Duckett v. Crider

50 Ky. 188, 11 B. Mon. 188, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 42
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 14, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Ky. 188 (Duckett v. Crider) 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
Duckett v. Crider, 50 Ky. 188, 11 B. Mon. 188, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 42 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action of detinue was brought by Duckett and wife' for the recovery of a female slave, Mary, and her children, in possession of Crider, who had purchased and received the mother about nine years before from one Wyatt, who had purchased her from J. J. Satterfield, who had early in the year 1835 purchased her from Gray, her owner, but had taken the bill of sale to his niece, Eliza Satterfield, now E. Duckett, and one of the plaintiffs. A trial was had upon the plea of non detinet, and a verdict having been found for the defendant under instructions moved for by him, and which, [189]*189being admitted to be erroneous, need not be stated, the judgment against the plaintiffs must be reversed, unless upon the case as presented by the pleadings and evidence, the jury were bound, without any instructions, to find for the defendant, or the Court might have instructed them to find for him, or as in case of a non-suit.

It appears that Eliza Satterfield was about eighteen-years of age, when the bill of sale was made to her, and was then at the house of her uncle, J. J. Satterfield, under some agreement made between him and her father, residing in a distant county, to the effect that if the latter would permit her to go and reside with her uncle, and also give up to him his notes for $70, he would buy a negro girl for her- — that the notes were given up, and she was taken home by her uncle, where she remained some few months, when falling-sick, she was taken by her father to his own home, where she remained about two years, until her marriage under the age of twenty-one, with Duckett, and never returned to live with J. J. Satterfield, who had and retained possession of the slave until 1839, when he sold and delivered her to Wyatt, who in 1840, sold and delivered her to Crider, in whose possession she remained up to the commencement of the suit in 184-9, having in the interval given birth to the children claimed in the declaration. It does not appear that Eliza Satterfield knew while she was at her uncle’s, that the' bill of sale had been made to her, or that she ever had possession or control of the slave, unless as implied from the possession of her uncle, nor was it known in the neighborhood that she had, or made any claim until about the time this action was commenced. But the slave was considered and recognized as the properly of J. J. Satterfield, who exercised ownership over her from the date of his purchase until he sold her to Wyatt. The manner and time of the delivery of the bill of sale by J. J. Satterfield, and of its coming to the possession of the plaintiffs, though stated by the father of [190]*190Eliza Satterfield, is rendered uncertain by bis conflicting declaration proved by another witness, which raised a question of credibility proper for the decision of the jury. And as there seem to have been subsequent transactions between J. J. Satterfield and the father of the plaintiff, Eliza, in which the $70 surrendered may have been settled, it might have been a question whether the consideration on which the bill of sale had been taken to E. Satterfield, having partially failed, was not in fact wholly reimbursed. The long silence of the present claimants, and their acquiescence for fourteen years in the possession and sale of the slave by J. J Satterfield and the subsequent vendees, is well calculated to raise inferences unfavorable to their title, and especially if, as their witness states, the bill of sale had been delivered to him when he took his daughter home, and was upon her marriage delivered to her husband.

In'a suit by husband and wife, the declaration & proof should show a right to maintain a joint action.

But whatever inferences might be drawn from these facts, they are not established by the verdict, and cannot be assumed by the Court as a ground for sustaining the judgment. Nor can it be assumed, if the jury could have found that the possession of J. J. Satterfield was not adverse, but amicable and subordinate to the title of Eliza Satterfield at the time of her marriage in 1837, and up to his sale to Wyatt in 1839. If it was thus amicable and subordinate at the time of the marriage, then the consequence would be that the title vested absolutely in the husband on the marriage, and that the right of action being in him alone, was not only barred by lapse of time, but there could be no recovery in this joint action by himself and wife, and that the verdict and judgment being on this ground right, and in fact necessarily for the defendant, there could be no reversal. In the case supposed, the absolute property would have vested in the husband long before the date of the act of February, 1846, preserving the rights of married women in their slaves, and was not divested by that act, though it should be regarded as authorizing [191]*191a joint action by husband and wife in consequence of the permanent right of property in her, and of her right in case of her surviving him. But even in a case coming under this operation of the act, and especially where, as in this case, the declaration avers a joint possession, which in law is the possession of the husband, the declaration should show on its face the right of the wife, as being the only ground on which she could be united in the action. And as this declaration does not allege, nor profess to show any right in her, or any ground for uniting her in the action, unless the insufficient fact of a joint bailment in the first count, and a joint possession in the second, be intended for that purpose, there could have been no recovery in this action, without an amendment of the declaration.

One disability cannot be added to another to save a right of action for slaves whether it be a succession of disabilities in the same person, or in a succession of persons: (Cro zer vs Gano and Wife, 1 Bibb, 259-60, overruled.)

It is only by assuming that the possession of J. J. Satterfield was adverse to the title of Eliza Satterfield before and at the time of her marriage, and that her right being but a chose in action did not vest absolutely in her husband by the marriage, nor until reduced to possession by him, that there can be any plausible ground for maintaining that the right of property if it existed in her at the time of her marriage still remains so as to authorize a suit for iis recovery in the name of herself and husband. And as more than twice five years had elapsed from the time of her marriage, and also from her arrival at full age, before the commencement of this action, her right has long since been barred by the lapse of five years since she came to full age, unless, as the disability of coverture occurred before that of infancy was removed, the one can be added to the other so as to preserve her right under the saving clause of the statute, notwithstanding the lapse of more than the statutory period for barring her action after the removal of the disability of infancy. The important question whether in a personal action successive disabilities can thus be added with the necessary effect .of prolonging indefinitely the saving in favor of persons under disability, and of postponing indefinitely the ap[192]*192plication of the statutory bar, has not so far as we know, been heretofore directly presented, for decision in this Court. The case of Crozier vs Gano wife, (1 Bibb,

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Related

Lampton v. Usher's Heirs
46 Ky. 57 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1846)
Crozier v. Gano
4 Ky. 257 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1808)
Floyd's Heirs v. Johnson
12 Ky. 109 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1822)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Ky. 188, 11 B. Mon. 188, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duckett-v-crider-kyctapp-1850.