Clement v. Riley

11 S.E. 699, 33 S.C. 66, 1890 S.C. LEXIS 126
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 26, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 699 (Clement v. Riley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clement v. Riley, 11 S.E. 699, 33 S.C. 66, 1890 S.C. LEXIS 126 (S.C. 1890).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

S. B. R. Riley, commonly called Stephney Riley, a man of color, died in October, 1885, intestate, leaving, as stated, personal estate more than enough to pay his debts. He left a widow, Molly Riley, but no children or lineal descendants. The widow, Molly, administered, and being in possession, claims the whole estate as sole heir. This action was instituted against her for an account by the plaintiffs, the Clements, claiming to be brothers and sisters, or their children, of the intestate, through their mother, Patty, or Patsy, Clement; making parties defendant the Snipe children, who claim to be brothers and sisters of the half blood through their father, one Isaac Snipe. The parties are all colored people, formerly slaves, and the question is, whether any of them, and, if so, who, are the heirs at law of the intestate, Stephney Riley.

It was referred to the master, G. II. Sass, Esq., to take the testimony and to report upon all the issues of law and of fact, with leave to report any special matter. He took a mass of testimony, which is all printed in the “Brief,” and reported, among other things, as follows : “Isaac Snipe, the elder, a slave, lived on Mr. Bailey’s plantation, on James Island, for years before the late war. He died long before the war in slavery. He left surviving him several children, the Snipes and Stephney. The Snipes were the children of a woman named Hannah; Riley of Patty or Patsy Clement. Patsy was bought by Mr. Bailey from a plantation in St. John’s Parish, and brought to his plantation. She had several children, the Clements, plaintiffs herein, when [76]*76she came to the Bailey place. They were by another father (probably other fathers) than Snipe; and the father of at least one of the children afterwards went to the Bailey pla'ce in search of her, but was driven off by Snipe, with whom she was then living. When Patty came to the Bailey place, Hannah was still alive, and it seems from the weight of the testimony that she was still living with Snipe, though some of the witnesses say that Snipe had separated from her before Patty’s coming. Be that as it may, however, shortly after Patty’s coming, Snipe left Hannah and ‘took up’ with Patty, and Isaac and Patty thereafter lived together as man and wife, according to plantation custom, for many years, and he was living with her when he died. Stephney Riley was the only child of Patty and Isaac. Hannah, the mother of the Snipe children, was alive at the time of Riley’s birth, and, indeed, outlived Isaac Snipe; but Isaac never returned to her. He left her definitely, and took Patty as his wife, and his marriage to Patty was recognized by their owner, Mr. Bailey, who, when Patty’s former husband came to the plantation after her, supported Snipe against him, and ordered him off the place. Riley was subsequently sold and removed to Charleston. On December 23rd, 1853, he was married to Molly, a slave, by the rector of Calvary Episcopal church, and lived with her as his wife to the day of his death. They never had any children, and Molly survived her husband, and is defendant herein. Riley accumulated property after the war, and this suit is brought by the Clements, the children and grandchildren of Patty, claiming one moiety of the same as the half sisters, by the mother’s side, of Riley, who died intestate, against the widow and the Snipes (children of Hannah), who claim as the half brothers and sisters of Riley, by the father’s side. If the claim of the half blood be sustained, the .widow is entitled to one moiety, and the half blood to the other moiety. If no half blood relationship (and no other is set up), the widow takes the whole estate,” &c. He held that Isaac and Hannah were not husband and wife, and, therefore, that the Snipes were not legitimate, but that Isaac and Patty were husband and wife, and their issue, Riley, w'as legitimate, and the plaintiffs (Clements) were brothers of the half blood [77]*77through their mother, Patty, and entitled to one moiety of the estate, the other going to the widow, Molly.

Both the widow, Molly, and the Snipes children excepted to the report, and, upon argument, the Circuit Judge held as follows, viz. : “I find that there is evidence of a moral marriage between Isaac Snipe and Hannah, slaves. The consent of their owner could confer no right to dissolve such marriage. The relations between Isaac and Patty were not those of husband and wife, but concubinage merely. S. B. W. Riley was illegitimate. There is no proof of the legitimacy of the plaintiffs. I do not consider that the facts of this case bring it within the decision of Davenport v. Caldwell (10 S. C., 317), nor under the operation of the acts of 1865, 1866, and 1872. It follows, that neither the' plaintiffs nor the defendants are heirs at law of S. B. W. Riley, deceased, and that the defendant, Molly Riley, the widow of the intestate, is entitled, under the statute of distributions, to hold the entire estate of her deceased husband, without accountability to the plaintiffs, or the defendants,” &c. From this' decree the Clements, as well as the Snipe branch, appeal to this court.

Clements’ Appeal. — “1. Because his honor found that ‘there was evidence of a moral marriage between Isaac and Hannah, slaves. , The consent of their owner could confer no right to dissolve such marriage. The relations between Isaac and Patty were not those of husband and wife, but merely concubinage.’ And in error, further, in not finding that Isaac married Patty according to plantation custom, and with the sanction of their owner, and lived with her as his wife until his death, and that the connection between Hannah and Isaac was not a marriage even according to plantation custom, but merely concubinage. 2. Because his honor erred in finding S. B. W. Riley illegitimate, and that there was no proof of the legitimacy of the plaintiffs. 3. Because his honor erred in not finding the plaintiffs the legitimate children and grandchildren of Patty, because the master so found, and neither Molly, the widow (except as to one), nor the Snipe defendants, excepted to such finding, and therefore it must be taken as a fact. 4. Because his honor erred in finding that the facts of this case do not bring it within the decision of Davenport v. Caldwell (10 S. C.), nor under the operation of the acts [78]*78of 1865, 1866, and 1872. 5. Because his honor erred in finding that the plaintiffs are not the heirs at law of S. B. W. Riley, and that Molly Riley, the widow, is entitled to hold the whole estate of her deceased husband, without accountability to the plaintiffs. 6. Because his honor was in error in that he did not find that, irrespective of the fact, whether Hannah or Patty was the wife of Isaac (Riley’s father), yet the plaintiffs and Riley, being both children of the same mother, to wit, Patty, that under the operation of section 4 of the act of 1865, they are her legitimate children, and hence inherit the one from the other — the plaintiffs from Riley,” &c.

Appeal oe Snipe’s Children. — “1. Because his honor, the •judge, found that the consent of the owner of Isaac and Hannah, slaves, conferred no right to dissolve their marriage, and should have found that the act of the owner operated as vis major, and therefore dissolved such marriage. 2. Because the judge should have found that the relations between Isaac and Patty, after the dissolution of the marriage between Isaac and Hannah, were those of husband and wife. 3. Because the judge should have found that Stephney B. W.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 699, 33 S.C. 66, 1890 S.C. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-riley-sc-1890.