Clarke v. Baker

30 Ky. 194, 7 J.J. Marsh. 194, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 12, 1832
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Ky. 194 (Clarke v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. Baker, 30 Ky. 194, 7 J.J. Marsh. 194, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 36 (Ky. Ct. App. 1832).

Opinion

Judge lírcrioí.As

Jpb'vrrerl the opinion of the Court.

Chief Justice Robertson did not sit.

This was an action instituted in 1825, by Clarice against Baker, for the Trover and conversion of slaves. On the trial of the general issue the plaintiff proved that in 1813 theslaves were sohjj conveyed, and delivered to him by Martin Baker; that he had held possession of them from that time ti l 1825, when thev secretly left him, or were car-3’ied off in the night, and a few days afterwards were found in the possession of the defendant, who refused to deliver them up. The defendant then shewed that Martin Baker, in 1817, by an answer in the nature of a cross hill against Clark and others, in a suit then pending in the Garrard circuit court, prayed and sought a recision of the contract of sale of sai 1 slaves, and to have them redelivered because of alledged fraud and imposition on the part of Clarke, in their obtention; that Martin Baker diecl in 1823; [195]*195-that said bill was regularly continued until 1826, when it was revived in the name of the defendant, as administrator of said Martin, and that it was now pending; that the defendant had administered on the estate of said Martin. He also introduced witnesses whose testimony conduced to shew, that at the time of making the sale to Clerke, Martin Baker was of unsound mind, and that plaintiff had taken advantage' of his weakness, to procure a sale of the slaves at an inadequate price. Upon this testimony the plaintiff moved the court to instruct the Jury:—

“1st. That a party remaining in the adverse possession of slaves for five years, thereby becomes invested, in virtue of the statute of limitations, with such a right as to enable him to recover them of the former owner, who may afterwards have obtained the possession wrongfully,
2d. That the pendency of a suit in chancery between the same parties, about the same slaves, will not protect such former owner wrongly obtaining the possession against the operation of the statute of limitations, in action at law, brought by the party from whom tiiey are taUen or withheld.
3d. That a party, who, during the pendency of a suit brought by him to recover the possession of slaves, takes said slaves from the possession of his adversary, without his consent, is a wrong doer.”

The court refused to give either of these instructions, and for so refusing, assigned for reasons, to the counsel and jury, that, “as Martin Baker had by hi? bill asserted title to the slaves before they had been five years in the possession of plaintiff, the-case was not within the reasons of any opinion of the appellate court, in the cases to which the-court had been referred, the possesion of the plaintiff Ciar .e having been disturbed by the suit in chancery.” For refusing to give said instruction? the plaintiff excepted. Verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendant. The plaintiff then moved the court for a new trial, because the verdict was contrary to law and evidence, and because the court erred in its instructions to the jury. The .court overruled the motion’®®!- a new trial, and [196]*196Clarke has appealed to this court, and assigns for error the refusal to give the instructions asked, and the overruling his motion for a new trial.

Plea of “good retfu,_ .uea o .

Before entering upon an investigation of the errors assigned in behalf of Clarke, we are met by a preliminary objection on the part of the defendant, Ba-¿er. It is thisv in addition to the'plea of not guiityT Baker filed another plea, in which, after setting forth the filing of Martin Baker’s cross hill, its pendency and subsequent revivor in his name, as his administrator; he says “that said Martin - had good title to said slaves, and defendant as his administrator, in which character he holds them, has a right to the possession and disposition thereof, and further avers, that the suit in chancery is still pending, &c.” To this-plea the plaintiff demurred, and the court sustained his demurrer. It is now insisted that this jilea is good — presents a substantial bar to the action, and that the court, judging upon the whole record, must fender a judgment of affirmance without regard to any errors which may have intervened to the jirejudice of Clarke. The plea could scarcely have been drafted with a view to present the issue which it is now contended to embrace; nor does it contain a sufficiency of either form or substance to subserve the purjjose to which it is attemjited to apply it. Waiving all excejition to the loose and unusual dress in which it is supposed to assert jiroprietorship of the slaves in Martin Baker or the defendant, it does not aver when Martin had “good title,” how long it subsisted, nor that he retained it at the time of his death, and though it asserts that the defendant has the right to their possession and disposition, it does not affirm that he liad such right at the institution of the suit. A state of case may well.be imagined which would allow all the allegations of the plea to be true, and still leave a right of action in the jilaintiff. As suppose a mortgage from Martin to the jilaintiff; a seizure and conversion of the slaves by the defendant, and after institution of the suit a jiayment of the mortgage by the defendant. This reinvestiture of the title in the defendant, after suit brought, woul-^not destroy the plaintiff’s right of action, existing at the time of its institution. This [197]*197construction of the plea may be deemed critically severe and exact. Be it so. Every plea which is attempted to be used for a similar purpose, should be made to undergo a similar test. Besides, we think there was great force in the objection urged at the bar, that the plea, if good at all, amounts only to the general issue, and therefore should receive no further consideration than if it were a second plea of not guilty, which the plaintiff had failed to notice. Having disposed of this objection, we shall proceed to consider the questions presented by the assignment of errors.

The court may instruct thejury with* our being moved so to do, but i* is noi bound to instruct unless requested so to do. t When instructtions to the jury are requested of the court, it is bound to necidu u- on them in the form ii* which' they are draughted and presented o the court, but it is not ' ound to mould Ihrm into the proper form. General rule is that the couttshould not give in* structionson mere abstract points of law*

The first is whether the court should have given the instructions as asked by the plaintiff.

The propriety of giving the third instruction asked for was waived- in argument, and the two first only insisted on. To those two on the one hand it is objected, that they were merely abstract propositions of law, not applied to, nor comprehending all the facts or aspects of the case, whilst, on the other, it is contended that they embrace legal points applicable and pertinent to- the facts and issue, and that if they needed qualification, the qualification should have been made by the court, or by instructions which should have been ashed by the adverse party. It has long been settled, that the court may instruct the jury without being moved so to do, but it is not bound to do it. It need only decide upon the instructions as asked, and is under no obligation to mould them into proper form.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Ky. 194, 7 J.J. Marsh. 194, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-baker-kyctapp-1832.