Crane v. Allen

11 La. Ann. 493
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 11 La. Ann. 493 (Crane v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crane v. Allen, 11 La. Ann. 493 (La. 1856).

Opinion

Merrick, C. J.

This suit is brought by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant twenty-eight slaves and their natural increase, together with $2,800 per annum, the alleged value of their services.

The principal facts out af which tin's controversy took its rise occurred in the State of Mississippi, where both plaintiff and defendant resided at the time.

The defendant claims title to the slave's in controversy through the plaintiff, and hence the burden of proof in this case is upon the defendant to establish, by clear evidence, his right to the property in question.

The principal facts.in the case are these: Jn, 1S45 the defendant married Saloam Grane, the daughter.of the plaintiff', who resided in Claiborne county, Mississippi. At the time of her 'marriage she possessed in her own right certain negroes inherited from her deceased brother, William G. Grane, an estate in certain other negroes called the Brashear negroes, determinable upon her death without children, and perhaps one other negro girl given her by her father.

James Grane, the plaintiff, having a tract of land ov plantation in Sunflower county, Mississippi, placed his daughter and her husband upon the same, with certain negroes belonging to himself, which were either on the place at the time or placed there after Allen and his wife took charge of it. Allen cultivated the place with these negroes and those belonging to his wife for his own account. In 1847, the second year after Allen and wife had taken possession of this plantation, called the Greenbriar or Sunflower Plantation, Mrs. Allen being dissatisfied in Sunflower county, an arrangement was made by which she and her husband returned to Claiborne county. The Greenbriar Plantation was left in the condition it then was, negroes and stock, except three of his wife’s slaves, Charles, Anarcha and Little Sara, and some horses which Allen brought away with him.

He removed to a plantation under the control of James Crane, which belonged to his children, inherited from William O. Grane. Mrs. Allen's interest in this plantation, as heir of her brother, was one-fiftb. Crane had on the [494]*494plantation, when Allen and wife moved to it, in Nov. 1847, the twenty-eight slaves now in controversy. Allen and wife cultivated this plantation for their own use, as they had previously done with the Greenbriar Place, until she died, in January, 1851. The defendant refusing to deliver up the slaves, an action of replevin was instituted in Mississippi by the plaintiff against the defendant. The defendant removed the slaves to the parish of Tensas, in this State. The bond under which the slaves had been-released on replevin being defective, that action was dismissed, and the present action was commenced against the defendant in this State.

He alleges in substance that he has title in this manner: That said Orane had given his daughter six slaves previous to his removal to Sunflower county ; that at the time of his removal he gave her verbally a tract of land and three more slaves; that with these slaves, his wife’s Brashear negroes and those she had inherited from William O. Grane, the Greenbriar plantation was cultivated by him ; that he and his wife exchanged the Greenbriar Plantation and slaves with the plaintiff for the William C. Crane or Waterman Crane plantation and slaves; that by the law's of Mississippi he inherited the slaves on the death of his wrife as next of kin.

He also relies on the statute of limitations of Mississippi limiting the actions of trover detinue and replevin to three years.

The testimony is almost exclusively made up of depositions.

The jury, on a second trial, (the first jury being unable to agree) found for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.

The record is voluminous, and the testimony somewhat conflicting. We shall not undertake to recapitulate the same, but merely state the conclusions to which wrn have arrived.

We disregard all that plea of defendant by which the testimony of certain of plaintiff’s witnesses is attempted to be impeached by the proof of particular facts against them. The mode of impeaching the credibility of witnesses is well defined: it is by inquiries as to their general reputation for truth and veracit3' in the neighborhood w'here they are known, and not in inquiries as to particular facts which might often be extremely prejudicial to a truthful witness without any possibility of his defending himself against them. Stanton v. Parker, 5 Rob., 109. 1 Greenleaf’s Evidence, No. 461.

Wo find no sufficient evidence in the record to show that the plaintiff made a verbal gift of the Greenbriar Plantation and the negroes claimed to the defendant’s wife. In arriving at this conclusion we have not been unmindful of the decisions of the common law courts, that where a father sends slaves home with his married daughter it is presumed to be a gift; but while we recognize this principle of law, we find another equally well settled in Mississippi, which is also available in this case, viz: that the character of the wife’s possession of such property may be shown by her acts and declaration out of the presence of her husband. Muirhead v. Muirhead, 1 Gushman, 97.

We think it results from the testimony:

1st. That Grane, who had not been in the habit of giving off property to his children, did not intend to do so in this instance, either to transfer the ownership of the land which was transferable by deed, or the slaves, which might be conveyed by him by parol.

2d. That Mrs. Allen did not understand that she had any title to the property except the eight negroes she held in her owd right.

[495]*495In regal'd to the alleged exchange of the property in the two plantations and slaves, we do not think it took place for these reasons:

1st. Grane had not been divested of title to the Greenbriar Plantation, and it would have been absurd in him to attempt to acquire title to a plantation which he already owned, by giving in exchange therefor one which already belonged to the person with whom the exchange was made and her co-heirs.

2d. Allen was a lawyer, and the property considerable, and there is not the slightest written evidence of such transfer, and moreover we are informed by defendant’s counsel, and such is the law, that a married woman cannot alienate even her right to slaves except by deed duly acknowledged.

3d. The acts of Mrs. Allen were inconsistent with such exchange of property, and were not so understood either by herself or by Grane.

4th. Such exchange is also inconsistent with the declarations and acts of the defendant after the death of his wife, in obtaining a release of the heirs as to the other property claimed by her in her lifetime, and in asserting as a moral right that Grane ought to allow him possession of the property until the debts were paid.

The next question presented for our consideration is the statute of limitations.

We find that the limitation of the actions of trespass detinue and trover for taking any goods and chattels to three years, and we suppose the action of replevin to have been limited by a previous statute to the same period.

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11 La. Ann. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-allen-la-1856.