Harris v. . Harris

42 N.C. 111
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 42 N.C. 111 (Harris v. . Harris) 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
Harris v. . Harris, 42 N.C. 111 (N.C. 1850).

Opinions

PEARSON, J., dissented. Upon the pleadings and proof the following case appeared:

On 11 May, 1835, Frederick Ward conveyed a negro girl, Jinny, to Thomas Ward, "in trust to and for the separate use of Nancy Harris, the wife of William Harris, and free from any control of the said William, during the natural life of the said Nancy, and upon the death of the said Nancy upon further trust to hold the said negro and her increase to the sole and separate use of Elizabeth Ledbetter, the wife of Richard Ledbetter, and Sally, the wife of John Scorey, both to be equally interested in said trust; and upon the happening of the death of the said Elizabeth or Sally or both, the said Thomas is to hold the said negro and her increase for the benefit of their children; one-half to the children of Elizabeth and the other half the children of (112) Sally." Elizabeth Ledbetter and Sally Scorey were the daughters of William and Nancy Harris. The negro girl was in the possession of Harris and wife; and, in March, 1838, William Harris, being much indebted and judgments rendered against him for debts for which his sons-in-laws, Ledbetter and Scorey, were bound as his sureties, William Harris and his wife, Ledbetter and his wife, and Scorey and his wife sold the negro woman and one of her children, then six months old, to the defendant, Herbert Harris, for the price of $700, and those six persons made a deed to said Herbert for them, with a covenant of general warranty; and he took them into his possession. He paid the consideration money partly in discharge of the debts mentioned, partly to William Harris, and partly to Ledbetter by the direction of the other vendors. Scorey and wife have four children; and in September, 1841, this bill was filed by Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Ledbetter, Mrs. Scorey and her four children, against Herbert Harris, William Harris, Ledbetter, Scorey, and Thomas Ward, and charges that Herbert Harris knew of the existence and contents of the deed made by Frederick Ward, and that, with such knowledge, he purchased the negroes from William Harris for an inadequate consideration, and that, supposing that he could make his title good thereby, he, by pursuasions and false suggestions and promises and undue influence and control over them, caused and procured the plaintiffs, Nancy, Elizabeth and Sally, *Page 85 and their husbands to sign the deed for the slaves — Ledbetter being induced to do so by receiving a part of the purchase money, and the said Scorey by getting to himself another child of Jinny, then in his possession. The prayer is, that the defendant, Herbert, may be compelled to surrender the slaves and their increase and account for the hires, so that the purposes of the deed of settlement may be performed and for general relief. The answer of Herbert Harris denies all the (113) allegations of fraud and undue advantages, sets forth the terms and purposes of his purchase, and the conveyance to him, and insists on his title thereby acquired. The plaintiffs have failed to establish any extraneous circumstance to impeach the conveyance to the defendant. Indeed, the allegations of the bill are expressed in such general terms, that one must suppose that no relief could be expected on them; and that it was intended to put the relief on the ground, that the conveyance by a married woman of a slave, held by a trustee to her sole and separate use, is inoperative. The opinion of the Court, however, is to the contrary; and we hold that a feme covert entitled to a separate estate in personal property, unless there be some clause of restraint of her dominion, may convey it and do all other acts in respect to it in the same manner, as if she were a feme sole. That is the settled law of the Court of Equity in England, and was, long before the revolution; and it is therefore obligatory upon the Courts here, just as much as any other established rule of property, derived from our ancestors. To go no further back, it was unquestionable law in Lord Hardwicke's time. In Peacock v. Monk, 2 Ves., 191, he points out the difference in that respect between real estate, and personalty, or the profits of real estate, which in fact is personalty and goes to the executor; and he gives the reasons for the difference. As to personal property, he says, where the wife has a separate use in it, "she may dispose of it by an act in her lifetime or by will. She may do it by either, though nothing is said of the manner of disposing of it" — that is, in the settlement, or articles. That has never been denied in England from that day to this, though the grounds of the rule have been (114) often stated in subsequent cases, and the principle itself more distinctly explained. In Fettiplace v. Georges, 1 Ves. Jr. and 3 Bro. C. C., 8, it was, for example, stated in terms, that personal property, settled or agreed to be settled to the separate use of a married woman, may be disposed of by her as a feme sole to the full extent of her interest, although no particular form for doing so is prescribed in the instrument. The *Page 86 principle of that rule is, that she takes separate property as hers exclusively, with all the rights and incidents of property; of which one, and a most important one, is the right of disposition. This principle has been applied to all cases since, in whatever form they may have arisen. Thus she may convey personalty in which she is entitled in a separate use in reversion, as well as a present interest. Sturgis v. Corp., 13 Ves., 190. She may sell or give even to her husband, since in respect of that property they are regarded as distinct persons, like other strangers; though the Court will scrutinize such dealings upon a natural suspicion of actual constraint on her. Powlet v. Delavet, 2 Ves., 663;Squire v. Dean, 4 Bro., C. C., 36. She may not only convey her separate property, but, without the consent of her husband or trustee, she may encumber it by mortgage, or charge it by contracting debts, as by giving a bond for so much money merely. Fettiplace v. Georges, andHalme v. Tenant, 1 Bro. C. C., 16, 2 Dickens, 560. Other instances need not be cited as evidence, that, in the last case, Lord Thurlow laid down the rule as correctly as he did explicitly, which he took fromPeacock v. Monk, supra, that a feme covert, acting in respect of her separate personal property, is competent to act in all respects as if she was a feme sole. He says, it was impossible to say the contrary. Now, beyond all controversy, the ground of that rule is not any capacity or power supposed to be imparted to a married woman by her husband (115) or by the instrument creating the separate use as a capacity or power, thereby creating and subsisting by itself apart from the property; but it arises out of the ownership of the property, and the right such absolute ownership imparts to the person, to do with it as she pleases. When equity adopted the principle, allowing that separate property might be vested in a married woman, which the law denied, it followed, as being inherent in the jus proprietatis, that there should be the jus disponendi. That is declared in all the cases to be the principle; and there is no contradiction among them. Even when a gift is made in general terms to the sole and separate use of a feme covert, and the instrument goes on to add, that she may dispose of it in some particular manner, as by deed or will, yet she may do so in another manner by reason of her general property, in which the power is merged. Elton v. Sheppard, 1 Bro. C. C., 532; Hales v. Margerum, 3 Ves., 299.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.C. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-harris-nc-1850.