Jacocks v. . Mullen

24 N.C. 162
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 24 N.C. 162 (Jacocks v. . Mullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacocks v. . Mullen, 24 N.C. 162 (N.C. 1841).

Opinion

Gaston, 1.

The plaintiff filed his petition in the Superior Court of Perquimons, in the April Term, 1841, of said Court,- against Benjamin Mullen and Harriet his wife, and Thomas Wilson. The petitioner sets forth that Greenbury Mullen, deceased, formerly of Bertie County, left a last Will *163 and Testament duly executed, of which he appointed his wife Harriet executrix, and William L. Gray and Turner Watson executors; that after his death the widow proved the Will, and Gray and Watson renounced the executorship; that by the said will the testator bequeathed as follows: “ I give to my son William certain negroes, (naming them,) to him, his heirs and assigns, for ever; but in case he should not arrive to the age of twenty-one years, or marry, my desire is that my daughter Sarah Mullen have the aforesaid negroes,” as by the will, which is referred to as part of the petition, more fully appears-; that Sarah Mullen intermarried with Noah Weeks, and-died intestate in the lifetime of her brother William.; that no administration was had upon her estate until the year 1839, when the plaintiff was duly.appointed her administrator; that the said William has died since the said Sarah under the age of twenty one years and unmarried, whereby the petitioner became entitled, as the administrator of the said Sarah, to the said slaves ; that Harriet Mullen, the executrix of'the testator, has intermarried with Benjamin Mullen, who, as the husband of the executrix, took the slaves into his possession, sold some of them and received large profits from their hire. The petitioner further alleges, that 'Thomas Wilson, having intermarried with one Elizabeth Mullen, and claiming that his wife was one of the next of kin of the said William, instituted a suit against Benjamin Mullen and wife, and recovered a part of the said negroes; that the petitioner has frequently applied to, the said Wilson to pay over unto h-ina what the said Wilson recovered in said suit, and to the said Benjamin to deliver over to him the negroes and account with him for their hire, and that both the said Benjamin and Thomas have refused to comply with these requests, denying his right to any part of the negroes so bequeathed, The prayer of tire petitioner is that Mullen and wife may be decreed to pay over what is due to the petitioner, and to deliver up the-said ne-groes and their issue, and the said Thomas to pay the amount recovered by him as aforesaid ; and for such other and further relief as the petitioner may be entitled to. The defendants Mullen and wife filed their answer at the succeeding *164 Term. This answer, admitting all the material facts alleged in the petition, states that the testator died in 1811; that Sarah his daughter intermarried with Noah Weeks in 1818 or 1819, and died intestate and without issue in 1821; that William her brother died in 1823, unmarried and under the age of twenty-one years; that the defendants, Benjamin and Harriet, intermarried in December, 1813; that the said Benjamin, in right of his wife as executrix, took possession of these negroes as part of the estate of her testator ; and that upon the death of the said William he kept the negroes, claiming them in right of his wife as the sole next of kin to the said William, until the year 1838, when a claim was set up to a share thereof by Thomas Wilson and his wife Elizabeth, who was the' half sister of the said William, on the side of the mother of the said William. The answer states that in the year 1835, the defendant, Benjamin, sold one of the said negroes, Aaron, because of his misconduct, for the sum of $375; that in the year 1839, at the suit of the said Wilson and wife, a decree was made for the sale of certain others of the slaves ; that they were sold accordingly for the sum of $1302. These defendants insist that the petitioner is not entitled, under the will of Greenbury Mullen, to the slaves or their price ; and, if he be, insist upon the lapse of time as a bar to that claim. The other defendant, Wilson, also put in his answer, in which he says only that he and his wife recovered, by a decree of this Court, a part of the proceeds of the property mentioned in said petition, and insists that he is not liable therefor, or any part thereof, to the petitioner.” Upon the filing of these answers a decree was made, whereby it was declared i: that the petitioner was entitled under the will of Greenbury Mullen, and upon the death of William Mullen, to the slaves bequeathed unto the said William, and.to their increase, and to the hires thereof from the death of the said William, or to the value of such of them as have been sold, if in truth any were sold, and the interest thereon, and the hire of the said slaves until they were sold ; and that the said petitioner recover of the said Benjamin Mullen the said slaves, with the hires and profits, or if they have been sold, their value with interest, and the hires *165 and profits up to the time of the sale.” And the decree directed a reference to the clerk to take an account of the value of the slaves that have been sold, with interest thereon, and their hires up to the time of the sales.” From this decree the defendant, Benjamin Mullen, prayed an appeal to this Court, which was granted by the Judge of the Superior Court.

This is an appeal by one of the defendants only, and from an interlocutory decree. The law directs, that when the Superior Court, in the exercise of its discretion, shall permit an appeal from an interlocutory judgment or decree, the record of the ease shall remain below, so that all necessary orders may be there made for preparing the cause for a final trial or hearing, and that the Court, allowing the appeal, shall direct so much only of their proceedings in the cause to be certified to this Court, as shall be necessary to present the question or matter arising upon the appeal fully to our consideration. From inattention to these provisions of the law inconveniences have been repeatedly experienced, and we feel it a duty to call the notice of the Circuit Judges and of the profession to them. When a transcript is sent up of all the proceedings in the cause, without a statement of the question or matter, on which our judgment is invoked, we are not only put to much unnecessary trouble to find out what is the matter submitted to our consideration, but are often in danger of adjudging upon some technical defects, inaccuracies and imperfections appearing in the transcript, to the surprise of one or other of the parties and to the hindrance rather than the advancement of justiee. We have not hitherto deemed ourselves justifiedin-refusing to take jurisdiction of appeals from interlocutory judgments and decrees, because the matter of appeal is not specifically stated, but it must not excite surprise, if after this notice, we should find ourselves compelled to adopt this course.

In the present case we have examined the matters alleged in the answer of the appellant, upon which answer the interlocutory decree is founded, to ascertain whether they be sufficient to warrant that decree. It they be, then we cannot say that there is error in it.

*166 The first question presented for consideration, is, as to the construction of the will of Greenbury Mullen.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.C. 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacocks-v-mullen-nc-1841.