Hall v. Hill

6 La. Ann. 745
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 La. Ann. 745 (Hall v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Hill, 6 La. Ann. 745 (La. 1851).

Opinion

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Rost, J.

Elizabeth Hall, and her husband, Dixon Hall Jr., in right of the said Elizabeth, and of their common children, and William T. Hall, as trustee for their benefit, have enjoined the sale of certain slaves, taken under execution, as the property of Alfred G. Hall, at" the suit of the defendants against him, on the ground that those slaves formerly belonged to Dixon Hall, Sr., a citizen of the State of Alabama, who bequeathed.them by his last will to Wm. [750]*750T. Hall, in trust for the parties now claiming them. They allege, that the testator died in 1839, that the will was duly probated and the slaves delivered in execution of the devise, and that they never have parted with the title.

The defendants have pleaded the general issue, and denied that Dixon Hall, Sr. ever was the owner of the slaves; they aver that,vat the time of the seizure, Alfred G. Hall, held the slaves, under a title from Dixon Hall, Jr., to whom they originally belonged, which title was duly recorded in the parish of the domicil of the said Alfred G. Hall. They deny any transfer from Dixon Hall, Jr. to his father; aver that Dixon Hall, Sr. never was in possession of the slaves, and that if atitle exists from his son to him, it is fraudulent and simulated. They pray for the dissolution of the injunction, with damages, and for general relief.

After hearing, the district court perpetuated the injunction, and the defendants appealed.

On the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the testimony of Amy Hall, taken under commission, to prove the genuineness of the deed from Dixon Hall, Jr. to Dixon Hall, Sr., and to identify the slaves named therein with those mentioned in the will of Dixon Hall, Sr. and that they were delivered to Elizabeth Hall, which evidence was objected to by the defendants, on the ground that the witness was the mother of Dixon Hall, Jr., and the grandmother of his children, and incomptent, as such, to testify in a suit id which they were parties. This abjection was sustained by the court, and the plaintiffs took a bill of exceptions.

The ruling of the court is based upon an express provision of the code (C. C. 2260); it is no argument to say that the witness would be competent to testify for Elizabeth Hall, if she was alone in court, and that the evidence should therefore have been received, so far as she is concerned. Elizabeth Hall has no distinct interest in the property ; she claims jointly with her children, and if they have any title, the title of both is the same, and as she has joined her children in the prosecution of the suit, the testimony which is inadmissable as to them, is equally so as to her. See Guerin el al. v. Bagneries, 13 L. R. 15. Jedediah "Leeds etal. v. John Caldwell et al. 1R. R. 256. The disposition of the will under' which plaintiff claims title is as follows; “T give, devise and bequeath unto my son, Win. T. Hall, in trust for Elizabeth Hall. the wife of Dixon Hall, Jr. and their children now born, and those that may hereafter be born during their lives, all the negroes embraced by name in a bill of sale made by Dixon Hall, Jr. to me, sometime in the month of March, 1839, and the said property, as described in the bill of sale from Dixon Hall, Jr. to me, is to bo the property of the wife and children of the said Dixon Hall, Jr. to their sole and separate use; and if the said Dixon Hall, Jr. shall die, and his wife marry again, then the whole of the property shall be absolutely vested in the trustee, for the children of the said Dixon Hall, Jr.”

It is in evidence, that after the death of Dixon Hall, Sr., the will was duly probated and recorded, but no acceptance of the trust by the trustee, or actual delivery of the slaves has been shown. Without inquiring how far such a testamentary disposition would be recognized by our courts, in relation to the slaves mentioned in it, after their removal to Louisiana, we will assume that the parties, collectively, have alleged a legal title.

It has been urged, in behalf of the defendant^, that the slaves bequeathed, should have been named in the will; that the reference to the bill of sale is vague and indefinite; and that the bequest is void for want of certainty; that if it is not, the sale referred to should have been annexed to the will, and probated as a part of it.

We are of opinion that a testator may so construct his disposition, as to render [751]*751it necessary to have recourse to some document, in order to elucidate or explain hisántention, and that the document referred to, may be consulted for that purpose, and need not be probated as forming a' part of the will. Jarman on Wills. 82. 13 L. R. 17. But whatever be the nature of the document referred to, it must be clearly identified as the instrument to which the will points. The instrument adduced in evidence as being the one to which the testator had reference, is a receipt from Dixon Hall, Jr. to him, for twenty thousand dollars, in full for the slaves therein named, bearing date the 5th day of March, 1839; at the foot of the receipt is the following memorandum: “I am to deliver the above named negroes to Dixon Hall, Jr., as soon as I save my crop.” The defendants have expressly denied the identity ofthis document, With the one to which the testator had reference, and have alleged that if the identity should be shown, the instrument is fraudulent and simulated. This document is a simple receipt, and not properly speaking, a deed of sale; there are no witnesses to it; its existence, at the time it bears date, is nowhere shown, and we are not informed in whose hands it has remained ever since ; for aught that appears to the contrary, it may have been fabricated on the day it was produced in court, for the purposes of this suit. To establish the identity, which it is incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show affirmatively, they rely on the testimony of McFee, Barnham, Wallace, Hickman and Jumper. The two first proved the signature of Dixon Hall, Jr. to the receipt. The testimony of Wallace is immaterial. Hickman states that the negroes in question were originally in possession of Dixon Hall, Jr., in the State of Alabama, and that he claimed them as owner; that in March, 1839, the witness thinks on the 9th of that month, Dixon Hall, Jr. conveyed all his slaves and all his property of every kind, to his father, by a bill of sale, and that Dixon Hall, Sr., subsequently made his will and devised the property mentioned in said bill of sale, to the wife and children of Dixon Hall, Jr. Jumper states, that sometime in March, 1839, he saw Dixon Hall, Sr., on his way to his son’s, Dixon Hall, Jr.-, he told the witness that his object in going to his son was to buy his property; that his son had become involved, and that he had loaned and paid out $16,000 for him, and that he was going to purchase his property, to make himself safe. A few days after this conversation, the witness saw him on his return from his son Dixon, and he then told witness, that he had purchased out Dixon, in toto; that he gave him, for his possessions, $21,000, including his negroes, mules, horses and stock of'all descriptions, his land and household and kitchen furniture.

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Related

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199 So. 647 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
6 La. Ann. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-hill-la-1851.