James v. Tankersley

12 Tex. 405
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 Tex. 405 (James v. Tankersley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. Tankersley, 12 Tex. 405 (Tex. 1854).

Opinion

Hemphill, Ch. J.

This is a suit by plaintiff and appellants to recover a negro woman and child alleged to be the property of the said Catherine, with a prayer that it be ordered and adjudged to be her property. Judgment was for defendant, and eighteen grounds have been assigned as reasons for its reversal. It would be a tedious task to recapitulate the facts of the case, or to discuss the numerous grounds on which the judgment has been assailed.

The controversy was finally reduced to the single point, whether the slaves were the property of the husband James H., or of Catherine his wife; or, in other words, whether the proof established the fa,ct of property in Catherine, as had been alleged and claimed in the petition.

I shall consider this case as if all the parol evidence rejected had been admitted, giving however only the legal weight to such evidence, and to conclusions of law stated in thé evidence such force as they derive from the facts in proof. It appears that the plaintiff Catherine is the daughter of one Hugh Rown; that she intermarried with the plaintiff James H., and they having lived together for some years in Georgia, about the year eighteen hundred and forty, as nearly as can be ascertained from the record, removed to the State of Alabama, where they have ever since resided, and that the negress in controversy was the property and remained in possession of Hugh Rown, the father of Catherine, until about the time of the removal of the plaintiffs to Alabama, when she went into their possession, and so remained for the next eight or nine vears.

The question is,, what was the effect, under the rules of the Common Law, of this transmission of the property to the possession of the plaintiffs ?

[407]*407And it appears to be well established upon authority, that when slaves or other chatties pass from a parent to a daughter on or after marriage, a gift to the daughter is to be presumed, and that this is absolute and unqualified, unless there be some express condition or stipulation at the time of the gift to the contrary. (4 McCord, 228 ; 1 Nott & McCord, 221-223 ; 1 Richardson, Eq. Rep. 301.) Although the parent may have intended only a loan or a conditional gift, yet if this be not expressed at the time, it will not affect the character of the transaction as a gift. For it makes no difference what the parent intended, the only question is what he did. His acts are the best, as they are the only conclusive evidence of his intentions. There is not a scintilla of evidence of facts or declarations cotemporaneous with the act, to show what the parent intended at the time of the gift, or in other words, at the commencement of possession in the plaintiffs, or to prove any stipulations on his part, that the property was for the sole and separate use of the plaintiff Catherine. The only evidence. that the gift was conditional is the declaration of the donor in Georgia, made subsequent to the gift, that the property was for the separate use of his daughter; but the only effect of these subsequent declarations would be on the donor himself. They would stop him from reclaiming the property, but they could not change or modify the rights of the husband, vested under the gift. Those were modifications to which the husband did not assent. They were made in his absence, and in all probability when he was at his home in Alabama. The case then stands thus.

The delivery of the property to the plaintiffs presumes a gift to the wife. This, by operation of law, immediately vested in the husband, and as no conditions were attached at the time of the gift, he held in absolute right, which could not, at least without his consent, be modified by the subsequent declarations or acts of the donor.

The next question is, has the husband assented to this modification of his rights, and this diversion of his property to [408]*408the exclusive use and control of his wife. There is no evidence of any positive act by which such assent was expressed. The proof as to his quasi assent, or as to the right in which he claimed the property, is conflicting. The first witness testified that he never heard the husband claim the negroes as-his own, but frequently heard him say that they were his. wife’s. The testimony of other witnesses, however, is to the effect that he .always, during the eight years the slaves remained in Alabama, claimed them as his own; that they were levied on to satisfy his debts and were surrendered again to-him, not on the ground that they were his wife’s property, (a& we may infer from the evidence,) but from a claim set up by a stranger, under a bill of sale, which the Sheriff was not willing to risk, without a bond of indemnity, which being refused, he returned the property to the husband in whose possession-he had found it. The proof is also, that the husband being embarrassed with debts, run this property to Shreveport in ’48 or ’49, to shield it from sacrifice, and he there declared it to be for sale, thus evincing that he was not claiming it in, right of his wife, for her right could not be effected by his debts, but that he was claiming it in his own right, which he might-lawfully do, the gift originally being without conditions or restrictions, and no subsequent modification having been made in it with his assent or approbation ; and if there be a conflict as to his words giving such assent, there is none as to his acts, for these are uniformly to the contrary.

But the-plaintiff Catherine also claims under the will of her-father, executed in 1845 and proved in 1848, by which the negress Mary was bequeathed to her, subject to her disposal and her’s only, with a limitation over to John Eown and his heirs, in the event of her death leaving no child or children. This claim rests on no foundation. The bequest had no effect on the previously vested right of the husband. The will was not made until five, nor proven until eight years after the gift or the accrual of the right to the husband. The rational inference is, that the probate followed shortly after the death of' [409]*409the testator, consequently the bequest is an attempt to change the disposition of property, which eight years before had been fixed irrevocably in the husband, by the act of the testator himself. The absurdity of such an attempt is too palpable to require illustration. The rights of the husband, through the gift to his wife, were beyond the control of the testator. His possession and right under it were adverse to all the world, to the donor as well as others. (1 Rich. Eq. Rep. 301.)

As before stated, the husband might have assented to such a disposition of his property for the benefit of his wife. But did he give such assent ? Clearly not. His acts manifest a very different purpose. The will was proven in the year 1848, and in that year the husband was shifting from post to pillar, and seizing upon one device after another to save this property from sale for his debts, under the belief of course that it was-subject to his debts, that it was his own property, and his acts show that he intended to claim it as such to save it for his own benefit, and secure by sale the proceeds to himself.

Consequently the wife can set up no claim under the will, nor under the subsequent acts of her husband, for they are not such as to show assent to the bequest, or a surrender of his own rights. Such an assent cannot be presumed, and especially where, as in this case, the design of the testator was in the event that the wife died childless, to exclude the husband from all share or right in the property.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tex. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-tankersley-tex-1854.