attained their majority, and without issue, leaving the appellee, Elizabeth Alice Smith, the only surviving issue of Girard Smith and Harriet, them surviving. The slaves mentioned in the deed of trust belonged to John Shields, the donor, at the time of the execution thereof, and Girard J. Smith held them in his posses-' sion, under the deed of trust, down to the time of his leaving Alabama.

The above facts were established by the deed of trust itself, and the depositions of John Shields, the donor named in the deed of trust, and William B. and Edward T. Shields his sons.

Edward T. Shields, in addition to the facts above stated, deposed that after Smith’s death, say in the summer of 1852, he, as the agent of his sister Harriet, one of the appellees, went to Fort Smith, in this State, in quest of the slave Tom, in controversy in this suit, who is the same boy Tom in the deed of trust described as being named Tom, and aged fifteen years; and on his arrival at that place, ascertained that he was in the possession of the appellant, Blackburn, who resided in the Cherokee ■ Nation of Indians, That both appellant and the slave being beyond the reach of civil process, he was induced by the attpr-neys whom he consulted, to hire a man to bring the slave to him, and by that means he obtained possession of the slave, whom he knew to be the identical same boy Tom mentioned in the deed of trust, and started on his return home with him, when he was arrested at appellant’s instance, and taken to Yan Burén, and whilst on his way, with the slave, from Yan Burén to Fort Smith, to answer the charge made by appellant, appellant, accompanied by several others, took the slave out of his possession. His understanding was, that the slave was taken from him by virtue of a writ of replevin, or some other process. At all events appellant directed the seizure and capture of the slave. The slave was worth then $1,000. Morton, One of the appellees, is the husband of his sister Harriet, the widow of Girard J. Smith, and appellee, Elizabeth Alice, is the only surviving child of the said Harriet. He further stated that appellant told'him he-bought the slave in controversy from Girard J. Smith.

Appellees also proved that the hire of the slave in question was worth from $100 to $125 per annum. This was all the proof adduced on the part of the appellees.

Appellant then proved that Girard J. Smith, by bill of sale, bearing date 26th October, 1849, sold the same slave to him. That at the time of the execution of the bill of sale, the slave was aged about 15 years, and that he was, at the time of the trial, worth $800. That the appellant has resided in the Cherokee Nation of Indians ever since he purchased the boy of Smith, and has during all that time, had the slave in his possession in the Nation. That Edward T. Shields obtained possession of the slave, in the manner by him stated above — that he was arrested upon a charge of larceny, for the act, and whilst under the arrest, the boy was replevied out of his possession at the suit of appellant; and that, at the time the slave was so reple-vied,_ Shields refused to say, in answer to an interrogatory propounded, that he recognized or knew the negro, but said he thought he knew him.

The appellant objected to the reading of the depositions of the witnesses on the part of the appellees, all the proof on their part being presented in the form of depositions, some of them having been taken in Dallas county, Alabama, whilst others were taken in Missouri. The objections to the depositions were general, and were overruled by the Court, and he excepted.

Certain instructions were given to the jury, at the instance of the appellees, which were also objected to, at the. time, and exceptions taken by the appellant, when they were given. The instructions, as given by the Court, were as follows:

“ 1. That if the jury believe from the evidence, that the negro man mentioned in the declaration, is one of the negroes mentioned in the deed of trust executed by John Shields to Girard J. Smith, and that he was in defendant’s possession at any time before the commencement of this suit, and that he claimed him under purchase from said Smith, and that, before the commencement of this suit, Girard J.

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18 Ark. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackburn-v-morton-ark-1857.