Ketchum v. Dew

47 Tenn. 532
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Tenn. 532 (Ketchum v. Dew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchum v. Dew, 47 Tenn. 532 (Tenn. 1870).

Opinion

Andrew McClain, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The complainants in this cause, bring this suit as the devisees of Leonidas Ketchum, who was the husband of Amelia C., and step-father of the other complainants. Leonidas died in 1862, leaving a will, by which he devised his property to the complainants.

Leonidas, during his life, had become indebted to the defendant, Panthea Dew, and had executed a deed of trust upon five acres of land near the city of Memphis, to secure the payment of this indebtedness. After his death, the trustee was proceeding to sell this land, in pursuance of the terms of the deed, when complainants filed this bill, praying an injunction of this sale, and alleging that the debt mentioned in the deed of trust, to secure which it was executed, was usurious, and insisting upon this and various other reasons why it would be unjust and unconscionable to sell this land and appropriate the proceeds according to the stipulations of-the deed.

[534]*534It is charged in tbe bill that the debt mentioned in the deed of trust was contracted for five negroes, in the following manner: That the defendant, Mrs. Dew, having these negroes, and wishing to sell them, that Leonidas, as her agent, undertook to sell them for her, and took from her a bill of sale, so that he could the more readily make title to purchasers; and that it was understood that when the negroes were sold he was to have the use of the money at 12 per cent, interest, and that he executed his notes accordingly.

Mrs. Dew answers upon oath, and this charge as to agency is denied, and she insists that the sale was an absolute sale, and the note executed for the purchase money, and the deed of trust executed, to secure payment of purchase money.

The facts of the case, as we gather them from the pleadings and evidence in the cause, are about these: Mrs. Dew was the owner of a life estate in five negroes, which was bequeathed to her by her father, James Black, of Maury county, Tennessee. These negroes were bequeathed to her for life, remainder to her children, free from the marital rights of any husband she might afterwards have. She married, and her husband has died, and she has never had any children.

There are other clauses in the will which will probably give the remainder to the widow and children of Black, in the event she dies without issue.

It appears that, on the 1st of September, 1859, Leonidas, the testator of complainants, bought these negroes from Mrs.' Dew. This sale, which appears to have been a sale, not of the life estate only, but an absolute sale, [535]*535is evidenced by a memorandum exhibited in the record, bearing date September 1, 1859, signed by the said Leonidas, in which it is set forth that he agrees to pay Mrs. Dew $5,100 on the 1st of January, 1862; and also that he agrees to pay her, on the first day of every January, until the 1st of January, 1862, and then also the sum of $600, as interest on the purchase money. It is further stipulated, that he is to give, as security for the $5,100, a deed of trust upon five acres of real estate near the city limits of Memphis; and all to be arranged by the 1st of January, 1860.

At the time this transaction took place, the negroes were in the possession of Leonidas, at Memphis, and Mrs. Dew lived at Philadelphia, though she was occasionally at Glendale, in Ohio; and the transaction was conducted by correspondence.

Leonidas, having the negroes already in his possession, after this sale was thus agreed upon, took one of the negroes — -a boy, named Isham — to New Orleans, and placed him in a negro mart for sale; and while there he died from the effects of an overdose of laudanum. His death occurred before any note had been executed by Leonidas, or deed of trust, and before Mrs. Dew had executed a bill of sale: Some correspondence took place in reference to the death of Isham, in which the question as to who should be the loser by this accident, was mentioned.

It appears, however, that, in pursuance of the original agreement, as evidenced by the memorandum referred to, the trade was consummated according to the stipulations of that agreement. There is, accordingly, exhibited in [536]*536the record, a note for §5,100, bearing date January 1, 1860, and due on or before January 1, 1862.

A deed of trust is also exhibited in the record, by which the five acres of land is conveyed in trust to secure this debt. In this deed, the indebtedness is stated, substantially, as in the memorandum of September 1, 1859, though in different form — omitting to mention the installment of $600, interest due January 1, 1860, according to the original agreement; it being then stated to be an indebtedness of $6,300, due by two notes — one for $5,700, due January 1, 1862; the other for $600, due January 1, 1861.

The bill of sale from Mrs. Dew to Leonidas, with warranty of title, also appears in the record. This bill of sale embraces all the negroes — the boy, Isham, with the others — although it was exectued after his death. It is ante-dated, however, so as to correspond with the date of the contract of sale, and bears date September 1, 1859.

"We are satisfied that this transaction was, in point of fact, a sale to Leonidas by Mrs. Dew, and so understood by the parties; and not a mere arrangement, by which he was to sell as her agent.

It is insisted, in argument, that, conceding this to be so, the transaction was nevertheless tainted with usury; that the negroes were sold for vastly more than their value, even if Mrs. Dew had owned the absolute title, but that she was the owner of only a life estate; and, besides that, at the time the deed of trust, note, and bill of sale were executed, Isham was, in point of fact, dead —so that Leonidas only got four negroes, for what' he had originally agreed to give for the five; and that, [537]*537upon all these grounds, the ease is brought within the principle of the ease of SwansOn vs. White, in 5 Hum., 373.

In that ease, it is held, that, where property is sold at a price gretrtly above its real value, to enable the purchaser by re-sale, at its real value, to raise money, that such transaction is usurious. "We think that case was correctly decided, and have no disposition to disturb it. But we do not perceive how the present case can be brought within the principle of that case.

In the first place, assuming Mrs. Dew to have had the absolute title to these negroes, there is no evidence that the price at which they were sold to Leonidas was above their real value. It appears that Leonidas sold the negroes, except Isham; but it does not appear at what price. In this aspect of the case, then, there is nothing to bring this case within the principle of the case referred to.

In the next place, upon the assumption that Mrs. Dew had only a life estate, and sold the negroes for what they were worth, if absolute title had been conveyed, it is sufficient to say that she gave a bill of sale, with warranty of absolute title.

There is no evidence of fraud practiced by Mrs. Dew upon Leonidas. These were family negroes. Leonidas was a nephew of Mrs. Dew, being a sister’s son. He had had possession of these negroes for some time before his purchase, hiring them out, and controling them for Mrs. Dew; and we think he must have understood the character of Mrs. Dew’s title as well as she did herself.

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562 S.W.2d 827 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Tenn. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchum-v-dew-tenn-1870.