Haughton v. . Barney

37 N.C. 393
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 37 N.C. 393 (Haughton v. . Barney) 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
Haughton v. . Barney, 37 N.C. 393 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

Gaston, 3.

This bill was filed in the Court of Equity for the county of Chowan, on the 27th of February, 1836, in the name of Mary Haughton, plaintiff, an infant suing by her next friend Elizabeth Pettijohn against George W. Barney and wife Louisia, Jonathan H. Haughton, Robert H. Booth, the executor of Jonathan Haughton, deceased, and Charles Haughton, the administrator of Thomas B. Haugh-ton, and Richard B. Heath and wife and others, the heirs at law of the said Thomas B. Haughton, deceased, defendants. *394 Its mriterial allegations are, that the plaintiff is the only surviving child of Joseph M. Haughton, who died in the year, 1834, and was such at the time of the death of the father of the said Joseph, Jonathan Haughton, who died in November, 1835 — that the said Jonathan on the 11th of May, 1830, being seized and possessed of a large real and personal estate, and influenced by considerations entirely unknown to the plaintiff, conveyed by far the greater part thereof to the defendant Jonathan H. Haughton his son, and the defendant George W. Barney, who was the husband of his daughter Louisa — that afterwards on the 14th of November, 1830, the defendants Jonathan H. Haughton and George W. Barney, either in pursuance of the order and direction of the said Jonathan Haughton, who, notwithstanding the deeds of conveyance aforesaid to his said son and son-in-law, exercised some control over the property thereby conveyed, or in compliance with a covenant or agreement made with the said Jonathan, did, at his instance, sign, seal and deliver a certain deed, (a copy whereof is set forth,) whereby the said Jonathan H. Haughton and George W. Barney, in consideration of the sum of five dollars, did bargain and sell unto Thomas B. Haughton a certain trust of land therein particularly described, which had' formerly been conveyed to the bargainors by Jonathan Haughton, and fifteen negroes, to have and to hold unto the said Thomas, his heirs and assignees, in trust for the following purposes, that is to say: to pay out of the said property the sum of $125 annually, during the life of Sarah Haughton, wife of the said’ Jonathan, in part discharge of a decree, or a bond given in pursuance of a decree, in Chowan Superior Court, in a suit wherein the said Sarah by her next friend John M. Roberts was plaintiff, and the said Jonathan defendant, “the said money to be paid to John M. Roberts or Sarah Haughton, he or she giving a receipt for the same to Thomas B. Haugh-ton, and it is meant that the said Thomas should attend to see that the same be paid out of the property “so conveyed,” after payment of said money, in trust to suffer the said Jonathan to occupy the land and all the negroes during his the said Jonathan’s life, and after the said Jonathan’s death to *395 suffer Joseph M. Haughton to occupy the land and use the negroes during his the said Joseph’s life, and, should the said Joseph leave any children of h.is body lawfully begotten, to hold the same in trust for said children, and, should the said Joseph leave no children at his death lawfully begotten, then to hold the same in trust for Jonathan H. Haughton and Mary Louisa Barney, to them and their heirs, and to make conveyances as they shall direct. It is further alleged in the bill, that this deed, at some time after its execution, passed into the possession of Jonathan Haughton, who kept it among his valuable papers; that, about the time of the death of the said Jonathan, it passed into the possession of the defendant Roberth H. Booth, who, in violation of the rights of the plaintiff, has delivered the same to the defendant Barney, who has either destroyed or yet unjustly detains it; that, when the said deed was executed, the plaintiff’s father was ignorant of her rights, and that the plaintiff herself, by reason of her infancy and destitute situation, has been unable to assert them; that in consequence, either of the neglect of the trustee named in the said deed or of Jonathan Haughton, or of the fraud or neglect of some of the other parties to it, the said deed has never been registered nor proved for registration ; that no certain information of the existence of said deed was communicated to the friends of the plaintiff until lately, and that, as soon as they heard of the existence of it, they applied to the defendant Booth, whom they supposed to have the possession of it, and were told by him that the same was in the possession of the defendant Barney, whose interest is indirect opposition to hers, and who falsely pretends that in consequence of an agreement between himself and some other person to the plaintiff unknown, the said paper ought not to be produced for registration. The bill further alleges, that Thomas B. Haugh-ton, the trustee, died in 1831 or 1S32, that the defendant Charles was duly appointed administrator of his estate, and that the other defendants, particularly named, were the heirs at law of the said Thomas. It charges, that after the death of the plaintiff’s father, who during his life lived oh the tract so conveyed in trust, the defendant Barney directed the *396 mother of the plaintiff to seek a shelter elsewhere, in consequence whereof her said mother, being much distressed in mind, in indigent circumstances, and witbal entirely ignorant of the plaintiff’s rights, abandoned the possession to the said Barney, who hath ever since continued to cultivate the same ; and that the defendant Booth, upon the death of Jonathan Haughton, took possession of the slaves so conveyed, and hath ever since either hired them out or permitted his co-defendant Barney to have the use thereof, whereby the plaintiff is entirely deprived of the benefit of the provision made for her in said deed. The prayer of the bill is, that some fit person be appointed a trustee, in the place of the said Thomas B. Haughton, deceased, to carry into execution the trusts in said deed declared ; that the defendants, Barney, Booth and Jonathan H. Haughton, be decreed to deliver up the said negroes and their increase and the possession of the said land, and to account for and to pay over the hire, rent and profits thereof; that the defendant Charles Haughton be decreed to convey the legal title in the slaves aforesaid, and the other defendants be decreed to convey the legal title in the land aforesaid, to the trustee so to be appointed upon the trusts in said deed declared ; and for such other and further relief as the plaintiff’s case requires.

All the defendants putin answers. Those of the administrator and the heirs of Thomas B. Haughton, declare that they have no personal knowledge of any of the matters charged, claim no interest whatever in the property in dispute, and are ready to submit to and do whatever the court shall direct therein. The answer of the administrator, Charles Haugton, states also, that about two or three years before the death of his intestate, he heard Jonathan Haugh-ton express a determination to make the said intestate a trustee for his son Joseph’s family, and that afterwards he heard the said Jonathan several times declare that the Pettijohn family, into which his son Joseph had married, should have no portion of his property.

The answer of the defendant, Jonathan H. Haughton, admits that the plaintiff is the sole surviving child of Joseph *397 M. Haughton, deceased, and that this defendant and Mary Louisa, the wife of the defendant George W.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.C. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haughton-v-barney-nc-1842.