Cuny v. Robert

16 La. 175
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 La. 175 (Cuny v. Robert) 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
Cuny v. Robert, 16 La. 175 (La. 1840).

Opinion

Garland, J.,

delivered the opinion of,the court.

This suit is brought to recover a mulatto woman, named Lavinia and her child, slaves for life, which the plaintiff says belong to him, having purchased them of Gilbert C. Russell, on the 3d June, 1832, by an act under private signature, proved to have been executed on the day it purports to be dated, by one of the subscribing witnesses. Robert claims the slaves, alleging and proving by the production of a notarial act of sale, that he had purchased them from Isaac Franklin, in New-Orleans, on the 10th March, 1829, who says he purchased her from Robert Armstrong, through the agency of one William Nichols, but shows no written title or evidence, other than a receipt which Robert Armstrong gave Nichols on the 4(h March, 1829, acknowledging the receipt of five hundred dollars as the price of a girl named Lavinia, which he says was sold, on his account, to Messrs. Franklin, being the same girl conveyed to him by F. W. Armstrong, who alleges he had authority from Gilbert C. Russell, to sell the woman, and.says he did sell her, in August, 1827, to the aforesaid Robert Armstrong, although the sale is not dated until the 19th day of June, 1833, about eighty days after the commencement of this suit, and the parties had notice of it. When Russell sold to the plaintiff, both parties knew the slaves were in the possession of the defendant, and that he had claimed and possessed them a little more than three years. The defendant cited Franklin as his warrantor, who called upon Nichols and he upon F. W. Armstrong, all [179]*179of whom have answered. All the parties admit the woman once belonged to Russell, and the defendant says he authorized Armstrong to sell her; but the plaintiff and Russell deny it.

A power to sell must be express and special. No particular form of expression is necessary, but it must distinctly express the intention of the seller, so as not to admit of equivocation or serious doubt.

The alleged power to sell, the defendant says, is contained in a letter which he produces. It is addressed by Russell to F. W. Armstrong, Huntsville, Alabama, dated in the parish of Rapides, 23d June, 1827. It is written in a loose style, and not read by the writer after it was written, as is said in a postscript. He speaks of a variety of matters, among other things of the pain given to some other slaves by “ the separation of Vincent and Lavinia.” He directs Armstrong to deliver Vincent to his mother-in-law, and take a receipt from her, stating that when he should refund her from five to eight -hundred dollars, Vincent should be returned. He speaks of two slaves called Tempsey and George, to be delivered by a person named Hunter, and a runaway called Ben, who he expects to come in that day, and says if he gets them, “ you will receive them by the first conveyance. I shall consign to you Bob or Toulner.” He then speaks of his property in Kentucky, which he intends selling, and of other matters; then comes that part of the letter, in which the power to sell is alleged to be contained. “ Do the best with George, Lavinia and Nelson, and apply the whole of the proceeds to your own debts in bank;” and the letter breaks into other matters again. The counsel for the defendant, contends, these words taken in connection with the other parts of the letter, indicate sufficiently the intention of Rus sell to sell, and in effect complies with the article 2966, of the Louisiana Code, which says a power to sell or purchase must be express and special. It is true the law has not provided any particular form for a power of attorney, and it is sufficient if the principal distinctly expresses his intention, but as the law now is, it must be so distinctly made known as not to admit of equivocation or serious doubt. This court, in 1822, when the old Code was in force, decided that a letter written by a principal to a third person, informing him of his .determination to sell certain slaves, and requesting that person [180]*180to assist another (who he said was his agenl) to sell, was a special authority under the article 10, page 422 of the old Code; Steer vs. Ward et al., 10 Martin, 679. The Legislalure afterwards took up the amendments to the old Code, and inserted the word express in the article, so (hat a power to sell or to purchase, must now be “express and special.” Louisiana Code, article 2966. We are to presume the legislature knew what the decisions of this court were, and that by inserting the word express in the article in the Louisiana Code, it was intended to say, that something more definite and particular should be required than what the court had considered sufficient in the case of Steer vs. Ward et al., or what was required by the old Code. The authority in the present case, is by no means as strong as in the case cited, and it seems the legislature did not think such a power sufficient, and required something more.

From the terms of the letter from Russell to Armstrong, it. appears they were on terms of intimacy, but it does not appear in the record that the former owed the latter any thing, or that he was in any manner bound for him, nor does it appear that Armstrong owed any debts in bank; on the contrary, it appeal's he did not apply the proceeds to paying a debt in bank, but delivered the slave Lavinia to Robert Armstrong, who sent her to New-Orleans, in the early part of the year 1829, and gave F. W. Armstrong credit for five hundred dollars on a debt of his own. But admitting F. W. Armstrong to have been indebted to some bank, we cannot presume Russell intended to make him a donation of ■his slaves to pay the debt. The most reasonable construction is, he wished to aid his friend, and therefore directed him to do the best with the slaves to relieve himself, at. the same time reserving the title to them. If Armstrong was in debt, and Russell wished to relieve him, it is more probable, if the debt was small, that Russell intended by the words “ do the best, with the slaves,” that they should be hired and the proceeds used ; if, it was large, the best for Russell’s interest was to have (hem mortgaged and raise money ; thereby giving both an opportunity of redeeming them. Without [181]*181other circumstances, we consider the power too indefinite to authorize Armstrong to sell the slaves mentioned; and it appears he never did sell as agent.

the judge4 to charge the jury, that “a power to sell a slave, must be expresa and special, and ferredfrom^rcumstances,” is too specifically and strongly ex-the^the^hand" to tell the jury if it appeared to have been “fairthorize a sale,” and that «*ey might “consider which the power was meant to be used, taken with the context,” is too loose and indefinite.

There is another feature in this case which shows that F. W. Armstrong had doubls about his authority, or conducted his business very loosely, as he never made any written conveyance of the slave to Robert Armstrong, until after this suit was brought and all the parties knew it. That Nichols knew of the suit, is clear from his letter to the defendant and his counsel, and it is almost as certain, that F. W. and Robert Armstrong knew it also; if they did, then they knew Russell had previously sold the slave to the plaintiff, and the power was revoked. It is not pretended F. W. Armstrong ever purchased Lavinia from Russell, and in his sale he does not sell as agent, but as owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 La. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuny-v-robert-la-1840.