Cameron v. Commissioners of Raleigh

36 N.C. 436
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 N.C. 436 (Cameron v. Commissioners of Raleigh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron v. Commissioners of Raleigh, 36 N.C. 436 (N.C. 1841).

Opinion

Gaston, J.

The late John Rex, of the City of Raleigh, by his will duly executed, after devising to his nephew, John Rex, of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, a tract of land, situate in that county, devised all his real estate in the State of North Carolina unto Duncan Cameron and Geoorge W. Mordecai and the survivor of them, upon certain trusts therein afterwards particularly declared. He then bequeathed unto the said Duncan Cameron and George W. Mordecai and the survivor .of them all his slaves, in trust to cause the said slaves, as soon after the testator’s death as practicable, to be removed to Africa, and there settled in some colony, under the patronage and control of the American Colonization Society; with a proviso, that in case any of the said slaves should refuse to be so removed, the slave so refusing should be sold and the money, arising from the sale, should be added to the fund created for the removal and support of such of the slaves, as should be removed to Africa with their consent. The testator proceeded to declare his will as follows: “It is my will and desire that the lands and plantation, about three miles west of Raleigh, and the several lots of land, comprising my tan yard establishment, together with all my crop, stock of every kind, plantation tools and carriages, implements for tanning and currying, household and kitchen furniture, belonging to me at the time of my death, be sold by the said Duncan Cameron and George W. Mordecai, or the survivor of them — and the proceeds of such sale shall constitute a fund to defray the .expenses incidental to the removal of my slaves to some colony in Africa, under the patronage and control of the American Colonization Society, and for the establishment of said slaves in such colony after their removal to the same.” The testator then gave to the same devisees and the survivor of them, all the money belonging *438 him, all the debts due to him, and all the residue of his nol: t'nere^n devised and appropriated, in trust to and for the erection and endowment of an infirmary or hospital for thg sjcic anc[ afflicted poor of the City of Raleigh, upon a , * J 53 1 r lot of twenty acres adjoining the said city, which he thereby appropriated to that purpose — and directed that when the constituted authorities of the city should appoint trustees, capable in law of holding the same, then his said devisees or the survivor of them should convey the said lot of twenty acres and the fund accruing from the money belonging to him, the debts due to him, and the residue of his estate, as above described, unto the said trustees, so to be appointed, in trust for the erection and endowment of such hospital. And the testator further constituted the said Duncan Cameron and George W. Mordecai Executors of his will. The testator died, the executors proved the will, entered immediately upon the performance of the trusts thereby imposed, and caused all the said slaves, with the exception; of a negro woman Winney, who would not consent to leave the state, to be removed to the Colony of Liberia in Africa, a colony under the control and patronage of the American Colonization Society, where they are now residing as free persons. The constituted authorities of the City of Raleigh, have appointed trustees, capable in law of holding the property appropriated for the erection and endowment of the hospital, and the Legislature to enable the said trustees more efficiently to execute the trust reposed in them, have, by a special act, constituted them and their successors a body corporate and politic by the name of “ The Trustees of the Rex Hospital Fund.” This bill is filed by the plaintiffs, the said Cameron and Mordecai, for the advise of the court upon certain questions of alleged difficulty in the construction of the will, and also that they may have a settlement of their accounts, under the direction of the court, and to it are made parties defendants the commissioners of Raleigh, the said trustees, and the negroes so removed to Africa. The commissioners and trustees have answered the bill. The negroes not being in the state, were made parties by publication, and as to them the bill was taken fro confesso. A partial decree has been *439 made, and nothing now remains for the action of the court; except the questions upon which their advise has been prayed.

The first question is, whether a stock of leather, which the , .... . ,_. , , ... testator had in his tanning establishment at the time oí death, constitutes a portion of the fund, appropriated for the removal of his slaves to Africa and their establishment there, or falls into the other fund, provided for the erection and endowment of the hospital. Upon this question we are of opinion that the stock of leather does constitute a part of the first fund, and does not fall into the second. Stock, as meaning a personal capital, set apart for use or profitable employment, is confessedly of various kinds — such as agricultural, mercantile, manufacturing, or vested in public or corporate funds. The expression used here is ‘‘stock of every kind,”1 and it is used in the same sentence, in which the testator disposes of his plantation and his tanning-establishment. No reason can be discovered, why terms so broad, used in this connection, can be restrained to stock belonging to the plantation, and exclude stock, belonging to the tannery. No argument in favour of such a construction can arise from the testator having expressly named his implements for tanning, because, in the same sentence, he has named also his plantation tools. We are not at liberty to look out of the will for its meaning; and, if we were, we cannot hold, that the greater or less amount of this stock ought to affect the interpretation of the will.

The negro woman Winney, who refused to go to Liberia^ had been purchased by the testator upon a credit, and the price was unpaid at his death. The executors rescinded the contract with the seller, returned the slave and took in the testator’s note. And it is askéd of us whether the amount of this note .ought not to fall into the first fund. We answer this question in the affirmative, - The debt, which the testator owed for the purchase of Witney, was chargeable on the residuary part of the estate, given to the hospital fund — and the value of Winney, if she refused to be removed, belonged to the colonization fund. She did refuse — and the transae *440 tion was substantially a re sale, and the produce of such re~ sale must appropriated as the testator has directed.

The remaining question arising upon the pleadings is, whether the whole of the fund appropriated to the removal . rr. 1 and settlement of these negroes is given for the beneficial use of the removed negroes, to be applied to their support and advancement and as their property, or whether it is only subject to a charge for their removal to Africa and the first necessary expenses, incidental to their settlement in a new country, and after satisfying these expenses, does not fall into and pass with the general residue. In the answer of the Commissioners of Raleigh it is insisted, that the testator only charged his estate with the expenses of removal and settlement, and that the whole sum remaining in the hands of the plaintiffs, after defraying such expenses, falls into the Hospital Fund. Two grounds are taken in support of this claim.

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Related

Cunningham v. . Cunningham
1 N.C. 519 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1801)

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.C. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-commissioners-of-raleigh-nc-1841.