Hundley v. Perry

37 Ky. 359, 7 Dana 359, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 1, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 37 Ky. 359 (Hundley v. Perry) 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
Hundley v. Perry, 37 Ky. 359, 7 Dana 359, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 151 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed in the Louisville Chancery Court, by Perry, a negro man, to assert and establish his right to freedom, against John B. Hundley, who claimed and had long held him as a slave.

The complainant claims his freedom under a deed of emancipation executed by his former owner, Charles Hammond, of Anne Arundell county in the State of Ma[360]*360ryland. Which deed, bearing date the 7th day of May, 1802, was proved and recorded in the county of Anne Arundel], and afterwards recorded in the county of Jefferson in this State, to which several of the slaves emancipated thereby, had been removed. Among twenty two negroes, whom this deed purports to emancipate— to be free at different periods, are Deb and her two children, Perry and Mace: Deb to be free in 1804; Perry, the present complainant, in 1822, and Nace in 1824.

Hundley, in his answer, admits that Hammond was the former owner of Deb and Perry and Nace, and that he executed the deed of emancipation set up in the bill; but charges that said Hammond was not, at the date of the deed, and has not been at any time since, the owner or master of the complainant, and that he had not then, and has not since had, any right, in law or equity, to set free the complainant, or, in any manner, to control his services; “because, as the defendant expressly charges; the said Hammond did, on the 16th day of February, 1801, for a good and valuable consideration, sell and dispose of the said complainant, with his mother and brother, to one Edward Dorsey; and that, on the same day, the said Hammond, on delivering the complainant, with his said mother and brother, did execute to said Dorsey, his receipt in full payment” for them; which receipt is exhibited with the answer, and is as follows: “Received — Feb. 16th, 1801 — of Edward Dorsey, seven “ pounds ten shillings, it being full payment for one ne- “ gro woman named Deb, and her two children named “ Nace and Perry.

“Teste, Charles Hammond of Chs.

uIsaac Randall.”

The names of Hammond and Randall, upon this receipt, were proved to be in their respective hand-writings; and it was further proved that, in the spring of 1801, Edward Dorsey removed from Maryland to Kentucky, bringing with him the three negroes Deb, Perry and Nace; that he used them as slaves until his death in 1804; after which, Perry remained in his family until the year 1822, when Hundley having intermarried with one of Dorsey’s daughters, acquired, in right of his wife, [361]*361and, as he says, by purchase from the other heirs, the sole interest in him, and has held him as a slave ever since. It was also proved that, at the date of the receipt exhibited in the answer, Deb, who was about twenty years old, and her two children, (of whom one was about three or four, and the other, one or two years of age,) were worth in Maryland from four hundred and fifty to five hundred dollars; that Dorsey owned the husband of Deb, and was about to bring him to Kentucky; and a witness for the defendant, says he understood that Doivsey bought Deb and her children to prevent a separation; but he does not pretend to any particular knowledge of the transaction between Hammond and Dorsey.

Hammond is dead, but the period of his death is not stated. A witness, whose deposition was taken on both sides, in reply to a general interrogatory filed by the complainant, requiring him to state what further he knows material for the complainant, states, that “he be- “ heves a deed of manumission was drawn up and exe- “ cuted by said Hammond, for the emancipation of said “ negro woman Deb, and her two children, and others “ named in the last deed, and that the same was not re- “ corded within the time required by the laws of Maryland; he thinks the deed was executed in the year u 1800; he believes the deed of 1802 was designed to “ carry out the object of the deed previously executed, “ but not recorded in time.”

The Chancellor decreed that Perry was of right a free man, and that Hundley should pay him three hundred dollars for his services, which are proved to have been worth one hundred dollars a year, since 1830. From this decree, Hundley has appealed.

The main question in the case is, whether, upon the pleadings and evidence, it can be determined, with reasonable certainty, that, before the execution of the deed of May, 1802, Hammond had divested himself of all right in Perry, so that his deed of emancipation, then made, could not have any operation in favor of Perry.

It is alleged by the defendant Hundley, that he did so divest himself, by a sale and transfer of Perry &c. to Dorsey, on the 16th of February, 1801.

[362]*362Under tire admission that Hammond was the previous owner of Perry, and the necessary inference that unless, prior to May, 1802, he had made such a transfer of his right as disabled him from making the deed of that date, it was obviously incumbent on Hundley to prove the substance of his allegation, by showing that Hammond had transferred to Dorsey the absolute property, or such other interest in Perry as prevented the deed from taking effect as to him, either in 1822, when, according to its terms, he was to be free, or at any subsequent period before the commencement of this suit. For, if he had a right to make Perry free from 1830 or 1835, and not sooner, we apprehend the deed purporting to emancipate him from 1822, must have its effect at any ■subsequent period when the right of the grantor became ■immediate.

Has Hundley proved that Perry was sold absolutely, as a slave for life, to Dorsey? He offers as proof of this fact, the receipt which has been copied, and the fact of Dorsey’s bringing the negroes, therein mentioned, to Kentucky, and retaining them in his service. The facts relating to the possession would certainly conduce to prove an absolute sale, if they stood alone and unexplained. But as this inference derives its strength mainly from the acquiescence of those who would have the right, if it was not with the possession, and as it would have bée^destroyed by a speedy reclamation of the ne-groes by Hammond, it would seem to be in some degree weakened by his executing, within a few months after-wards, a deed purporting to emancipate, at a future time, the. same negroes. It is, however, unnecessary to weigh the effect of the deed in this respect, or to give it any. The facts relating to the acquisition and retention of possession, do not stand alone, and are not wholly unexplained.

The receipt is stated by Hundley, to have been executed at the time of delivering the possession, and the fair inference from the proof is, that it was executed at or about that time. It is at least certain, that it relates to these negroes, and to the arrangement under which Dorsey obtained the possession and brought them to [363]*363Kentucky. And, although it does not purport to give the particulars of that transaction, yet as it is the only eotemporaneous writing relating to it which is exhibited in the cause, it is entitled to great weight, among the few facts whieh tend to elucidate the character of the transfer, and of the interest and possession held under it.

The fair inference from the language of this receipt is: — first, that the sum of £7

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 359, 7 Dana 359, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hundley-v-perry-kyctapp-1838.