Gibson v. Jayne

37 Miss. 164
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 Miss. 164 (Gibson v. Jayne) 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
Gibson v. Jayne, 37 Miss. 164 (Mich. 1859).

Opinion

Handy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This bill was filed by the appellees to recover certain slaves in the possession of the appellant, and to prevent their removal in derogation of the rights of the appellees.

The bill states, in substance, that on the 15th of April, 1839, one Tims, of the State of Alabama, the father of the complainant Juliet, by deed of gift conveyed the slaves in controversy to his daughter Juliet, the wife of Brewster H. Jayne, and William Love Brown, her son by a former husband, jointly, said slaves being then in the possession of said Juliet and her husband, in Simpson county in this State, where they resided. The terms of this deed are as follows : “ which slaves I give as a joint property to my daughter Juliet Jayne, and her son William Love Brown, now about eleven years old; and I hereby appoint Brewster H. Jayne and my daughter Juliet, his wife, to hold and enjoy the right of possession in said [166]*166property until my aforesaid grandson William L. Brown shall have attained the age of twenty-one years, when the said property may be divided, and the said William lawfully put in possession of one equal half, as near as the case can be; the other half of said property shall go to the children of my said daughter Juliet by the said Brewster H. Jayne after her death.” This deed was recorded in Perry county, Alabama, where the donor resided, but not in this State. At the date of this deed, the said Juliet was the mother of all the the co-complainants except one, and they were all her children by her husband, Brewster H. Jayne. Some time in the year 1840, Jayne disposed of these slaves by exchanging them with the defendant Gibson for other slaves, and received the sum of five hundred dollars in addition to the slaves received by him in the exchange. The bill states that the complainant Juliet does not recollect whether she joined in the conveyance of the slaves to Gibson, but states that the matter was conducted by her husband Jayne, who was not authorized to make the sale; that some time in the year 1840, Jayne removed, with his family and William L. Brown, to Texas, and on the 10th of July, 1842, he was slain by Indians, who, at the same time, took and carried away William Love Brown, who has never since been heard from, though the most diligent inquiries have been made for him; and the bill avers the belief that he is dead, either from wounds received when he was captured, or in some other way; that the complainant Juliet returned, with her children, to this State, in the year 1848, and has since resided here, two of the children having reached majority, and the others being infants; that by the aforesaid deed, the children took a vested estate in remainder in one-half of the slaves conveyed by it, to take effect on the death of the said Juliet, who took a life estate therein, and at the death of William L. Brown, that Juliet took at least one-fourth of the half interest vested in him by the deed, but she claims that she is entitled to the whole of his interest, under the laws of Texas, as he died without issue or descendants, and leaving no brothers or sisters of the whole blood, and she being, therefore, entitled as his heir ; and that the complainants, her children, are entitled in remainder to the one undivided half of the property, at the death of their mother, which the bill charges will be prejudiced or entirely lost to them, as the defendant will remove [167]*167the slaves beyond the jurisdiction of the court. The bill charges that Gibson knew, when he obtained the slaves, that they did not belong to Jayne, but that they were the property of William Love Brown and the complainants, and offers to restore to him the slaves received from him in exchange, and now in the complainants’ possession. The prayer is for an account of hires, for discovery, for recovery of the slaves, for the writ of sequestration to the sheriff to seize and hold the slaves, &c. *

The defendant demurred to the bill on several grounds: 1st. The Statute of Limitations as to all the complainants. 2d. Lapse of time generally. 3d. That the complainant Juliet Jayne, the mother, is barred by the statute. 4th. Want of equity in the bill. This demurrer was overruled, and hence this appeal is taken.

The first question for consideration arises upon the first ground of demurrer, and is, whether the Statute of Limitations is a bar to the recovery of all the complainants upon the case as stated in the bill; for if any of the complainants are not barred, this ground of demurrer, being general and denying the right of all of them to the relief sought, was properly overruled. It is like a demurrer to an entire bill, which must be overruled if the bill be sufficient for part of the relief sought.

It appears by the statements of the bill, and the deed of gift exhibited with it, that the children of Mrs. Jayne, who are co-complainants with her in the bill, are entitled to an estate in remainder in one-half of the slaves, to take effect in possession after the determination of her estate for life. As to them, the statute did not commence to run until the determination of the particular estate; for until then, they are not entitled to the possession, and no laches is to be imputed to them, nor are they affected by the laches of the party holding the particular estate. Jackson v. Sillick, 8 John. Rep. 269; Martin v. Woods, 9 Mass. 377; Jackson v. Jackson, 5 Cowen, 103. Yet they have the right to file their bill to prevent the loss of the property by the conduct of the party holding it, and where there is just ground to believe that he will remove it, and place it beyond their reach, so that it will be lost to them when their right of possession shall be established by the determination of the particular estate. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 845. And such is the character of the bill as to the children. Their claim and inte[168]*168rest are not, therefore, in the same right, and joint in their nature with the claim of their mother ; and the rule, that where one of several parties entitled to a joint action, is under no disability at the time the action accrues, if the action be not brought in due time, all will be barred, is not applicable to this case.

This ground of demurrer was, therefore, not.well taken.’ And the same reason is applicable to the second ground of demurrer, and shows that it was properly overruled.

The third ground of demurrer relies upon the Statute of Limitations, as a bar to the right of Mrs. Jayne to recover for her interest in the slaves.

Her right of recovery, as set forth in the bill, is placed on two grounds : first, as tenant for life of one moiety of the slaves, being the interest given to her for life in that part of them which were to go to the children ; and secondly, her interest in the part of the slaves belonging to William Love Brown, either one-fourth or the whole of that interest, as his distributee.

So far as her estate for life under the deed is concerned, it is clear that her right of action accrued upon the death of her husband, in July, 1842, and certainly upon her return to this State, in the year 1848. Yet this bill was not filed until the lapse of nearly ten years from that latter time ; and there can be no doubt but that the statute bars her recovery upon that right.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
37 Miss. 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-jayne-miss-1859.