De Lane v. Moore

55 U.S. 253, 14 L. Ed. 409, 14 How. 253, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 440
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 55 U.S. 253 (De Lane v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Lane v. Moore, 55 U.S. 253, 14 L. Ed. 409, 14 How. 253, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 440 (1853).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, iiqthe year 1847, ¿led their bill in the court aforesaid against the appellees, seeking of. them a discovery as •to certain slaves charged to have come to the possession of their testator, apd also an account and a recovery of'the value,’ increase, hires, and profits of those slaves, and claiming by name a negro woman named Linda or Linder, together with her children.

'The bill charges that in the' year 1816,'Mrs. Ann Wood De Láne, a widow; lady residing in the State of South Carolina* and possessed of’ valuable real estate, and of sundry slaves, being about to .izitermarry with one John Yancey, azi antenuptial contract was entered info and executed between these parties. The stipulations izi this contract, which is made an exhibit with the bill, are to the following effect: That “ all the estate of the

said Ann, real and personal, should be and remain for the joint use, support, and enjoyment of the' said John and Ann during their joint lives, and to the survivor of them during his or her life; that the same should be free from any debts, dues, demands, or contracts of said Yancey, unless it should be under the following restrictions : That the said John Yaneev *261 should not have the right to dispose of any portion of the estate of property, real or personal, unless- the said Ann should consent thereto. That the said John should have the right to dispose of the property upon his. obtaining such consent. That -the said Ann should have the right of granting or withholding her consent without resorting to the aid of a court of equity, or to the intervention of a trustee. That all transfers by the said John of any portion of the property with the consent of the said Ann, should be valid, whether made for his separate use and benefit, or for the joint use of himself and wife ; and that the said John should not be compellable to settle any equivalent for property so transferred, unless there should be a stipulation between the parties to that effect. That all of the estate, real or personal, which should remain undisposed of during the joint lives of the parties, should be for the use and benefit of the survivor '; and at his or her death should be equally divided amongst all the children of the said Ann, both of this and of the former marriage. That none of the aforesaid estate, real or personal, should be liable for any debts, judgments, or executions, that might be in existence at the date of the contract, or at any time thereafter against the said John, unless by mutual consent of the parties. The bill further charges that the marriage having taken place between the said Ann Wood De Lane and John Yancey, they removed to the. State of Alabama, where the said Ann having died, the said Yancey, who survived her, sold to James L.,Goree, deceased, either during the lifetime or after the death of the said Ann, but without her consent, and in violation of the ante-nuptial agreement, several of the slaves mentioned in that agreement. That the said Philip JH. De Lane, Martha Chiles, and Grace Lykes^who are the children of Ann W. De Lane, by her first marriage, and her only heirs, were, at the date of the sale aforesaid by Yancey, infants of tender years.

The bill makes no persons defendants, and seeks relief against none others, except the said Andrew B. Moore, and James L. Goree, the executors of James L. Goree, deceased.

The respondents deny all personal knowledge of a purchase of slaves by their testator, of Yancey, but state that they have: been informed, and believe, that the decedent did, in his lifetime, and in the lifetime of Ann W. Yancey, obtain from the said ■ John-Yancey,, in the year 1822, a' negro woman slave, named Lindy, and her child Becky, in payment of a store account contracted with the decedent, whilst a merchant in Alabama, by said John and Ann Yancey, for sugar, coffee, pork, butter, clothing, and other necessaries for the support of the said John arid Ann, and of the complainants, the children of the' said Ann, *262 and' of the slaves conveyed in the marriage settlement. The respondents deny that any slave mentioned in that agreement, except the woman Lindy, ever came to the possession of their testator, and after naming the offspring of Lindy, they aver that this female slave and her offspring were never held by the respondents in any other right than as the executors of James L. Goree, deceased; that long before the institution' of this suit, the respondents, as such executors, had delivered over to the distributees of their testator, all the slaves held by them, had settled their account as executors, and received a discharge, viz., on the 2d day of January, 1846. Having made the above statements in answer to interrogatories put by the bill, the respondents propound these separate averments, and claim to be allowed the benefit of them as if specially pleaded.

1. That their testator was a bond fide purchaser of the slave Lindy for valuable consideration, without notice of the alleged marriage settlement.

2. That more than six years had elapsed between the death of Yancey, who survived his wife, and the commencement of this suit, and therefore the suit is barred by the statute of .limitations.

3. That the said marriage settlement was made in the State of South' Carolina, and was not recorded according to the laws of that State, and is therefore void, both as to the respondents and to their testator, who was a bond fide purchaser without notice.

4. That if the marriage settlement had been properly recorded, or was otherwise valid the sale of the slave Lindy was made with the assent of the said. Ann Yancey.

5. That the respondents received the said slaves as the executors of the last will and testament of decedent, as a part of his estate, and had, before this suit was commenced, disposed of them according to the provisions of said will, by distribution and delivery to the legatees of said estate, and' that long before the commencement of this suit, had made'a final settlement of' said estate, and had been discharged from said executorship.

To the answer of the respondents, the complainants filed a general replication, and upon the pleadings and proofs, in the cause, the District Court, on the 7th of December, 1849, pronounced a decree, dismissing the bill of the complainants, with costs. The correctness of that decree we will proceed to consider. .

The first question which' presents itself, in the natural order of investigation of the proceedings of the District Court, is that which was raised upon the admissibility in evidence, of an authenticated copy of the antenuptial contract, upon the suffi- *263 ciency of the cause : assigned for the non-production of the original. The cause so assigned, was this. The three children of Mrs. De Lane, with the husbands of the two daughters, depose that they never possessed, nor ever saw.the original contract ; that they have made diligent inquiry for it, but have been unable to learn either its present existence, or place of existence— and believe that it has been lost or destroyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 U.S. 253, 14 L. Ed. 409, 14 How. 253, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-lane-v-moore-scotus-1853.