Boyd Ex. v. Whitfield

19 Ark. 447
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 19 Ark. 447 (Boyd Ex. v. Whitfield) 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
Boyd Ex. v. Whitfield, 19 Ark. 447 (Ark. 1858).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court-

On the 10th February, 1851, Francis E. Whitfield filed a bill in the Lafayette Circuit Court, against Richard Boyd, as executor of William B. Easley and Lewis B. Fort, making substantially the following allegations:

About the year, 1836, Easley sent from Virginia, where he resided, into Arkansas, certain slaves, which he possessed and claimed as his absolute property, among which were Peggy and her four children, Royal, Beverly, Henderson and Hubbard.

In the year 1836 or 1837, Easley sold Peggy and her children, with several other slaves, in good faith, and for their full market value, to David Vautier, at Spring Hill, in Plempstead county, Arkansas, but complainant did not know the price that was agreed to be given for each or all of the slaves.

Complainant believed that Easley conveyed the slaves to Vautier by bill of sale, “with covenants of title and warranty,” but complainant had not been able to procure the original, or a copy of the instrument, and he expressly avers that Easley represented the slaves to be his own by absolute title, and sold and delivered them as such.

Vautier purchased the slaves upon credit, and Thomas S. Williamson, then residing in Lafayette county, Arkansas, became his surety for the payment of the purchase money. Vautier failing to meet the debt at maturity, payment was demanded of Williamson, and he, finding that Vautier could not pay the debt, and that he would have it to pay, proposed to complainant, Whitfield, to sell to him Peggy and her four children, and several other slaves, (part purchased by Vautier of Easley and part his own), and complainant agreed to purchase the same. Whereupon, in order to obtain title thereto, the slaves were taken to Minden, Louisiana, with the consent of Yautier, and there sold as the property of Yautier, and purchased by Williamson, at and by a sale made by the parish judge of the parish of Claiborne, who was ex-officio a notary public, etc. And, thereupon, on the 9th February, 1841, at the parish aforesaid, Williamson and complainant signed an instrument by which it was agreed that Williamson had, on that day, sold to complainant 24 slaves, and among them Peggy and her four children, with other personal property and real estate, for the sum of $16,200; payable thus: $1,200 in cash, $5,000 to the Branch of the Real Estate Bank at Washington, Arkansas, and the residue in one and two years, with interest at eight per cent, from date, either by complainant’s own obligation, or that of Lewis B. Fort. To which agreement was added a memorandum, signed by Williamson, and dated 19th February, 1841, admitting, as was true, the receipt from complainant of his acceptance for $5,438 73, payable at nine months at the New Orleans Canal and Banking Company, in lieu of the $5,000 to be paid in Bank,’and also the notes of the complainant and Lewis B. Fort for $10,028, at one and two years.

On the 10th of February, 1841, before the same parish judge, Williamson, by a notarial act, conveyed the slaves, etc., to complainant, for the consideration expressed in the agreement, and delivered them to him, and he had thereafter continued in possession thereof, etc.

On the 19th of February, 1841, Williamson was still indebted to Easley, as surety of Vautier, as aforesaid, in the sum of $10,-128; and Lewis B. Fort was indebted to complainant, for the purchase money of a tract of land, in the sum of $8,553: Whereupon, it was agreed by and between Easley (acting by his agent, Carrington) complainant, Williamson and Fort, that Easley would receive in lieu of Williamson’s indebtedness to him, the obligations of Fort and complainant, with Williamson as surety, for said sum of $10,128, five thousand dollars thereof payable in one, and the residue in two years, bearing eight per cent, interest from date: by the execution and delivery of which obligations Williamson was to be released from his preexisting liability to Easley, and remain liable only as such surety on said obligations' — whereupon three obligations were executed, each joint and several, one for $5,000, one for $3,553, and one for $1,575, all dated 19th February, 1841, the first due at twelve, and the two others at twenty-four months from date, with interest thereon, on each, at eight per cent., etc. On the first two of which, Fort was principal, and complainant and Williamson were sureties; and on the third, complainant was principal, and Fort and Williamson sureties. The obligations were delivered to the agent of Easley; and by the execution of the first two, Fort was released and acquitted from his pre-ex-isting liability to complainant on account of the purchase money of said land, etc. This arrangement was ratified and confirmed, in all its parts, by Easley, and the obligations accepted by him; and to secure the payment thereof, on the 15th August, 1843, ($430 80 having been paid on the first obligation,) Fort and complainant jointly executed to Easley a mortgage upon a large number of slaves, nine of which belonged to complainant, (and among them Royal, one of Peggy’s children,) and the others belonged to Fort. Which mortgage was conditioned for the payment of the balance due on the obligations, on or before the 1st of March, 1844, with a proviso, thatif they paid by that day, $2,500, they should have five years from the date of the mortgage to pay the residue, on condition of paying annually, on the 1st of March, one-fifth of the principal, and all interest then due.

Peggy and her children remained in the undisturbed possession of complainant, without his suspecting that there was any adverse title to them, until the year 1847, when, to his astonishment, a bill was filed against him in the Lafayette Circuit Court, in the names of Nancy Browder and others, claiming title to the slaves, adverse and paramount to that of Easley and complainant, as devisees under the will of John Stovall, once the owner of Peggy, made in North Carolina, in the year 1819, and also claiming hire for the slaves from March, 1847, when their alleged estate vested in possession, etc. On service of process, complainant employed competent counsel, answered the bill, made all the defence to the suit in his power, in due time employed other counsel in Virginia to look up and take testimony in defence, and obtained all the testimony in his power. Was compelled to trial at October, 1850, and upon the hearing, the Court decreed the slaves to be the property of the complainants in that suit, with $1,650 hire, and that they be delivered up to them, etc.

That the will of John Stovall devised Peggy to his daughter, Fanny Liggin, for life, and at her death, to her children, who, or whose representatives, were the complainants in said suit. That said Fanny married one Obediah Liggin about the year 1803, and they thenceforward resided in Mecklenburg county, Virginia, adjoining Halifax county, North Carolina, where John Stovall lived.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ark. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-ex-v-whitfield-ark-1858.