Hawkin's adm'r v. Craig

22 Ky. 254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 3, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ky. 254 (Hawkin's adm'r v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkin's adm'r v. Craig, 22 Ky. 254 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Owsley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The now wife of Craig, was once the. wife of Edmond Singleton, and at his death became entitled to the life estate in one third of the slaves, then owned by Singleton, as her dower of the slaves. Sometime after the death of Singleton, his then widow, and now Mrs. Craig, married John Haw-bins, who for many years thereafter, and until his death, held the possession of the slaves now in contest, claiming them as the dower slaves of his wife, in the estate of her former husband, Singleton, and after bis death the slaves were held by his wife in the same right, until she subsequently married Craig, and he has continued to hold them ever since. — Administration of the estate of Hawkins having been granted to the present appellants, by the competent authority, and they conceiving that the life estate in the slaves, to which Mrs. Craig was entitled as the widow of Singleton, became vested in Hawkins, to whom she was married, whilst the widow Singleton, applied to Craig, after his marriage to her, and demanded the slaves, but he refused to deliver them, insisting that the right of his wife as the [255]*255■widow of Singleton to the slaves survived to her upon the death of Hawkins, and that as the administrators of Hawkins, the appellants had no right to demand or receive the possession of them.

Detinue by Hawkins’ administrator. Copy of the proceeding of the commissioners of the county court assigning the slaves to-Hawkins and wife, for dower in Singleton’s estate, offered, but rejected. Question stated.

This action of detinue was then brought by the appellants as the administrators of Hawkins, against Craig and his wife for the slaves.

Mon delinet was pleaded by Craig and wife; and on the tial of that issue, the appellants, for the purpose of proving that the slaves were actually assigned to Mrs. Craig, whilst she was the wife of Hawkins, as the dower of the slaves of her first husband, Singleton, introduced as evidence a copy from the records of the county court of Jessamine county, of an order made by that court, upon the application of Hawkins, appointing commissioners to assign to the then- wife of Hawkins, and former widow of Singleton, her dower in her deceased husband’s estate, also the report of the commissioners to court, made in pursuance of the order appointing them, and containing an assignment of the slaves in the contest to the then Mrs, Hawkins, as her dower slaves, together with the order of the county court, approving the report of the commissioners, and directing it to be recorded. By this copy it appears that although the commissioners who were appointed by the court, were qualified to the report made by them, before it was admitted to record, it does not appear that they took the oath required by the law upon such subjects, before they proceeded to the duties assigned them by the order under which they were appointed; and because the copy did not show that the oath had been administered to the commissioners before they acted, the circuit court excluded the copy from being used as evidence before the jury. The first question therefore, that demands notice, involves the correctness of that decision.

if admitting the slaves to have been assigned to Mrs. Hawkins, in the lifetime of Hawkins, as her dower in the slaves of her former husband, Singleton, 'and if admitting that they were possessed by Hawkins in his lifetime, under the assignment to [256]*256his wife, that notwithstanding, upon the death of Hawkins, they survived to Mrs. Hawkins as his survivor, it will at once be perceived that the appellants cannot have been injured by the decision which went to exclude the copy from being used as evidence to the jury. For the object intended by introducing the copy, was to establish hi Mrs, Hawkins, a dower right in the slaves, as the late widow Singleton, and of course, if after the death of Hawkins, that right survived to her, it is totally immaterial as respects the claim of the appellants, whether or not dower of the slaves of Singleton was ever assigned to her. Before the rejected evidence can, therefore, be known to be material to any point in issue between the parties, it is necessary that we should enquire as to the right which a husband acquires to slaves possessed by him, under an assignment of dower to his wife during coverture out of the estate of her former husband, the dower right of the wife in slaves, vests entirely and absolutely in the husband, then, upon the death of the husband in the lifetime of the wife, that right must pass to his representatives, and cannot survive to the wife, and facts designed to be established by the rejected copy, would of cour.-e be material to the right claimed by the appellants in their characv ter of administrators of Hawkins,

Feme’s estate of dower in .her first husband’s lands, survives to her on her second husband’s death. Statute making slaves real estate for certain purposes,

If the right which a husband acquires in the dower slaves of his wife be of the same sort as that which he is entitled to in her dower lands, we would readily admit that after the death of the husband it would survive to the wife, and not pass t<? the representatives of the husband.

But we apprehend that the right which a husband acquires to the dower slaves of his wife, is essentially different from that which he is entitled to in her dower land. We know that by a provision contained in the act of the Legislature of this State, is declared that “all negro, mulatto or inriiau slaves, in alt courts of judicature and other places within this Commonwealth, shall be held, taken and adjudged to be real estate, and shall descend to the heirs and widows of persons departing this life, [257]*257as laucls are directed to descend, &c. and were there no other provision in the act calculated to repel the conclusion, there would, we acknowledge, be great plausibility in contending that the right acquired by a husband in the dower slaves of his wire, is not greater than that which he is entitled to in her dower lands.

Slaves are far ®3tate °[ 1,10 aTth”1» riage, and whatever of comedo her, during tiie cover-th^husUn? Slaves assign-fi'JIt'hus-band’s estate, reduced to possession by her second not^surviVe to her on his death, but ccutorWSeX" cemor.

[257]*257But the act contains many other provisions, all of which would require a useless waste of time to particularly notice, but which we would remark in general, goes conclusively to show that notwithstanding the provision cited, slaves to most purposr es are still treated as personal chattels.

There is one section of the act which goes explicitly to place the right of a husband to the interest of the.slaves of his wile on the footing of chattels, That section provides that, “where any slave or slaves have been, or shall be conveyed or bequeathed, or have or shall descend to any feme covert, the absolute right, properly and interest of such slave or slaves, is hereby vested, and shall accrue to, and he vested in the husband of such feme covert, and where any feme sole, is or shall be possessed of any slave or slaves, the same shall accrue to, and be absolutely vested in the husband of such feme,

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ky. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-admr-v-craig-kyctapp-1827.