Gordon v. . Brown

39 N.C. 399
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1846
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.C. 399 (Gordon v. . Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. . Brown, 39 N.C. 399 (N.C. 1846).

Opinion

The facts of this case seem to be these, as collected from the pleadings and exhibits. Sarah Gordon was in 1834 of an advanced age and owned some slaves and other property; and among them was a negro man named Jim, and a woman named Harriett. She had a numerous family of descendants. Two of her sons were then dead, namely, Nathaniel and John. The former left several infant children, of whom the present defendant was the guardian and stepfather. The latter left a son, who is the present plaintiff and was then of full age and resided in Mississippi. John Gordon was, at the time of his death, indebted to one Thomas Brown on a judgment (400) in a court of Tennessee for the sum of $550; and the present defendant was the agent of the creditor to collect or secure the debt. In that state of things, Mrs. Gordon was desirous of making some immediate advancement for the children of her deceased son Nathaniel, and provide for the payment of the debt of her late son John, and also make some prospective provision for the present plaintiff; and she determined to give to Nathaniel's children the use of the negro Jim during her own life, and to give the remainder in him after her death, and also the other negro Harriett, to her grandson, *Page 309 the plaintiff, subject, nevertheless, to the payment at her death of what should be then due for principal and interest upon the judgment of Thomas Brown against his father; and to that arrangement the defendant, as the agent of Thomas Brown, assented. In order to carry it into effect the parties adopted this method. Sarah Gordon and Nathaniel C. Gordon, the plaintiff, made an absolute bill of sale to the defendant for the two negroes, bearing date 13 March, 1834; and at the same time he, with a surety executed to them a bond in the penal sum of $1,000, with a condition, reciting that, whereas Sarah Gordon and Nathaniel C. Gordon, had sold to H B, the defendant, the two slaves, Jim and Harriett, and for the purpose of repurchasing them had agreed to pay him at the death of Sarah Gordon the sum of $550 and interest thereon, to be applied to the judgment in favor of Thomas Brown against John Gordon, and then providing that the bond shall be void, if during the life of Sarah Gordon H B shall allow her to have the use and possession of Harriett, and, during the same term, shall hold the slave Jim for the benefit of the infant children of Nathaniel Gordon, deceased, and upon the death of the said Sarah, shall convey the said two slaves Jim and Harriett to Nathaniel C. Gordon (the plaintiff); he, the said Nathaniel C. first paying to H B the said sum of $550, with the interest thereon. On 15 March, 1834, the bond was proved before a Judge and registered. (401)

In March, 1842, Sarah Gordon died, having made a will, in which the defendant is appointed executor. In October, 1843, this bill was filed by Nathaniel C. Gordon against Hamilton Brown, to obtain the conveyance of the two slaves and an account and payment of their profits, since the death of Sarah Gordon, the plaintiff offering to pay the principal and interest of the debt of his father to Thomas Brown. The bill charges, however, that the defendant was unable to convey the negroes, because he had sold them in the lifetime of Mrs. Gordon; that is to say, Jim for the price of $637 to a person in this State, who has since carried him to parts unknown, and Harriett to some person in Georgia for $1,000; that those sums were less than the value of the slaves, but that the plaintiff was willing and had offered to accept them instead of the slaves, and, after deducting the sum due on Thomas Brown's judgment, to receive the residue and interest thereon from the death of Mrs. Gordon; but that the defendant refused to settle on that principle or any other, except that of accounting to the plaintiff for the penalty of $1,000, named in his bond, by deducting therefrom $814 for the debt of Thomas Brown, and paying *Page 310 the balance of $186 to the plaintiff. The prayer is for a conveyance and delivery of the slaves, and the increase of Harriett, or payment of the sums for which they were sold, or payment of their present values.

The bill states that the original bond was in the possession of Sarah Gordon, and has been lost, and a copy from the register's books is annexed as an exhibit.

The answer admits the execution of a bond in the penalty of $1,000, and that "it was not materially variant from the copy annexed to the bill" but "the defendant upon the best of his recollection does not admit, and does not deny, that the paper, annexed as a copy, is a true copy of the bond."

The answer states, that the bond was executed with (402) the understanding, that Sarah Gordon might, nevertheless, at her will and pleasure, dispose of the negroes, provided she should pay the debts to Thomas Brown; that in 1836 Sarah Gordon, on account of the bad qualities of the negro, sent Harriett to Georgia, and had her sold there on a credit for $1,000, for which a note was taken payable in Georgia bank notes to one Gwyn, her agent. The defendant admits that Sarah Gordon made known to him her wish to dispose of Harriett, and her intention to appropriate a part of the price to making a further provision for the children of Nathaniel Gordon, who were the wards of the defendant; and that the defendant did not interfere to prevent her, but advanced the money for the expenses of carrying the slave to Georgia. The answer states that in 1838 the defendant received $300 on the note for the price of Harriett: and that no other part of the debt has as yet been collected, though he thinks that, after a short delay, the residue may be collected. He says that the reason he did not receive the money before, was the depreciation of Georgia notes, being as much at one time as 16 per cent below those of this State; and therefore he let the debt continue outstanding, until the circumstances of the debtor became doubtful: but that in doing so and in all his other conduct, he acted upon the best of his judgment for the interests of those concerned as he would for himself. He furthermore states, that Sarah Gordon afterwards made he will, and therein bequeathed divers legacies, which will be defeated by reason of a deficiency of assets, unless a part of the price of Harriett be applied to their satisfaction.

The answer states the reason for the sale of Jim to have been, his insubordination and the apprehension, on certain circumstances mentioned, that he designed an escape into Canada or a northwestern State. It admits the price to have been *Page 311 $637, which it says was the full value; and states the defendant's ignorance, whether Jim or Harriett be living or dead, or what is their present value, or whether Harriett (403) had any children. It also admits that the defendant hath kept out at interest the said sums $637, and $300, and states that he paid the interest to Mrs. Gordon during her life, and is ready to account for the principal and interest since her death to the plaintiff, if he be entitled thereto. The defendant states, that when he executed the bond, his understanding was, that the demand of the plaintiff for a breach of the condition was limited to the penalty of $1,000; and he insists on that, as the law of their contract. Moreover the answer insists, that, as the bond was payable to Sarah Gordon and the plaintiff, he is bound by the acts of his co-obligee, and that, as she sold the negro Harriett and directed the disposition of part of the proceeds, and therefore could not complain thereof, so neither can the plaintiff. The defendant then submits to pay the plaintiff the penalty of $1,000, deducting therefrom the debt to Thomas Brown.

The plaintiff put in as evidence two letters written to him by the defendant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

M'cree v. . Houston
7 N.C. 429 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.C. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-brown-nc-1846.