Craig v. Gamble

5 Fla. 430
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Fla. 430 (Craig v. Gamble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craig v. Gamble, 5 Fla. 430 (Fla. 1854).

Opinion

DuPONT, J.,

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This cause is brought up by appeal from a decree pronounced therein by tbe Hon. J. Wayles Balcer, Judge of tbe Circuit. Court of the Middle Circuit of Florida.

Tbe complainant, Hannah S. Craig, by her next friend, Henry L. Rutgers, filed her bill in the Circuit Court of Leon County, on the 18th day of June, A. D. 1853, against the defendants, James B. Gamble and Haley T. Blocker, setting forth amongst other matters, that the defendant. Gamble, bad caused an execution at law, which he held against one William P. Craig, (the husband of complainant,) to be levied upon fifteen hogsheads of sugar, belong[433]*433ing to complainant “in her own right,” and praying that the defendant Gamble, as plaintiff in execution, and the defendant Blocker, as Sheriff, be perpetually enjoined from further proceeding under the said levyv and that the same be dismissed. In accordance with the prayer of the bill, a writ of injunction was granted, directed to the defendants, and restraining them from any proceedings until the further order of the Court.

The defendant, Gamble, filed his answer on the 28th day of June, A. D. 1853, in which he denied all the material allegations contained in the bill, and particularly traversed the' title of complainant to the hogsheads of sugar levied upon.- This defendant also set forth in his answer special matter to be insisted upon by way of demurrer, at the final hearing, under that provision of the statute which recognizes and allows such practice ; but in view of the decision to' which this Court has come upon the merits of the case, it has been deemed unnecessary to consider those matters, or to pronounce an opinion-in relation thereto.

A final hearing of the cause was subsequently had upon bill, answer, replication and.proofs, and the evidence relied upon is to be found incorporated in the followingagreement of counsel, which forms a part of the. record before us, viz :

“ Memorandum. — At the hearing of this canse before I-Ion. J. "Wayles Baker, at Chambers, on the day of , 1853, it was admitted by the parties, by their counsel, as follows, to-wit: That the sugar in controversy in this cause, was raised and made by William P. Craig, husband of the complainant, on his plantation at Manatee, with the labor of himself and his own servants; that it was shipped by him to Mrs. William P. Craig, the complainant, and was stored in her name at the Railroad depot at Tallahassee ; that it was shipped by him on the day of . , 1852, as shown by the bill of lading in evi[434]*434dence, and reached the Tallahassee depot on or before the 3d day of December, 1852; that John G. Gamble, who executed'the transfer (in evidence) of judgments to John A. Craig and Hannah S. Craig, was duly empowered to transfer those judgments, and that the 'title and right thereto was and is legally vested in said John A. Craig and Hannah S. Craig.”

The “bill of lading” referred to in the foregoing agreement, is'a simple shipping receipt, signed by one William Blakeney, acknowledging to have received of “ William P. Crcdgf “for and on aoaov/nt of Mrs. William P. Craig f certain hogsheads of sugar, together with some other articles of merchandize ; and the “ transfer of judgments ,” also referred to, is in the usual form, assigning certain judgments at law, which had been obtained in favor of the Union Bank of Florida, against William P. Craig, to Hannah S. Craig and John A. Craig.

This is all the evidence that was adduced at the final hearing of the canse, and upon this evidence, the Judge in the Court below, sitting as Chancellor, was called upon to determine whether or not the injunction which had been temporarily granted, should he made perpetual. ‘

We are of opinion that he decided correctly in refusing the prayer of complainant, and in ordering the hill to he dismissed with costs.

It is clearly manifest that, in the then state of the pleadings, the title to the sugar levied upon was the only point at issue. If it had been shown by the proofs that Mrs. Craig, the complainant, had legally acquired the ownership of the property, then might her title have been protected by virtue of tbe provisions of the statute enacted by our Legislature for the protection of the rights of married women. But we are of opinion that the evidence to this point entirely fails to show' such a title in her as will override [435]*435the rights of creditors, and especially the lien of an execution cr editor. What are the facts of the case, as admitted at the bearing ? Why, that the sugar in controversy was raised and made by William P. Craig, (the defendant in execution,) on his plantation at Manatee, with the labor of himself and his own servants.” This, then, according to the well established principles of law, invested him with the .absolute title to the same, as the fruit of his labor. When and by what means did he divest himself of that title-? In looking into the record,, we can find no evidence of a purchase by or sale to the complainant, or indeed to any other person; there is no j>roof of consideration or value passing from her to the owner, William P. Craig, and the only intimation of an intended change of property is f o be found in the terms of the bill of lading, or shaping receipt, given by William Blakeney for the sugar in controversy. Now, by the very terms of the bill of lading, it is shown that the sugar was received of William P. Craig, the defendant in the execution, but for and on account of the complainant, his wife. This bill of lading,'or shipping receipt, however it might tend, as a matter of evidence, to induce the impression that there had been or was to be a change of property in the sugar, from William P. Craig to his wife, certainly does not of itself afford any proof of a sale. The essential element of a bona fide sale is wanting - — the consideration, and this is not supplied by any proof aliunde, so far as we have been able to discover. It is true that in the argument by counsel, it was insisted that the'complainant, being a creditor of her husband, by virtue of the several judgments assigned to herself and John A. Craig, it was a legitimate presumption that the shipment of sugar embraced in the bill of lading was intended as a payment on account of that demand ;• but we can discover in the record no evidence which in the remotest degree [436]*436tends to connect those judgments with the shipment of the sugar. There is no evidence that any credit for the value of the sugar, was ever entered upon those demands, or ever intended so to be. Neither the transcripts of the judgments nor the copies of the executions issued thereon are before us; but the transfer from John G. Gamble to the complainant and John A. Craig, stands in the record isolated and alone, unconnected by a particle of proof with the only point in issue, to-wit: The title to or ownership of the property in controversy.

If it be assumed that the shipment of sugar was intended as a pledge, the proceeds of which, when sold, were to pass to the credit of the transferred judgments, the reply is obvious — the bill contains no allegation of the kind, nor is there any proof in the record tending to support such an assumption.

In view, then, of the entire absence of any proof to show a sale or pledge of the sugar in controversy, from "William P.

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5 Fla. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-gamble-fla-1854.