Irwin v. Morell

1 Dudley Rep. 72
CourtChatham Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedJuly 15, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Dudley Rep. 72 (Irwin v. Morell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Chatham Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. Morell, 1 Dudley Rep. 72 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1831).

Opinion

[72]*72This was an action of trover for-negroes. The case was tried the first time at-Term, 182-, when a- verdict was rendered for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed from the verdict, and the case was again tried at-Term, 183 — . Qn the part of the plaintiff' one witness testified that Alexander Irwin, an uncle of the plaintiff, about the time the line was run between the State of Georgia and the Indians, under the treaty of Shoulderborne, gave to the plaintiff a negro girl, ^lree or f°ur years old, whose name was Hannah ; — that said Alexander Irwin brought the negro girl to the house of the late General Jared Irwin, who was the father of the plaintiff, and called for the plaintiff, who met him in the yard. He then Put bar>d of the girl into that of the plaintiff!, and told her that he gave her that negro girl. Another witness a's0 testified that she did not see Alexander Irwin make the gift; but soon after he had brought the girl to the plantation of Jared Irwin, she heard him (Alexander Irwin) say that he had given the negro girl Hannah to the plaintiff. These two and other witnesses testified that said negro girl was always recognized in the family of Jared Irwin, as the property of Jane Irwin the plaintiff. Jane Irwin at the time of the gift, was a little girl, about the age of the girl Hannah. This negro Hannah and her children were the subjects of the suit, Xhe identity of the negroes, and the conversion by the defendant were sufficiently established.

()t3 the part of the defendant it was proved, that the negro bad remained in the possession of Jared-Irwin to the time of his death,- — that he exercised acts of ownership over them— that in the year 1815, he mortgaged them and other negroes to James Dickson and Co. — that after the death of Jared Irwin they still remained upon his estate and with his negroes, [73]*73until they were sold in the year 18:¿3 at sheriffs’ sale, to satisfy the debt due to James Dickson and Co. The person who was sheriff at the time of said sale testified, that .when he made the levy, he found the negroes in the possession of the family of Jared Irwin deceased, and on his plantation— did not take them away at the time of the levy — believed the plaintm was present when the levy was made; cud not know postively, but was under the impression that the J J ’ r i • i i i knew the nature or the process under which the levy was made: no person forbade him to take the girl Hannah; the negroes were sent to the court house on the day of sale by the family. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses who had acted as overseer for Jared Irwin in 1807, and had continued in his service for three years, stated in his cross examination that the negro Hannah was considered as the property of Jared Irwin, except by the family who called her Jane's property. The same witness gave an affirmative answer to the question “ whether from what he saw while acting as overseer, he did not believe the said slave was the property of the estate of Jared Irwin ?” There was no direct evidence that the plaintiff was cognizant of the mortgage at the time of its execution ; and one witness who was examined as to that point on the part of the defendant, stated it to b< that the mortgage was unknown to the family and neignoors of the mortgagor in the year 1817 ; that the situation of the plaintiff was such at that time, that he (the witness) could say that she knew nothing at all of the private transactions of her father and mother ; and that she usually spent much, of her time from home. To the question put on the part of the defendant “ whether the negroes were not considered in the family as the property of Jane Irwin,” the witness answered his Opinion • i i hbors that he did not think so of Jared Irwin after the and staled that John Irwin the son death of his father, applied to the witness to borrow a sum of money in order to keep back, (to redeem,) the negroes belonging to his sister Jane Irwin. No evidence was adduced that the plaintiff was present at the sale. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, whereupon the counsel for the plaintiff moved for a new trial upon the following grounds.

And if ho should not inter-Berthe statute but on the day of sale should publicly forbid the sale, and assert his title in the hearing of the by-standers, he might afterwards institute an ac-could not defend tHe”?1 proving that* the [¿TTihobly0 made°no objec-tlontion against tha purchaser who - • But if claim-^^htbotTat gross will ttic time of levy “d of doing so, it afrea-^s“'“¡¡» purchaser, as bar any future clalln' when i v»t-diet hasnofoun-nailon in the ev-,d®a"ce,wiy neb¿ granted; but ghen ¶®”® ha> both sides as it jury to determine the a“nT¿ctJg®^ idence, the court *lthou*h ü m®? differ with the jury on the point of preponder-XsturbWtL ver-diet.

[73]*73Because, the verdict was contrary to law and evi-J First. dence.

Secondly. Because since the trial the plaintiff has discovered new and material evidence. This ground vvas verified by the usual affidavit of the party. The following extracts from the affidavits of Simon Whitaker and Charles Wimam-son will show the nature of the newly discovered evidence. “ Simon Whitaker being duly sworn, deposeth and saith that he was in Saundersville, Washington County, on the-first Tuesday in January, 1823, at the time that General Irwin’s negroes were sold, and saw Miss Jane Irwin there, who claimed [74]*74a part of said negroes ; that he heard her say to her brother General John Irwin that she forbid the sale of them, and that she never would consent to the sale of them — that he saw the negroes encamped with a waggon on the commons of said town; and there they remained until they went back to Qenera] Irwin’s plantation: that he saw the sheriff within , * ’ . . sale hours, standing at the court house door crying the said negroes all at once, and knocked them off to the agent of James Dickson and Co. while they were at the camp on the with the waggon — that he enquired of General John Irwin, what he meant by such a course of conduct — - that he remarked the house of James Dickson and Co. had kind and indulgent to him — that he wanted the case settled — that he thought it was the best he could do — that he had made a private sale — and that he wanted to perfect titles — that he (deponent) told him that his sister Jane would never consent to it. He (General Irwin) then remarked that ‘ntended to try and satisfy her by letting her have some other property, that would suit her as well.”

it seems ever, that when glaringly*against the weight of inevitably work .gstiee^ new granted?ay 6 new covery11 of6new testimony winch tafee. — Though beenrheidhfnflex-ibte, the courts great caurionTn relaxing it. The court re-hictantiy grant-uporuhe^romd ered6Wte,t!'SCOv" which wasm°not merely cumula-ion with certain auxiliary cir-carastances at-tendantupon the upse, it not hav-factoriiy shown gltie was ¿td to obtain it sooner’ T&» .granting refcstagrib'tmist ?eP¿ndd¡Fcrotion Ttho>SCcodr" nature ami ciT cumstances °of Sis Pwücular

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Dudley Rep. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-morell-gasuperctchatha-1831.