Green v. . Collins

28 N.C. 139
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 N.C. 139 (Green v. . Collins) 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
Green v. . Collins, 28 N.C. 139 (N.C. 1845).

Opinion

Ruffin, 0. J.

The'record sets forth, apparently, a report of the whole trial, including all the evidence, and all the views his Honor thought it proper to submit to the jury in his charge, with reasons assigned to the jury for entertaining the opinions delivered to them. It would be much better to state only so much of the evidence as raised a question of law at the trial, and then the opinion prayed and given thereon, with simplicity and precision. That is the mode provided in the Rev. Statutes, c. 31, s. 103, which is taken from the St. 13, Ed. 1 ; and it would greatly promote the convenience of the Judges who preside at trials and the appellate Courts, to adhere to it. This Court does not enter the original judgment, and therefore cannot consider a motion for a new trial; and a report of the whole trial is out of place in the case to be sent to us. Our province is to enquire, nierely, whether there was any error in law committed on the trial, by refusing a proper instruction when prayed for, or giving an improper one. Hence, it is only necessary or proper to put down what one or the other party complained of and excepted to ; and, to do that with directness, in the affirmative or the negative, so that it maybe distinctly known what error is alleged, and the parties not be surprised by decisions in this Court on points different from those intended. We have so often experienced inconveniences from this cause, that we deem it proper to present the subject to the attention of the gentlemen of the bar, arid, *141 especially, to our brethren who preside on the circuits. A party has no right to ask the Judge to go beyond the matter of liis exception in drawing up the case ; and certainly, all dissertations to the jury upon a doctrine of the law at large, are out of place in an exception, since the matter, for the consideration of this Court, is the instruction refused or given, as applicable to the particular case in hand, and nothing more.

As we collect from the report set out in the record, the dispute is of this nature. The action is debt on a bond against the administrator, with the will annexed, of Timothy Chandler, deceased, and the defendant pleaded plene administravit, and no assets ultra. The plaintiff endeavored to charge the defendant with certain slaves as assets ; which consisted of two classes — one of them made up by a woman, named Sue, and her son Phil; and the other, of a woman, named Maria, and several of her children. None of the slaves were ever in the actual possession of the defendant, and consequently he was not, prima facie, chargeable with them. But the counsel of the. parties had previously agreed in writing, that, if by any suits against any of the persons, who had possession of them, the negroes could be made liable for the debts of Chandler, they should be considered 'liable to the plaintiff’s recovery in this action: it being the object of the parties to try the question of assets in its broadest sense. The effect of this agreement the Court understands to be, that the defendant is tobe liable in the same manner, as if the negroes were actually in his possession. In other words, the decision turns upon the question, whether the negroes were the property of Chandler at his death, so as to constitute a part of the assets for the payment of his debts.

The case, as to Sue and Phil, appears to be as follows. In 1804, Arthur Graham, after devising some of his land • to two of his sons, and giving a negro to a sister, and some small legacies to other persons, made in his will the *142 following bequest: “ All the remainder of my estate I leave to my wife Elizabeth, to be divided amongst my children as she thinks properand he appointed his wife executrix and his son John executor thereof. The widow took possession of the residue of the estate, which consisted in part of a number of slaves; and before the year 1814, she appointed to several of the testator’s children certain slaves under the will, though to what particular value to each, or in the whole, does not appear ; and the .appointees took them into possession. On the ,24th of September, 1814, Elizabeth, the executrix, and- Timothy Chandler, with whom she had before inter-married, made a further allotment of slaves among the five remaining children of Graham, assigning certain negroes to each of them in severalty and conveying the same: to one of them,,to the value of $1200 ; to three, to the value of $900, each; and to the fifth child, to the value of'$700. This distribution was made in a writing, headed as follows : “ A division of negroes belonging to the estate of Arthur Graham, deceased” ; and, after setting forth the names and values of the negroes allotted to the five children respectively, comes this entry: “ To Timothy Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler, the negroes Frank, old Sue, and young Sue, and 300 acres of land, $1000.” At the foot of the statement is the following declaration and covenant, under the hands and seals of Chandler and his wife; “ Wo, Timothy Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler, bind ourselves to make up to the above named heirs, property to make the negroes valued to the above heirs to the value of $1000, out of the estate of Arthur Graham, deceased.” From that period until his death in 1832, Chandler had possession of the said negroes, old Sue and young Sue, and the negro Phil is the son of one of those women; and, after Chandler’s death, Mrs. Chand-. Her continued in possession of them until after this suit was brought, when she conveyed him ‘ to one of her daughters.

*143 Upon the foregoing facts, after some dissertation upon three various constructions, of which the will of Arthur Graham was supposed to be susceptible, and after stating' an inclination to adopt the construction, that the widow took an absolute estate in all the property, with an expectation of the testator, that she would divide with her children, that is to say, by keeping for herself such part, and giving to them such parts as she thought proper, his Honor finally declined giving the jury any opinion on the will. And he stated that he did so, because, “ if the jury were satisfied, that as far back as 1814, Mrs. Chandler made a division with her children, giving them all a share, which they have enjoyed, and keeping for her share Sue and the other property, and this claims of hers had been acquiesced in, and the property kept by the husband as his own, up to his death, then Chandler had, either by the will, or by these subsequent circumstances, a good title to the negroes, and they would be asset in the defendant’s hands.” The jury found their value as assets.

The Court is of opinion, that there was error, both in declining to advise the jury of the legal meaning of the will, and in leaving it to the jury to find, that in 1814 any thing was kept by Chandler and wife, as her share of her former husband’s estate, that is to say, for her own benefit, and as her property, otherwise than as given in the will.

We cannot but understand, that the defendant insisted to the Court, that, by the true meaning of the will, Mrs. Chandler got no beneficial interest in the residue, and prayed an instruction accordingly. Certainly, that question arose directly in the cause, as it concerned the title to the negroes, which the plaintiff contended were assets of Chandler.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 N.C. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-collins-nc-1845.