Durham v. Dunkly

27 Va. 135, 6 Rand. 135, 1828 Va. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 27 Va. 135 (Durham v. Dunkly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durham v. Dunkly, 27 Va. 135, 6 Rand. 135, 1828 Va. LEXIS 5 (Va. 1828).

Opinion

Judge Care.

This is an action of detinue. The Lets arc these: On the 4th of January, 1804, the Defendant Dunkly executed a Deed of Gift, conveying Jenny, a slave, to the female Plaintiff, then an infant of tender years. The Deed has this clause: “I have delivered the above named negro to the said N. W. Sawyers, which t am to keep Lhe said negro, and raise it for the above named N. PV. Sawyers, until the said Nancy is thirteen years old.” There were two subscribing witnesses to the Deed; by one of whom it was proved in the County Court of Halifax in June, 1804; but, no further proof being made, it was never recorded. The execution of the Deed was proved at the trial by a subscribing witness. Before the execution of the Deed, but on the same the slave was delivered to N. PF. Sawyers; and immediately after the Deed was executed, she was taken back into the possession of the Defendant, upon the terms mentioned in the Deed; the said slave and the said Nancy being both at that time under one year old. The Defendant had (excepting the aforesaid delivery and taking back) remained in possession of the slave, from her birth; nor had the donee ever lived vvifh him. On this state of facts, the Court (on the motion of the-Defendant) instructed the Jury, “that the said Deed did not pass such an estate, as to enable the Plaintiffs to recover in this action: that to make the gift of a slave valid, such gift must be evidenced by Will or Deed, [136]*136p/bvect By two witnesses, or acknowledged’and recorded within eight months, or the slave must be delivered,.to, and remain in, the possession of, the donee, or some third person claiming under such donee, so that the possession of the donor must be entirely broken up.” Upon this instruction, the Jury fouqd a verdict for the Defendant; and this Court awarded a Supersedeas. We are to enquire whether the instruction of the Court be correct. That question depends oh the construction given to the 51st section of our Act concerning slaves, &c., 1 Rev. Code, 433: “No gift of any slave shall he good, or sufficient to pass any estate in such slave, &c. unless the same he made by Will duly proved and recorded, or by Deed in Writing, to be proved by two witnesses at the least, or acknowledged by the donor, and recorded according to Law. This section shall be construed to extend only to gifts of slaves, whereof the donors have, notwithstanding such gifts, remained in the possession, and not to gifts of such slaves, as have at any time come into the actual possession of, and have remained with, the donee, or some person claiming under, such donee.”

It was contended for the Plaintiffs, that this was a gift in futuro; and that to such gifts, the Act does not apply. The Deed says, _ however, that “I, Moses Dunkly, for the consideration of 1 love, &c., have given and granted, and by these presents do freely give and grant, unto Nancy Sawyers and her lawful heirs, &c., one negro girl named Jenny,” &c. These seem clearly to me, to be the words of a present, and not of a future gift; and if this Deed had been proved, or acknowledged, and recorded according to Law, there would have been an end of the question. No future act of Dunkly could have affected the title of the female Plaintiff. The Deed adds, “I am to keep the said negro and raise it for the said Nancy, till she is thirteen.” But, these words relate to the possession merely, and do not postpone the vesting of the right. This, then, being a gift in prsesenti, it is riot material to consider whether a-gift in futuro be within the operation of the Act.

It was contended, in the second placo, that taking this as a gift in prsesenti, still it was good, because the possession of the slave being delivered to the donee, and resumed by the donor, for the purposes, and upon the terms, of the Deed, the subsequent possession of the donor was the possession of one claiming under the donee; and so, that the Act ivas substantially complied with, which requires, that the slave, “shall have come into the actual possession of, and have remained with, the donee, or some person claiming under such do-nee.”

I confess that rav first impressions were strongly in favor of this [137]*137conclusion; but, subsequent reflection and investigation have compelled me to change them. There are but two classes of gifts of slaves which the Law tolerates. 1. A gift evidenced by Will or Deed, properly proved and recorded. 2. A gift evidenced by possession passing from the donor to the donee, and remaining with him, or one claiming under him. To place this matter in the clearest light, we must look back to the old Laws on this subject. The Act of 1757, 7 Hen. Stat. at Large, 118, entitled “An Act foi preventing fraudulent gifts of slaves,” after stating in the Preamble, “Whereas many frauds have been committed, by means of secret gifts made of slaves, by parents and others, whereby creditors and purchasers have been frequently involved in expensive Law suits, and often deprived of their just debts and purchases,” enacts, that no gift of slaves shall pass ony estate, unless by Will or Deed, duly recorded.

In 1758, 7 Hen. Stat, at Large, 237, there is a Law with exactly the same title, and with enactments almost exactly like the last,. The only material difference respects the continued possession of the donor. Thus, “whereas many frauds have been committed by means of secret gifts, made, or jtretended to have been made, by parents and others, (who have notivithstanding remained in possession of such slaves, as visible owners thereof,) whereby creditors,” &c. just as in the former. Here, we see what was meant by possession remaining with the donor.

These Acts remained in force unaltered, till October, 1787, 12 Hen. Stat, at Large, 505, when an Act passed to “ explain and asnend the Acts for preventing fraudulent gifts of slaves.” The Preamble is uncommonly long and particular in its recitals. It first recites substantially the whole of the Acts of 1757-8; and then states, that “ whereas, in the general construction of these Acts, it has been understood, that they were not intended to interfere between donor find donee, further than to prevent deceptions and frauds, and that the enacting parts of the said Acts extended only to secret gifts of slaves, and whereof the donor retained possession; and not to gifts ivhere the possession had been in the donee; and many parents and others have, since the said recited Acts, made gifts of slaves to their children and others, without Deed in writing, and such donees have continued in possession of the slaves so given, under a delivery at the lime of making, or after such gifts, by which the donees have been considered as the owners of such slaves, and have obtained credit and from a late arising on the said recited Acts, it was determined that all gifts of slaves, since t.hc said Acts, are void, unless made in [139]*139Writing, or confirmed by Will, as in the said Act is directed; which late adjudication, by disquieting and disturbing possessions, will tend to produce infinite disputes and litigation, and contrary to the intent of the donors, to deprive children of the provisions made for them by their deceased parents, injure husbands who have married women,

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Bluebook (online)
27 Va. 135, 6 Rand. 135, 1828 Va. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durham-v-dunkly-va-1828.