Jackson's Ex'rs. v. Holliday's Adm'rs.

19 Ky. 363, 3 T.B. Mon. 363, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 21, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Ky. 363 (Jackson's Ex'rs. v. Holliday's Adm'rs.) 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
Jackson's Ex'rs. v. Holliday's Adm'rs., 19 Ky. 363, 3 T.B. Mon. 363, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 74 (Ky. Ct. App. 1826).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the Opinion of the Court,

John Gains, as executor of Congreve Jackson, brought an action on the case against David Hamoton, the administrator or John Holliday, and dcciared with several counts.

in the first, ho declares that John Holliday was possessed of a slave which he represented ío 'be his. proper slave, held by him (Holliday) as the administrator of Ambrose Bush, and thereby deceitfully and fraudulently induced said Jackson to buy him at the price of 450 dollars But that the slave was not part of the estate of Bush, and did not belong to said Holliday as such* and belonged to,a.certain Lynden, [364]*364Comstock, whoso wife had taken the said slave away from one of the female distributees.of the said Congreve Jackson, to whom the slave had been assigned by the plaintiff, in the distribution of his estate.

Second •souril. Third count.. í'OWlil oounf. .Vinit ei'.mif. Not.- — nil the count? aro irt c:i ■! tor Iho deceit of defendants in-?co 4- bill. L. K, TJ!, ÜS. J’lun. PlililUiffs,OVi‘ ■qpaop.

The second count, is the same in substance with the first, except that Holliday, the intestate of the defendant, is pbarged with selling the said-slave as administrator of Ambrose Bush, knowing him to he the proper slave of Nancy J. Comstock, ¿rid with concealing that fact.

The third count charges, that Holliday was possessed of the slave, and represented him to be the property of Nancy J. Comstock, -and that ho was authorized and empowered by the said N. J. Comstock to sell the slave, all which he knew to he false, hut; that the said slave belonged-to Lynden Comstock, husband of the said N. J. Comstock) yet he induced ;he said Congreve Jackson to buy anil pay for the slave, by the aforesaid fraudulent representations^ and then follows the allegation that the slave was taken away as in the other counts.

The fourth count avers, that the slave belonged to Lynden Comstock and his wife, and that said Holliday well knowing the fact, sold the slave as his own, concealing the truth and misrepresenting his title,- and the slave was lost gs before.

The fifth count, slates, the slave to be the property of N. ,T. Comstock^ that Holliday was possessed of him. and falsely and fraudulently represented that he was authorized by her to sell !dm, and did profess to sell the right of said N. J. Comstock to the Boy, which Congreve Jackson'juirrhased, when in truth, and in (act, he had no authority or right to sell the slave, and that N. J. Comstock had reclaimed him as stated in the first count.

The defendant pleaded that his intestate was not guilty.

On the trial, the plaintiff proved that the slave in question belonged to the estate of Ambrose Bush deceased, of which Holliday, the defendants intestate, was administrator) that Holliday had assented to the distribution of said Bush’s estate, and with the distributees had united in choosing men to d> • [365]*365vide; that all the distributees were present, except Nancy Julia Comstock, a daughter of said Bush, who with her husband lived out of the state, and that Holliday himself represented her as agent in said division, by virtue of a letter from her to that effect, and signed as agent for her a written agreement, evidencing the division; that each distributee took their portions, and acquiesced-in the division, and Holliday, for Comstock and wife, took into his possession the slave in question, and kept him for them, they not being in the country, and this slave was allotted to Mrs. Comstock, in full of her share of the estate; that some time afterwards, Holliday caused an advertisement to be inserted in the.public newspaper printed at the court-house of the county, to this effect:

Motion for non suit overruled. Defendants, evidence.

“ Will be sold, to the highest bidder, on the 28th instant-, being court-day, before the door of John Dudley, in Winchester, a likely negro boy, seven years old, the property of Julia Comstock, to satisfy several executions. One half of the purchase money down, and the other, half in three months — the purchaser giving bond with approved security. December 19, 1818.

(Signed) John Holliday.”

He further proved that Congreve Jackson, the plaintiff’s testator, became the purchaser at the said sale, which Holliday conducted, and complied with its terms, and Holliday forthwith delivered him'the slave, and that on the death of said Jackson, the slave was assigned to one of his daughters, and was taken out of her possession by a relation of Julia Comstock, who now lived in this country with her, ami the slave could not be regained from them.

The defendants’ counsel moved the court to instruct the jury, on this evidence, as in case of a non suit. The court overruled the application.

The defendant, then proved that he sold the slave, by virtue of two decrees of the same court, rendered in two suits in chancery, the one of Francis Walker, against Lynden Comstock and John Holliday, as administrators of Bush, defendants, and the second .loremiah Hush complainant, and the same defendants. in the first suit, the decree was final, in the [366]*366latfer, interlocutory only, and then attempted to read in evidence, the records of said suits in Chancery.

Objetion to decrees offered in evidence sustained. Instructions for plaintiffs as tn the damaged. Instructions ns in case of non suit, can be given, only where it is "dear there is no evidence to support some neoesaajy fact. 7iistructinns ¡moved by defendant overyuled. Ojie who soils a slave as asonl of'the /Mvner, when afterwards sued by vendee fordeoeit, in falsely affirming his authority ,has the onus probasndi of his agency on himseif ami must shew if’’

[366]*366But they were objected to, as confering upon Holliday, no authority to make said sale, or to sell the title of Julia or Lynden Comstock in the slave and as irrelevant. The courtsustainod the objection and would not suffer these records to be read.

The plaintiff mo\ ed the court to instruct the jury, that if they (bund for the plaintiff, the criterion of damages was the sum paid for the boy with legal interest thereon, from the time it was paid; and the court gave the, instruction.

The defendant then applied to the court, to direct the jury that they ought to make a reasonable deduction from these damages, for the use and hire of the boy, for the time that Jackson ami his representatives held him. But the court refused this instruction. To all these opinions-of the court, the defendant excepted, and spread the whole on record, and has prosecuted this writ of error, contending that all.these decisions, or'some one or move of them, are erroneous.

As to the motion to instruct the jury as in case, of a non suit, it cannot be sustained on t he ground that the evidence varied from all the counts in the declaration.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Speed v. Transamerica Corporation
135 F. Supp. 176 (D. Delaware, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ky. 363, 3 T.B. Mon. 363, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacksons-exrs-v-hollidays-admrs-kyctapp-1826.