Crawford v. Crawford

4 S.C. Eq. 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1811
StatusPublished

This text of 4 S.C. Eq. 176 (Crawford v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Crawford, 4 S.C. Eq. 176 (S.C. Ct. App. 1811).

Opinion

The cause afterwards came to a plenary hearing before Chancellor James, who after hearing the pleadings, evidence and arguments, delivered the following decree:

The hill in this case charges the defendant, with having fraudulently obtained the bill of sale of six slaves in dispute, which slaves the defendant recovered of complainant, by an action of trover against her individually.

The complainant alleges that her husband, John Crawford, when on a visit to his father, in Anson county North Carolina, in December 1800, signed his name to a blank piece of paper, intending that it should he filled up with a title to defendant of a certain tract of land, but that defendant filled or procured it to be .filled up with a bill of saleof the slaves in question.

In the answer, defendant has stated that he paid §> 1,000 to his son for the six slaves, and took the lull of [178]*178sale for them. And to refute that part of the bill which states that he was in distressed circumstances, and had taken the benefit of the insolvent debtors’ act, and was not able to raise so large a sum of money, he states, it is true he did take the benefit of said act, in the year 1793, but that since "that time, he has been able to reach a state of considerable affluence: declares himself to be worth $ 5,000 ; and to shew,it, makes a statement of the property of which he is possessed.

To support the answer, Titus Crawford, a son of the defendant has been sworn, and two witnesses, Chas. Strother and Matthew Stallions, have been examined in North Carolina.

Titus Crawford, the son, has most minutely and particularly related all the circumstances respecting the payment of the S 1,000 consideration money mentioned "in the bill of sale : Ho says, that it was drawn by his brother Richard some time previous to the signing ;-*■ that lie read it, and several of tho family did so likewise; — that his brother John signed it at the supper-table, and that the money was counted out upon the table, partly in silver and partly in paper. He also adds many other circumstances, which might either argue that his memory was uncommonly retentive, or that he has proved too much.

The witnesses Strother and .Stallions, have also stated, that they heard John Crawford, while on a visit at his father’s, say, that he had sold tho boy Sam, and negroes "Warner and others to his father for- $ 1,0»0

To contradict this testimony, the complainant has produced the evidence of Stephen Tompkins, the elder and the younger, and the depositions under four commissions.

Stephen Tompkins the younger, relates, that after-the death of John Crawford, he went into North Carolina to the house of tho defendant, and first related t® the father and family the news of his son’s death. That in the evening after, when tho trouble and confusion in the family had somewhat subsided, (he being the brother-[179]*179ra-Iaw of John. Crawford, and acquainted with ills' affairs,) Michael Crawford the elder, asked him, if John Crawford had made a will ?■ The witness answered he had not. Then, said the defendant, his negroes will be sold, and I am sure he never intended them to go out of his family. The defendant next told the witness, that he would advise complainant to administer, and to buy in the negroes, for she could not do without them ; and to fix it so that all the negroes- might be sold in a lump. The witness asked him, if he thought this would be treating the children with justice, and defendant answer-.ed in the affirmative. That witness staid at the house of defendant, from about three o’clock in the afternoon, till breakfast next morning, and never heard from the defendant a syllable about his claim to the negroes, or ok the bill of sale. That he afterwards rode thirty-two miles with Richard, the son, who, it is said, drew the' bill of sale, and was in his company three days, and yet he never1 mentioned the bill of sale.

Stephen Tompkins, the elder, stated that he was; Very intimate with John. Crawford, his son-in-law, who told him of all his affairs, and that he never informed him of this circumstance, so maternal, as being the sale of the whole of the negroes he possessed. That after the return of John Crawford from North Carolina, in Dec.. 1800, when it is stated he sold the negroes, he was about to fight a duel, and made a will, which witness saw, and he therein-disposed of his negroes to his family, except. Sam,, whom he had sold to one Giffith, after his return from North Carolina. This witness also states, that when the defendant came in from North Carolina, and a little while previous to Ms commencing a suit at law for the negroes, he told him, ho had a bill-of sale for them.Witness asked him, bow he came by it ? and defendant said, that bis son Dick told him, when his son John was in North Carolina, he gave the bill of sale to him, saying ho might die or get killed on the way home; and that he flushed his brother Dick to give the bill of sale to ins father, that he might, in such case, make over the property to his children. Witness asked him, if he intended [180]*180to do so ? and defendant answered that he did. Defcm (]ant ]xja(Se many professions of love for the family» spoke removing the body of his son to North Carolina, and endeavored to persuade his widow and children to rc-move there with him. Upon being cross examined, the witness stated, that Michael Crawford, the defendant, also told him,' that he had never seen the bill of sale, till after the death of his son John.

Upon being called a second time, Stephen Tompkins the younger, said, that he had never sued Grif-fiths for Sam, and at the conversation above mentioned with defendant at his house, his wife said, that she would advise that Sam should not be sold, as he was a fine boy, and the defendant assented to what she said, and mentioned nothing of his claim to Sam. That defendant told this witness, that being old, lie never would see lidgefield; that his going w ould be of no service, as witness could advise as well as he.

At the close of the testimony given by these two witnesses, the court asked defendant’s counsel, if he could impeach their testimony, but ho did not attempt it, and upon enquiry it was found, that this evidence is unimpeachable,

1 n answer to the interrogatories in the commissions, Henry Key stated, that he heard defendant say, “If his son’s widow, the complainant, would go into North Carolina, and settle on a tract of land his son died possessed of, he never would attempt to take one of the ne-groes from her, but as she would not, lie was determined to take every one.” This witness also stated, that before the trial at law, he asked Richard Crawford if the consideration money had been actually paid ; he replied that six hundred dollars had been paid; and that afterwards, on the trial, he was surprised to hear the said Richard Crawford,declare on oath, that he saw his father pay his brother g 1,000 in silver.

Lewis Dickson deposes, that Michael Crawford the younger, told him, that either he, or his father, (witness is uncertain which) had possession of a blank pa-nor. signed hv duhn Crawford, which they intended i-> [181]*181nil up as a bill of sale of the negroes, to secure them to the children of John Crawford.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.C. Eq. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-crawford-scctapp-1811.