Dugger v. Bocock

104 U.S. 596, 26 L. Ed. 846, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2053
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 16, 1882
Docket165
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 596 (Dugger v. Bocock) 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
Dugger v. Bocock, 104 U.S. 596, 26 L. Ed. 846, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2053 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Waite

delivered the' opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity begun by the appellants, two of the children and heirs of Henry Dugger, deceased. The case, which was decided on demurrer to the bill, may be stated generally as follows: —

Henry Dugger, a citizen of Alabama, died in 1852, leaving Alice G. Dugger, his widow, and'eight children, of whom the present appellants were the youngest. The widow was appointed by the Probate Court of Marengo County administratrix of the estate, which consisted of lands and personal property. The estate being free from debt, she, on the 3d of September, 1860, filed "her petition in the Probate Court for leave to sell the lands for the purposes of distribution. The proper order was made, and on the 19th of November they were sold to Willis P. Bocock, one of the appellees, at $12.01 an acre, amounting in the aggregate to $28,806.40, for which he gave her his three notes with sureties, one for $10,370.30, payable Nov. 19, 1861, another for $11,138.47, payable Nov. 19, 1862, and the other for $11,906.64, payable Nov. 19, 1863. The sale was reported to and confirmed by the court, but under the law of Alabama the legal title to the lands did not pass from the heirs to the purchaser until the purchase-money was paid, and a conveyance actually made under an order of the court for that .purpose. Until such a conveyance, the heirs *597 .might maintain ejectment for the recovery of possession if the conditions of .the sale were not complied with. Doe v. Hardy, 52 Ala. 297.

It is averred in the bill “ that although said'Willis P. Bocock was the ostensible purchaser of the wholé of said'land, yet, by some arrangement between him and said Henry A. Tayloe, made before or at the time of said purchase, said Tayloe obtained by the understanding with Bocock the one hundred and ninety-six acres of land before mentioned, and undertook with said Bocock to pay the purchase-money f6r the same at the rate aforesaid, and said Tayloe went into and has since had possession thereof.” The present suit is brought with reference to this one hundred and ninety-six acres only, the whole property sold consisting of something more than six hundred and forty acres.

The bill then proceeds to state as follows: —

“ VI. Your orator and oratrix further, show to your Honor that neither said Bocock nor any one else has ever paid the purchase-money evidenced by said notes, or any part thereof, according to the terms of his purchase, or in any manner, except as hereinafter stated, and the purchase-money for said one hundred and ninety-six acres, with interest thereon, remains wholly unpaid.
“ VII. That said Bocock took up the said two notes first failing due with Confederate States treasury notes, and the said note last falling due he took up by handing over to Mrs. Alice G. Dugger bonds of the Confederate States. Your orator and oratrix, who were then infants, state,- upon information and belief, that Bocock and the defendant Henry A. Tayloe together urged said Alice G. Dugger to accept said Confederate notes and bonds in payment of said Bocock’s notes, at a time when all of her children who were of age were - absent from home, and the said Alice G. Dugger received such Confederate notes for the note first falling due without remonstrance; she reluctantly yielded and received the Confederate notes for the note secondly falling due, but when they urged her to accept the said treasury notes or Confederate bonds for the last note, she peremptorily refused to accept said Confederate notes and bonds, which were then really almost worthless, in payment of *598 said note, and for a long time she continued to refuse, and sent the said Bocock and Tayloe away without taking the offer; but she had great confidence in and esteem. for said Bocock and Tayloe, who were her neighbor's, and were men of high character, and they brought great pressure to bear on her to induce her to take the Confederate notes or bonds. They represented to her that she would be ruinously taxed by the Confederate, government if she, refused to take Confederate money in payment of said note, and- that she would be made tp pay the tax in gold, and they ór one of them reported her refusal to the Confederate tax-collector, who called upon hey and told her he was informed of .her refusal, and finally, under great pressure, under protest, and unwillingly, the said Alice G. Dugger very reluctantly yielded and took said Confederate bonds, and gave up to said Bocock said last note. The sons of Alice G. Dugger then of age’ were absent in the army.”''

;. Payment of the purchase-money was never reported in form to the court by,Mrs. Dugger, and no'order was ever made for lier to convey the property. . Neither did she ever execute any conveyance, but at the April Term, 1864, of the court she filed her final account as administratrix, in which she charged herself with the purchase-money, making no mention of the-fact that it had been paid in-the notes and bonds of the Confederate States. This account was audited and settled by7 the court, and a distribution ordered. The balance found due from the administratrix was $40,170.41, of which the share of each distributee was $5,021.80. These appellants were then infants, and the record shows that in the proceedings for settlement and distribution they were represented by H. A- Woolf. Mrs. Dugger was at the time their guardian, and she charged herself in her accounts as guardian, which were then pending -befare the court for par-, tial settlement, with the distributive shares of her wards.

- In 1866, after the close of the war, no:conveyance having been made to Bocock, Mrs. Dugger and hér'súrviving children, including the present appellants, who were still infants, commenced in one of the State courts of Alabama a suit, in the nature of an action of ejectment, against Bocock and Tayloe to recover the lands. Fearing that an attempt would be made by the defendants to get a deed, the widow and heirs, on the *599 12tb of May, 1866, filed in the Probate Court their protest against any order to that effect; but the bill avers that Bocock did, “ for the express purpose of defeating said action at law, on the twenty-first day of March, Í868, file his petition in said Probate Court, . . . wherein he represented and stated that he had paid the whole purchase-money for said lands, when in fact he had never paid it, or any part thereof, otherwise than in Confederate.States treasury notes and bonds, as already herein set forth in detail, and further setting forth in his petition that the said Alice G. Dugger had. not reported such payment, though more than a reasonable time had elapsed for her to have done so, and praying that an order for a conveyance of said lands to him might be made; and said Probate Court, notwithstanding said caveat and protest filed by the lieirs-at-law of said Henry Dugger, deceased, long before that time, and which was then on file, and without notice to the administratrix or to .any of the said heirs, and without the knowledge by them of said application, and.upon exparte proof made by said-Bocock, did appoint Henry A.

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Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 596, 26 L. Ed. 846, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dugger-v-bocock-scotus-1882.