Fox v. Matthews

33 Miss. 433
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 33 Miss. 433 (Fox v. Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Matthews, 33 Miss. 433 (Mich. 1857).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought in the Superior Court of Chancery against James A. Fox and Mrs. Elizabeth Fox, to recover the possession of certain slaves and hire for their detention, to which the complainant asserted title, and which he alleged had been surreptitiously taken into their possession by the defendants.

But two questions, at all material to be considered, are presented by the record. The first is a question purely of fact, and involves a consideration of the evidence adduced by the respective parties, to prove or disprove the contract or agreement alleged in the bill, [435]*435and upon which depends the right of the complainant to recover. The second is a question of law, arising upon the alleged invalidity of that contract or agreement.

The record is very 'voluminous; we shall therefore, in the very brief examination which we propose to make of these questions, direct our attention to those portions of it alone, which are essential to their proper comprehension.

Samuel S. Fox, deceased, the brother of the defendant, James A. Fox, and the husband of the defendant, Mrs. Elizabeth Fox, in 1836 or ’37 purchased a plantation and slaves, situated in the parish of Madison, in the State of Louisiana, from John and James Pye, and removed there to live at the time he purchased, carrying with him his wife, and some time afterwards placed on the plantation the slave Eda, and such of her children as were then born. This slave originally belonged to the heirs of Alexander Brown, deceased, of whom Elizabeth Fox was one; and upon her intermarriage with Samuel S. Fox, he purchased the interest of the other heirs in said slave and her children then living, and took her into his possession. . Samuel S. Fox owned on said plantation other slaves than those which he had purchased from John and James Pye; and in October, 1838, by an act passed before the notary public of the parish, he sold and conveyed the said plantation and a number of slaves with it, including Eda and her children, to the defendant, James A. Fox. By the same act, the whole of the property, land, slaves, &c., embraced in the conveyance, was specially mortgaged and hypothecated, to secure the payment of eight notes made by Samuel S., then outstanding and unpaid, for the aggregate sum of $34,000, and which, by the same act, the said James A. had assumed to pay. The complainant was then, or afterwards became, the holder of these notes, and having instituted proceedings, in the District Court for said parish, for the seizure and sale of the property thus mortgaged, recovered a judgment therein against said James A. for the sum of $34,000 and interest. The judgment was recovered in 1842, and on the 4th of February, 1843, an execution, issuing thereon, was levied by the sheriff upon all of the property, lands, slaves, &c., including the slave Eda and her children, embraced by the mortgage, and the same was taken into his custody. On the 4th of March, 1843, by an act passed before said [436]*436notary, the defendant, James A. Fox, conveyed to complainant all the land embraced in the mortgage, forty of the slaves, not including Eda and her children, and eight mules, in full satisfaction of complainant’s judgment against him; and which conveyance was accepted as such by the attorney in fact of the complainant. At the same time, by a similar instrument, the said James A. conveyed to the defendant, Mrs. Fox, certain slaves, sixteen in number, not including Eda and her children, in full payment and satisfaction of all claim, right, and title, which she had to the property conveyed to complainant, by said James A., by the act above mentioned.

In regard to these facts there is no controversy between the parties.

The bill alleges, that after the mortgaged property was levied on by the sheriff as above stated, and advertised by him for sale, to wit, on the 4th of March, 1843, complainant, said James A. Fox, and Mrs. Elizabeth Fox, agreed to compromise the proceedings on these terms, to wit: said James A. was to surrender possession, and make a conveyance thereof of all the land and negroes embraced in the mortgage, with the exception of ten negroes and their offspring, to be selected by Mrs. Elizabeth Fox for herself, in full satisfaction of the judgment. That Mrs. Fox made her selection of the ten negroes and their offspring, and such selection did not include Eda and her children; and that the negroes so chosen by Mrs. Fox were to be in lieu of, and in full satisfaction of, all the right and title and interest of Mrs. Fox and of James A. Fox to all the land, and the other negroes on said plantation, including Eda and her children.

In connection with the adjustment of the terms of the compromise, and explanatory of the understanding of the parties, it is further alleged that previous to the compromise, and while the same was the subject of discussion, it was mentioned by said Fox to J. M. Chilton, complainant’s attorney, that Eda and her children were the property of Mrs. Elizabeth Fox, and the other heirs of said Alexander Brown; and that therefore he (Fox) could not convey title to complainant for the same. To this, Chilton replied that Samuel S. Fox’s title, whatever it was, had been by him conveyed to James A. Fox, and ought, under the mortgage, to pass to complainant; and that if the heirs of Brown had any claim to said negroes, complainant would not only hold them with full notice [437]*437thereof, but cheerfully hind himself to surrender them on proof of their title; to which, complainant, by his attorney in fact, who was present, assented; that Chilton then, and on several other occasions, declared to said Fox that Brown’s heirs had no claim to Eda and her children, and that they should not, with his consent, be excepted out of the conveyance to complainant. That the terms of the compromise were agreed on and settled at Yicksburg, between Edward A. Pye, attorney in fact of complainant, and said Chilton, acting for complainant, and the said James A. Fox; and that it was expressly understood that Eda and her children were not to be omitted in the conveyance to complainant.

The bill further states that several days after the terms of the compromise were agreed on, said Fox, with one Thomas N. Pierce, who had acted as counsel of complainant in obtaining the judgment, without notice to Chilton of their departure or design, went over to Louisiana, and proceeded to draw up articles for the consummation of said compromise; that before the deeds were written by Pierce, said Fox falsely and fraudulently informed said Pierce that Eda and her children were not his property, but were the property of Brown’s heirs; by which representation Pierce was deceived, and induced not to include Eda and her children in the conveyance before mentioned. That said attorney in fact, Edward A. Pye, being then present, protested against the pretended claim set up in behalf of Brown’s heirs; but stated that if said negroes were omitted from the conveyance, they must remain where they were, in his possession, on the plantation, as the property of complainant, until the said claim could be tested. And Pye, having ascertained what is above stated, in regard to the title of Samuel S. Fox to Eda and her children, and that Brown’s heirs disclaimed all title to them, made known to James A. and Mrs. Elizabeth Fox, that he intended to retain them as the property of complainant, and placed Eda and her youngest children in charge of complainant’s overseer; the two eldest having been carried off by said James A. Fox, without his consent.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Miss. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-matthews-miss-1857.