Jones v. M'Neil

18 S.C.L. 466
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 18 S.C.L. 466 (Jones v. M'Neil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. M'Neil, 18 S.C.L. 466 (S.C. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

O’Neall, Jo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

I regret that, notwithstanding the three trials which this case has received, and although it has already had much more of the time and attention both of the Circuit Court, and of this Court, than its merits intitle it to, it should yet be necessary to send it back for a fourth trial. Before I proceed to noliee the grounds, upon which we think it necessary to comment, it is my duty to place the opinions delivered in this case, by two distinguished members of this Court, upon such grounds as will hereafter prevent them from being regarded as conflicting with one another.

As the case was presented to the Court of Appeals in the first instance, the only question considered was, whether the plaintiffs had the legal estate. Upon this, Judge Nott with his usual correctness decided, that Mrs. Jones was the trustee of the plaintiffs, and that she could not divest herself of that legal estate by any act of her own, without the consent of her cestuy que trusts ; and that, some of them beina: minors, they could not consent to the surrender, and therefore the legal estate was still in her. He, however, expressly declared, that if the case had been left to the jury, on the possession, alone, of the plaintiffs, he would not say, that the verdict might not be sustained. On the second trial the case was submitted to the jury on the possession of the plaintiffs; and it is in reference to this new position assumed by the case, that Judge Colcock’s opinion must be considered as applying. It was then considered as the case of cestuy que [470]*470trusts, not intitled, in law,' to the possession, but having the ac-* , . _ . . , , 7 • tual possession. In such a ease there could be no doubt, that m an action for an injury done to the possession, sounding altogether in damages, the jury might give damages to the extent of their equitable interests. And this was what was meant to be expressed in the instruction of the presiding Judge to the jury, on the second trial, and what Judge Colcock intended to convey, in saying, that the plaintiffs were intitled to recover their shares of the slaves.

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It has been reserved to this Protean case to assume, on the' third trial, apiew’,’character of right. On all the former trials it was contendedj that Mrs. Jones’ interest was at an end, and, in the first instance, that the present plaintiffs were the legal owners, in the second instance, that being the equitable owners in possession, they were intitled to recover, as the bailees of Mrs. Jones the executrix. And the jury having found the fact to be so, there is no doubt, that, on that ground, the plaintiffs’ recovery might be sustained. For it cannot now be questioned, that the bailee of goods may maintain trover, or trespass, against every one but the legal owner : and a bailee, having had actual possession, eo.upled with an interest, might maintain trespass even against the owner, for taking the goods out of his possession. It is however due to my knowledge of the case to say, that I do not consider the trespass complained of as a high handed act, calling for vindictive damages. The case, from the commencement, was a dispute about the right of property. Hall, who was a creditor of Mrs. Jones, conceiving erroneously, but, I have no doubt honestly, that she had such an estate in the slaves, as made them liable to his debt, seized and sold them under his execution, and became the purchaser. Having lost the possession accidentally, he employed the present defendants to capture the slaves and deliver them to him ; and they did so, under circumstances which made them trespassers. To defeat Hall’s only chance of legal claim, Mrs. Jones consented to a marriage, which, in law, divested her of all claim to the support, bequeathed her by the will, from the income of the plantation and slaves, during widowhood ; but which, to say the least of it, was any thing else than assuming the matrimonial obligations, which are intended to unite two persons, through good and evil fortune,' during life.

[471]*471Having premised these observations, I will proceed, in as brief a manner as possible, to state, and examine, the several questions, which I think it necessary to consider, for the disposition of the present appeal. They are as follows: — 1st. Were the declarations of Mrs. Jones admissible 1 2nd. Was Abel Gibson a competent witness 2 3rd. Had the defendants’ counsel the right to impeach the credit of the witness Harris by a: cross-examination 2 4th. What damages are the plaintiffs in this case intitled to recover 1

1st. The plaintiffs now seek a recovery on the ground, that they are the bailees of Mrs. Jones the executrix; and they are suing in her right, and for her benefit. She could not therefore be sworn as a witness. Her declarations, if she herself is incompetent, must be still more so. This rule must however be taken with some qualifications. If her declarations constituted a part of the bailment, at the time it was made, they would be admissible as part of the res gestes. Or, if her declarations constituted the act of bailment itself, then they are a fact, arid part of the plaintiffs’ title, and may be given in evidence. 1 Stark. Ev. 47, 49. But, with these qualifications, the rule, that her declarations are inadmissible, must govern. If, on the trial, the evidence of her declarations had been confined to such as were made at the time, when she delivered the* possession of the slaves to the plaintiffs; then under the qualification of the rule, which I have already stated, it would have been competent. But her declarations, made after the alleged bailment, that she haddelivered the slaves to the plaintiffs, and more especially, such declarations after the seizure of the slaves under Hall’s execution, were incompetent, and ought not to have been received.

2nd. The question as to the competency of Gibson has been, in some degree, a vexed question in this case. It lies however, within a very narrow compass; and is, I think, susceptible of an easy solution. In 2 Stark. Ev. 4th part, 744, it is said, in speaking of the interest, which will render a witness incompetent, “ The interest to disqualify must be some legal, certain, and immediate iulerest, however minute, in the result of the cause, or in the record, as an instrument of evidence, acquired without fraud.” It appears, that Gibson bought the slaves now in dispute from Hall, and contracted, in writingjthatif he, Hall,should fail in recovering the slaves in this suit, then the amount agreed [472]*472to be paid by him, Gibson, should not bo paid ; otherwise that it should. This, it appears to me, constitutes a legal, certain, and immediate, interest in the witness, to defeat Hall’s recovery. It is obvious from the facts developed in the case,- that Hall has no title to the slaves, and that, of course, the purchaser from him has none ; but yet, according to the words of this contract, if Hall could, in any way, succeed in defeating the plaintiffs, he might recover on the note of Gibson for the purchase money, and thus leave him to set up any defence,- which he could, to the claim to be made by the legal representatives of Henry Jones deceased. It is, however, useless to push'the reasoning to an extent which would be at war with the opinion intimated by the Court on the last appeal, that this witness might be competent, as his interest appeared to be equally balanced.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.C.L. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-mneil-scctapp-1831.