Fitzhugh v. Taliaferro

2 Va. 289
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1808
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 289 (Fitzhugh v. Taliaferro) 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
Fitzhugh v. Taliaferro, 2 Va. 289 (Va. 1808).

Opinion

Friday, April 22* The Judges delivered, their opinions.

Judge Tucker.

William Fitzkugh of Marmion in K* George county, about the year 1772, put his eldest son John in possession of sundry slaves., which he carried first to Caroline county, and afterwards to Amherst. He some years after sold one of them to Thomas Anderson, and another to Taliaferro. About eighteen months after his removal to Amherst several of them were taken and sold under an execution. John forbade the sale, which took place in 1788. William never brought suit in his life-time for any of them; but by his will dated in March, 1789, and proved in June, 1791, he bequeathed to his son John, “ all the negroes “ which he had hitherto lent hint during his life, and at his “ decease fhe whole of them, and their increase to be equal- “ ly divided between his two eldest sons now living by his “ present wife.” The appellants are those sons, who have brought a suit by their guardian against the purchasers, and their descendants, for those slaves and their increase. There is no evidence in the record that the slaves were given, to John Fitzkugh by his father: on the contrary the evidence of the delivery to him, seems to shew that it was intended by the .father as a loan, only* Some of the. defendants have pleaded the act of limitations: they all insist that they are fair purchasers, The Chancellor was of opi[301]*301ilion, “ that the father having suffered his son to remain so <~i long in possession of the slaves to his own use, ought to 44 be deemed in a controversy between himself, or volun- “ teers under him, and creditors of the son, or purchasers 44 from him, to have given him the slaves, unless his pos44 session had been under some written act, registered “ within a reasonable time, and in a proper Court shewn 44 to have been fiduciary, or no more than usufructuary, 44 by some written publication in solemn form premonishing 44 people with whom the son should deal, that he was al44 though the visible, not the real owner.” And dismissed the bill with costs, &c. from which deciee tbe complainants have appealed.

The lapse of time between the loan (if in fact it were a loan) of the slaves by the father to the son, being nearly or quite twenty years, the period between the sale of those sold by John Fitzhugh and the father’s death, being equal to that which the act of limitations makes a perpetual bar to the action for the recovery of them by the father; andtha£ which elapsed between the taking them and selling them under execution, and the death of the father, being little short of that which constitutes a bar to such recovery, I strongly incline to approve of the Chancellor’s opinion and decree, throughout. I have no hesitation in thinking it ought to.be affirmed as to those defendants who have pleaded the act of limitations. And upon the principles of public policy and utility, I think it ought to be affirmed as to the others. Five years peaceable possession of a slave will operate as a bar to the recovery by the former owner, unless some express bargain or agreement be proved, shewing that the possession of the holder, is in fact the possession of him who claims the absolute property. If no such proof be adduced the law construes the property to be in him who hath the unqualified possession, for such a length of time. And as to the creditors of the holder who may-have acquired a title under an execution, and as to purchasers either at a public sale under execution, or from [302]*302the holder himself, an acquiesence in their titles and pos» session thus acquired, seems to me to be a legal bar, and equally one in equity. The gift to the grandsons can have no reference to any period antecedent to the death of William Fitzhugh; for no remainder in a slave could have been created by any verbal gift, made at the time of the delivery to John Fitzhugh, and none is pretended to have been made by deed ; and the devise in the will, I consider, as merely void and ineffectual, after such a long period as intervened in this case. I am therefore in favour of an affirmance of the decree.

Judge Roane.

The first part of the second section of the act of 1785 to prevent frauds and perjuries,

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzhugh-v-taliaferro-va-1808.