Deatly's heirs v. Murphy

10 Ky. 472, 3 A.K. Marsh. 472, 1821 Ky. LEXIS 185
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 5, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Ky. 472 (Deatly's heirs v. Murphy) 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
Deatly's heirs v. Murphy, 10 Ky. 472, 3 A.K. Marsh. 472, 1821 Ky. LEXIS 185 (Ky. Ct. App. 1821).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the opinion

The heirs of John Deatly filed their bill in chancery against Zephaniab Murphy and Richard Stiles and others, representing that their ancestor was possessed of a considerable persona! estate, sundry slaves, and a tract of land ; and was, in the year 1812. accused of felony and imprisoned in the jail of Fayette county. That when under confinement his estate was pressed with sundry small executions, and to discharge them, he executed a letter of attorney to said Murphy, authorizing him to sell a negro slave, named Austin, to discharge the debts, and other property if Austin was not sufficient. That pursuant ⅛ the power Murphy sold the slave for about 255 dollars, and paid 200 thereof to the wife of Deatly, who again, on the request of Murphy, restored it to him, and he did not discharge the debts, but represented that he would let the estate, executed, be sold, and be would become the purchaser with the same money, of Deatly, gotten for the negro sold, and thereby secure it to the family of Deatly. That accordingly all the persona! estate was sold, by a sheriff and a constable holding a few small executions, amounting, in the whole, to an inconsiderable sum, and Murphy became the purchaser, and, 3moi>g the rest, of a negro girl named Eliza — That Deatly was a man of weak mind and easily imposed upon, and that Murphy possessed Lis entire confidence, and professed friendship towards him, and exercised a strong influence over him. — That Murphy, together with a certain John Roberts, then bailed Deatly out of jail, and after bis return home to Nicholas county, he,' Deatly, placed in the possession of Murphy, three negro slaves of great value, named Aggy, Nance and Mima— and that at the time Murphy got possession of these slaves, he paid Deatly one half dollar, which Deatly acknowledged to be the last payment for them; but engaged at the time, to restore them, and if he sold them he was to procure other negroes, and convey them over to Death’s family, to wit, to his wife and children, separate from the control of Deatly. — That Murphy having thus got all the personal estate and slaves, under the specious pretext of securing them for the family, Deatly still retained his land to the quantity cf 137 acres, for which hs held a bond on Joba [473]*473Fowler, executed by Col. Fletcher, bis agent, Stipulating a conveyance. That Murphy then came to the house of Deatly and represented to him that a certain Thomas J. Glass held an execution against Deatly for about nine dollars, and that he (Glass) was about to send the officer to execute and sell the land. That on Deatly’s being alarmed at this intelligence, Murphy informed him how he could avert the evil, by assigning the title bond on Fowler to some confidential friend — and that Deatly accordingly took sine dollars of his own money and furnished it to Murphy, privately, and then before witnesses assigned the title bonds of Fowler to Murphv, who paid him therefor the same nine dollars, acknowledging that to be the last payment for the land. The bill then proceeds to state that Murphy bad sold the personal estate, and all the slaves except the girl Eliza, and had assigned the title bond to the defendant Stites, and procured the agent of Fowler, as stated in an amended bill, to make the conveyance to Stites, who had brought ah ejectment for the land, all which acts of Murphy, happened after Deatly’s death, as to the sale of the property. The bill then makes Murphv, Stites, and Fletcher, defendants, and prays relief against all these transactions.

Murphy, in his answer, admits the sale of the negro Austin, but alledges that he paid the two hundred dollars to Mrs. Deatly and never received it back, and appropriated part of the fifty five dollars to the discharge of Deatly’s debts, and kept the residue in part pay for his trouble and alledges that he bought the personal estate and the slave Eliza with his own money — admits he bailed Dea'ly, and alledges that he bought the three slaves Aggy, Nanee, and Mima, of Deatly, for $500 paid down, and that the title of the negroes was in dispute, and hence they sold so cheap, as he took them entirely at his own risque, and he exhibits a bill of sale for the three, expressing the consideration of $500. He denies an agreement to hold the three slaves last named in trust for Deatly’s children, or any promise to restore them or furnish others in their room. He denies that he represented that Glass had an execution of nine dollars, about to take the land, and declares he had, himself, paid off Glass’s execution long before the assignment of the bond for the land. Contrary to all this he declares that he purchased the land at the price of five hundred dollars, three hundred and twenty of wbiah he paid [474]*474down to Deatly, and the residue he agreed to pay, and did actually pay to Fowler, being the balance due of the original price, and /or this consideration Deatly assigned to him Fowler’s obligation, and admits the sale to ¿titea and conveyance bv Fowler.

Tho’ a bill should be so drrwnT'as to enable a clianoelior to decree with such tuinlymaj be Win)6" wh re the party was ignorantof his rights^ & may avast ^ himself of any proofs or skmofthe answer.

Stites professes ignorance of the charges in the bill, admits the purchase and part of the payment, and reception of a conveyance, and declares himself an innocent purchaser without notice, altho’ bis conveyance was made, pending the original bill.

Fletcher complains of being made a defendant, and being called upon for a disclosure of the title bond or bonds of Fowler to Deatly which be bad taken in, when he made Ihe conveyance to Stites, as the agent of Fowler, declares he has lost or mislaid them, and cannot produce them.

The circuit court decided against the claim for the personal estate, on the ground that the personal representative had not sued, and against the claim for the slaves on the ground that the remedy of the complainants below was complete at law to recover them or their value. And also against the claim for the land, on the ground that the transfer of the bonds was made to screen the land from Glass’s execution, and of course no relief could be had against such a contract. The bill was accordingly dismissed without prejudice to any suit at law brought for the same cause of complaint, from which decree the heirs of Deatly appealed.

Among the numerous registers of guilt, which courts of justice are frequently compelled to make, but few can be f°un^ °f a color more dark, — a conduct more unfeeling and vile, than that which the proof in this cause discloses against the defendant Murphy. In such circumstances we rausl et!quire whether there are any legal bars in the road recovery, and whether Death,’s conduct was so equally base as that of Murphy, as to prevent his representatives ^rom r!’COVering ¡!1 Ibis suit.

1* ⅛ noticed by the court below, with much justice, that the bill is defective. It is so imperfectly and inartificially drawn, that it does not, nearly, embrace the case as made 0U1 by the answer of Murphy, taken in connection with the proof. Il is a sound rule that a hill ought to contain such charges and allegations as will support the jurisdiction of a court of equity, and warrant the decree of the chancellor upon its allegations. But it is a sound exception to this [475]*475ruie that many of such charges and allegations may be dis-ptiised w ith where the complainant is ignorant of his rights, and if the answer or proof aids such a case, relief may be granted without regard to the dtfective, and sometimes incorrect statements ofthe bill.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ky. 472, 3 A.K. Marsh. 472, 1821 Ky. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deatlys-heirs-v-murphy-kyctapp-1821.