Hogarth v. United States

30 Ct. Cl. 346, 1895 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 51, 1895 WL 695
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 6, 1895
DocketNo. 18000
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Ct. Cl. 346 (Hogarth v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogarth v. United States, 30 Ct. Cl. 346, 1895 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 51, 1895 WL 695 (cc 1895).

Opinion

Nott,' J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the class of cases to which this suit belongs a right of action is given, in effect, by the Act 2d March, 1891 (26 Stat. L., p. 822), to owners or heirs of owners who lost their lands in two parishes in the State of South Carolina, St. Helena and St. Lukes, by direct-tax sales during the civil war. The divestiture of this property, though by legal proceedings, was exceedingly pitiable, and when the harsher judgments of the war had softened and passed away Congress deemed it an act of justice as well as mercy to award something in the nature of restitution. The amount of restitution in this class of cases was $5 an acre.

On the 8th March, 1892, there was pending in the Treasury Department the claim of Eobert G. Norton and others, heirs of Eliza Wallace, for this statutory restitution of $5 an acre for a farm of 475 acres, in the parish of St. Helena. On that day (March 8, 1892) the Secretary transmitted the claim to this court under Eevised Statutes, section 1063, and on the 8th of October, 1892, the claimants, Norton et al., filed their petition against the United States in this court. On the 26th February, 1893, the case proceeded to judgment. The judgment was soon after paid and satisfied.

After the judgment had been paid and satisfied the claimants in the present suit presented their demand to the Secretary of the Treasury and asked the same restitution for the same property. The Secretary likewise transmitted their claim to this court under the Eevised Statutes, aud on the 23d May, 1893, the claimants came in and filed their petition. The case therefore presents the question whether the Government can be compelled to pay over again, or whether the present claimants, if they have the higher title, are precluded from now setting it up; that is to say, whether the judgment in the former case will have the same effect that it undeniably would have if the present claimants had been made parties to the suit aud had then neglected to assert their rights.

[348]*348The facts out of which this controversy springs are peculiar. In 1834, it is now conceded by all parties, the property was owned by and in possession of one Dr. Branson, who in that year died, leaving’ a widow, but no issue. Mrs. Branson continued in the actual and peaceable possession of the property -./until the capture of Port Boyal in 1861, and constructively in possession until its sale under the direct-tax acts, March 10, 1868, when it was bid in by the United States. After the death of her first husband she married Mr. Parm Wallace, and the estate in time became commonly known as the Wallace place, and it is so described in the records of the direct tax commissioner for the State of South Carolina.

Mr. Wallace died before his wife, and she died without issue after the direct-tax sale. The parties in the former suit of Norton et al. were her heirs, and as such recovered.

It has been one of the unfortunate peculiarities of all these direct-tax cases under the act of'1891 that the evidence has rarely, if ever, come up to the requirements of an action in ejectment. When the forces of the United States in 1861 appeared before these islands, the terrified inhabitants fled, abandoning houses and homes and household effects. Their deeds and documents and muniments of title were forgotten or lost. Still more unfortunately, the public records of the two parishes were destroyed,, and, as a general thing, conveyances and wills and all documentary evidence of title to realty in those parishes vanished from the face of the earth. The court therefore has had to rely in the most of these cases upon uninterrupted possession and undisputed acts of ownership for a number of years, and to relinquish the hope of any one claimant producing a paper title.

In the case of the Wallace heirs it was shown by testimony which was conclusive, and which is still undisputed, that Mrs. Wallace was in possession of the property from the death of her first husband in 1834 until her flight in 1861. Witnesses of unquestionable respectability testified that she exercised over it all rights of ownership and that she was the owner. The latter statement was of course a conclusion of the witnesses, which did not influence the mind of the court. It was also stated by the witnesses that “ she got the plantation by and through her former husband,” and that “ she acquired the [349]*349property through her first husband.” The manner in which she acquired it was not shown.

Under the laws of South Carolina, if Dr. Branson had died intestate his widow would have taken only one-half of the plantation 5 and as he left brothers and sisters, or their representatives, who would have been entitled to the other half, but who had asserted no such right during a period of more than twenty-one years, and who did not appear and assert a right to the restitution fund, it seemed a reasonable inference that Mrs. Branson had acquired in some way the whole estate. It might have come to her by devise; it might have come to her by purchase,- .but so far as the evidence of undisturbed possession could raise a presumption of title, it appeared to have been in some way vested in her.

The claimants in the present suit attempt to produce a will of Dr. Branson, or rather, it should be said, proof of the existence and loss of a will and secondary evidence of its contents. It is objected by the defendants that this secondary evidence is incompetent and inadmissible. The court, is of the opinion that the objection is well taken and that the secondary evidence must be excluded. The witnesses do not give the contents of the missing instrument. A great number of years have elapsed since they last saw it, and their testimony is nothing more than their conclusions of its purpose and effect.With the exclusion of this evidence as incompetent, the present case fails upon the facts; but as it is possible that the missing will may yet be found, and as similar suits may hereafter be brought by other parties, the court will proceed to the consideration of the fundamental question of law involved in the case, and that question is whether the United States in this class of cases can be held liable twice over, and after having paid once under the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction can be made to pay a second time.

If the land of Dr. Branson and the other owners in these cases had still been in the possession of the Government, and Congress had provided that restitution should be made and possession restored on their coming into this court and establishing their right and title by a suit in the nature of an action of ejectment, and judgment had gone in favor of the Wallace heirs and they had been put in possession of the land, no one would suppose that a second suit against the Government could [350]*350be maintained, by the Branson heirs, though they set up a higher title. Their remedy, if any, would be against the parties in possession, the Wallace heirs, who, if they recovered wrongfully and without notice to the rightful heirs, might be regarded as holding the property as trustees for those who were in law and equity entitled to it. Whether tbe present claimants can maintain a similar action for the fund which represented the land is a question not before this court, and concerning it no opinion is expressed.

The abandoned and captured property cases are somewhat analogous to these. There, as here, no contract existed, express or implied.

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104 U.S. 216 (Supreme Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ct. Cl. 346, 1895 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 51, 1895 WL 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogarth-v-united-states-cc-1895.