Davenport v. Prewett's Administrator

48 Ky. 94, 9 B. Mon. 94, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 8, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 Ky. 94 (Davenport v. Prewett's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. Prewett's Administrator, 48 Ky. 94, 9 B. Mon. 94, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 34 (Ky. Ct. App. 1848).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court

This action of detinue was brought by the administrator de bonis non, of Harvy Prewett, to recover seven slaves, (Rachel and her children,) from the possession of Davenport. The plaintiff’s right of recovery was contested on two principal grounds: 1st, That the legal title to the slaves was never in his intestate; and 2d, That if it was, he had transferred it to his children by a deed read as evidence on the trial; and 3d, Some attempt was made to show that the action was barred by adverse possession.

I. The question whether Prewett ever had title to the slaves, arises on the following facts: In September, [95]*951792, the will of John South was admitted to record iu the proper Court of the .State of Virginia, where he died in possession of a number of slaves, among whom was Rachel, the grand mother of Rachel now in contest. By one of the clauses of this will, the testator gave Rachel to his grand daughter, Elizabeth McClanahan, reserving to his daughter, Anne McClanahan, the use of her for life. After the testator’s death, Elizabeth McClanahan, the grand daughter, intermarried with Harvy Prewett, and died in 1833, leaving her husband aiid five children, and also her mother, then Anne Rochester, the devisee for life, all surviving her. Harvy Prewett, the husband, died in 1840, and Anne Rochester, (the Anne McClanahan mentioned in the will,) died in 1843. The possession of the elder Rachel and her descendants, came to the devisee, Anne McClanahan, and remained with her until, upon her daughter’s marriage-, she placed some of them in her possession, and •In 1834, she placed the younger Rachel with such children as she then had, in possession of Mrs. Davenport, her grand-daughter, but not a child of Elizabeth Prewett. Rachel and her children have remained with Davenport and wife, or under their control, ever since.

A vested remainder in slaves to take effect after the death often-ant for life, does not vest absolutely in the husband of a female upon her marriage; butin case of the death of the wife before the termination of the life estate, the right vests in the husband.— (B’lcs vs Marlcsberry, 3 Littell, 283-4; Turner vs Davis, 1 B. Monroe, 452; & Monroe 556.)

Construing the will as giving to Anne McClanahan the legal estate for life, and to Elizabeth McClanahan, then a feme sole, a vested remainder, to take effect in possession after the death of her mother, the doctrine seems to be well settled in this State, that upon her subsequent marriage during the continuance of the particular estate, this interest did not vest absolutely in the husband, but upon the death of either before the termination of the life estate, the title in remainder vested in the survivor. This rule is explicitly laid down in the case of Banks vs Marksberry, (3 Littell, 283-4,) as the result of a careful examination of all the cases. And upon that ground the right was decided in that case, not to-be in the administrator of the wife, but in the surviving husband. The same rule is again explicitly laid down in the case of Turner vs Davis’ adm’r., (1 B Monroe, 152,) and the authority of various cases referred to. And in the case of Greer’s heirs vs Boone, (5 B. Monroe, [96]*96556,) it is recognized as well settled. Upon the authority of these cases and of others therein referred to, we must decide that on the death of Mrs. Prewett, the vested remainder under the clause of South’s will, above referred to, survived absolutely to her husband, Harvy Prewett, whence it follows that unless the right was lost or disposed of in his life time, it passed to his administrator after his death.

'Though fhe prel^ítyTcSpts^ for dhir\leuefitS yet such presebuitted.

II. Then the question arises whether Prewett so disposed of his title during his life, as to prevent its vesting In h'is administrator. It appears that in 1835, after the death of his wife, the devisee In remainder, Prewett, then residing with his children in Jessamine county, executed a deed purporting to be between himself, of the first part, and his children by name, of the second part, and to convey to them several slaves, stated to be in his possession in Jessamine county, and also Rachel and her children, and other slaves said to be in possession of Mrs. Anne Rochester, in Mercer county, and to which it states said Prewett would be entitled after her death. The deed expressly reserves a right in the grantor 'to use and control the aforesaid slaves during his life, and to receive the profits, of their labor, and also reserves to Mrs. Rochester, in case of her surviving :him, a similar fight with regard to the slaves in her possession. This deed, which is said by a witness who deposed on the trial, to have been made for the purpose -of placing the slaves beyond the reach of an apprehended claim to alimony on the part of the grantof’s second wife, was acknowledged and recorded 'in the office <of the Clerk of the Mercer County Court, in which a ¡portion of the slaves may then have been, in the possession of Mrs. Rochester, the devisee for life, but In which neither of the parties to the deed then resided. The grantees' were all minors, the eldest a female, being then not more than ten or twelve years old, and since married, and at least three of the others would seem to have been still minors when this suit was brought, in January, 1847. There is no evidence that any of them ever accepted the deed or claimed under it, or that it had ever been heard of by the plaintiff, or by any of [97]*97the grantees, until aftér this suit was brought, nor until a short time before the trial, in September, 1848, which was more than five years after the death of the devisee for life. The original deed was not produced, but upon an affidavit by the defendant, that the original appeared to have been withdrawn from the Clerk’s office, and could not be found there, that he could not learn who had withdrawn it or in whose possession it was, and that the plaintiff on being called on for it, disclaimed all knowledge of it, a copy certified by the Clerk of the Mercer County Court, was read in evidence by the defendant without objection, there being some other evidence of the execution of such a deed by Prewett. The plaintiff then read, without objection, a paper executed a day or two before the trial by the children of Prewett, named as donees in said deed, except two, whose guardians had executed it. with the other donees, which paper purports to release all claim to the slaves in controversy, so far as depends upon the deed above referred to, but to claim them in virtue of their relation to Harvy Prewett, deceased. There is no re-lessee named in the instrument, and it was proved to have been executed under advice, as a disclaimer of title under the deed.

. Upon this evidence the Court, at the instance of the plaintiff, instructed the jury that if they believed from the evidence, that the deed of gift was never accepted by the grantees, or any of them, and that they never set up nor held title under it, it passed no title to them, and that the title still remained in the grantor. The verdict of the jury under this instruction, must be taken as finding the fact that the deed never was accepted by the grantees or any of them, nor any title set up under it.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ky. 94, 9 B. Mon. 94, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-prewetts-administrator-kyctapp-1848.