Holloway v. Conner's heirs

42 Ky. 395, 3 B. Mon. 395, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 6, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Ky. 395 (Holloway v. Conner's heirs) 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
Holloway v. Conner's heirs, 42 Ky. 395, 3 B. Mon. 395, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 34 (Ky. Ct. App. 1843).

Opinion

Judge Beech

delivered the opinion of the Court.

. In 1819 Richard Plead departed this life, leaving a will which was in same year duly proven and admitted to re. cord in the Office of the Nelson County Court.

After making several specific devises, the testator devised all the residue of his estate to his wife, for life, and at her death to be equally divided between his daughter, Lucinda Head, and the children of his daughter, Prudence Conner, wife of Daniel Conner.

In 1829, Charles Holloway and his wife, Lucinda, they . having intermarried subsequently to the execution of the will, exhibited their bill in the Nelson Circuit Court, alledging that the widow of the testator had died, ,and praying for a settlement and division of the estate according to the will.

Prudence Conner and her husband and children and Lewis, the surviving executor of said Head, were made defendants.

In 1831, Conner and wife and children exhibited their cross bill against Holloway and wife, and also against Samuel Hahn, Turner Wilson, William Penny, Robert Able, James M. Wright, and William H. Pope. They charge that Hahn, Wilson, &c. had obtained possession of certain slaves, devised by said Richard Head to Lucinda Holloway and the children of Prudence Conner; [396]*396that the possession of said slaves had been fraudulently obtained; and that the parties were confederating for the purpose of defrauding the devisees of Head out of their rights in them.

These defendants answered, denying any such intention, but admitting that they had the possession, respectively, of the slaves as charged.

Pope claimed the slave in his possession by purchase from Holloway, in 1829. The others claimed the inter, est of Holloway and wife as purchasers under executions against Holloway; that Holloway was entitled to an undivided moiety of said slaves, in right of his wife, Lucinda, which had been devised to her by her father, Richard Head. They pray a decree allowing them one half of the money for which the slaves may be sold, or that they may be permitted to keep them, upon their paying one half the value thereof to Mrs. Conner’s children, and finally, that justice and equity may be done.

In 1835, Conner and wife exhibited an original bill against same parties, charging that they were about to remove the slaves without the limits of the State, and ob. tained an injunction and restraining order.

The three suits were afterwards consolidated, and progressed and were tried together.

In 1840, Lucinda Holloway filed her petition in all the cases, suggesting her destitute condition, the intemperate, improvident, and prodigal habits of her husband, and praying that out of the remnant of her patrimony reasonable provision might be made for her'support, and a trustee appointed to take charge of her portion.

In 1841, Charles Holloway died, and his wife filed her answer, asserting her claim to one half of the slaves in possession of Wilson, &e. and to a reasonable hire during the. time they had had possession. She denies that the slaves had ever, been in her possession, or that of her husband."

,In 1842, the causes were heard and an interlocutory rendered, in which it is decided that the interest of Holloway and wife, in the slaves sold under execution, passed to the purchasers, and that Pope acquired the interest of Holloway and wife in the. slave purchased by him; that [397]*397Mrs. Conner’s children were entitled to one half the slaves and one half the reasonable hire while in possession of those claiming the interest of Holloway and wife. A commissioner was appointed to ascertain and report the value of the hire, and as the slaves could not be divided in kind, to make sale of the slaves, and their increase.

Upon the'coming in of the commissioner’s report, the Court pronounced a final decree, dismissing the bill of Mrs. Holloway, and decreeing to the children of her sister one half the proceeds of the sale and one half the hire of all the slaves in contest.

To this decree Lucinda Holloway prosecutes this writ of error.

The only errors assigned are: 1st. That the Court erred in not decreeing to her one half the proceeds of the sale of the slaves sold under executions, and of their increase and hire. 2nd. In overruling her exceptions to the report of the commissioner.

No error is assigned in reference to the slave claimed by the defendant, Pope.

Before we notice the more important questions involved in the first error suggested, we will dispose of the second. Exceptions were filed on behalf of the plaintiff in error, to so much of the commissioner’s report as related to the hire of one of the slaves in contest. The Court overruled the exception, and considering the age of the slave and the confliction in the testimony, as to the value of his services, we are not prepared to say that the exception should have been sustained.

Cross errors are suggested by the defendant, Wilson, which we will here notice and dispose of. He insists that he was improperly decreed to pay hire upon the slaves, Bill and Lucy, and if liable at all, that too much was decreed against him, and that the slaves were improperly decreed to be sold. It will be sufficient to say that we are very clearly of opinion that in neither of the particulars suggested is there any error, of which the defendant, Wilson, has any cause to complain. He had „ received the entire benefit of the services of the slaves when he claimed but a moiety, and it was certainly equitable that he should account to those owning the other [398]*398moiety for half the hire, which we are satisfied was not estimated too high. As to the sale of the slaves, it was in accordance with the prayer contained in his answer.

A remainder in slaves, ’tho vested in the wife before coverture, does not vest in the husbanduntil reduced to possession, & where the remainder is held in conjunction with others and no separate possession, but a suit pending for division, they are not liable to sale under execution for the debts of the husband.

The questions involved in the first error suggested will now be considered, and that the attitude of the parties may be clearly understood, it will be necessary to bear in mind that the bill of Holloway and wife, praying for a settlement and division of the estate of her father, and of which the slaves in contest constituted a part, was filed and process issued on the first of May, 1829. The slaves were sold under executions, against Holloway, in 1830. And it is also worthy of remark that the notes and claims, upon which the judgments were obtained, on which the executions issued, seem all to have originated subsequent to the exhibition of the bill.

It does not appear that any division of the estate devised by the testator, Head, to his daughter, Lucinda, and the children of his daughter, Conner, had ever taken place. Nor does it appear that Holloway had ever had any of the slaves in possession.

At what time the life estate of the mother of Mrs. Holloway terminated does not very clealy appear. Nor does it appear at what time Holloway was married, but as the will bears date in September, and was admitted to record in November, 1819, it may be assumed that it was not till after the death of her father.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ky. 395, 3 B. Mon. 395, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-conners-heirs-kyctapp-1843.