King v. Mims

37 Ky. 267, 7 Dana 267, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 22, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Ky. 267 (King v. Mims) 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
King v. Mims, 37 Ky. 267, 7 Dana 267, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 135 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Judge Marsham.

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Lucy Mims, claiming title to a female slave Edy and her infant child, brought this action of detinue, in 1835, to recover them from Benjamin A. King. A verdict and judgment having been rendered for the plaintiff, and the ' defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, a reversal of the judgment is sought in this Court, by appeal.

It is now contended that the Circuit Court erred in admitting improper evidence, which was objected to, and excepted to, by the defendant; and that the verdict was against law and the evidence in the case.

Plaintiff’s evidence of title to the slave in controversy. A deed having been made in Va. which, by the laws ofthat state, was required to lie there recorded, to give it validity— the production of a certified copy from the record, is sufficient evidence of the conveyance,without the original; and is also sufficient evidence of the execution of the original, when it is produced, and found to corres pond with the certified copy.

The plaintiff claimed title to the slaves under the will of her husband, Robert Mims, who died in 1828, and a deed of gift from his mother, Elizabeth Mims, to him, purporting to be executed in Goochland county, Virginia, in 1806, and to give to him a negro woman slave, Lucinda — reserving to herself the use of said slave during her own life; and proved, that Elizabeth Mims died in 1833, in Virginia, and that Edy was the child of Lucinda, and was born some years after the date of the deed of gift, and before the death of the donor.

In making out this title, the original deed of gift was read in evidence, and also a duly authenticated copy of the same deed from the record of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Goochland county, importing that the deed had been proved in said Court, by the three subscribing witnesses, within a few days after its date, and ordered to be recorded.

The only direct proof, made on the trial, of the execution of the original deed, was the deposition of one of the subscribing witnesses, who merely stated that he had witnessed the instrument; that he remembered the transaction well; that it had taken place in his own house. The reading of the deed upon this evidence, was objected to by the defendant, who also excepted to its admission by the Court. And the propriety of admitting it to be read in evidence to the jury, is one of the questions now made. But it is obvious that, if the deed was such an instrument as was required by the laws of Virginia to be proved and recorded, the production of a copy, duly certified and authenticated, so as to show that the original had been proved and recorded according to law, and that the copy was taken from the record, renders it immaterial whether the other proof now offered of the execution of the original deed, was in itself sufficient or not: first — because such a copy was of itself sufficient to prove the gift, without the production of the original; and, second — because such a copy with its certificates and authentication was itself sufficient evidence of the execution of the original, corresponding as it does with the copy, and having the same certificate of its proof in the Quarter Sessions Court of Goochland. [269]*269By the laws of Virginia, in force at the time of the separation of Kentucky from that State, and which, in the absence of all evidence to the contrary, we will presume to have remained in force, a deed of gift of a slave whereof the donor remains in possession, was required to be proved and recorded as this appears to have been. Pyle vs. Maulding, 7 J. J. Marshall, 206; and as this ■ deed is upon its face a deed of gift of a slave of which the possession is not only expressly reserved to the donor, but seems to have actually remained with her, we are of opinion that it was necessary to prove and record the instrument, and that the authenticated copy from the record, was all sufficient, either to authorize the dispensing with the original, or to prove it when produced. Whether, therefore, there was or was not any error in admitting the original deed upon the direct proof above noticed, the proof was amply supplied by the production of the authenticated copy; and the error, if any, was either cured, or rendered harmless.

At the time of the separation of this State from Virginia, her statutes required ', that a deed of gift of a slave, of which the donor remained in possession , should be proved and re corded ; and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, this court presumes the law is still in force there. To make an er-groundforrever* sal’tth® re®®r^ may have op-grated to the pre judice of the par ty ’ complaining ®fit-, ness was asked tbn^and'The'ob jeetionsto it be-“fs “a^ered'; but the record does not show what the answer was, or that it was prejudicial to the objector: the error will not reverse ■the judgment.-A testator, after sundry devises and bequests, desires that his executors shall sell a designated tract of land,' and that; after payment of his debts out of the proceeds, the balance shall go to his wife, towards her support, and towards the support and education of a son, whom, he says, he wishes to have supported out of the balance of his estate; and, by a residuary clause, he gives to his wife, during &e. all the balance of his estate, real, personal, &c. — part of which balance was a slave, the subject of the present controversy. Held, that this devise to the wife, with these directions as to the support, and schooling of the son, does not impose upon the executors the duty of educating the son, nor vest in them any interest in the estate and effects thereby devised. The slave, therefore — passing by the will like land — went directly to the widow ; and she can maintain an action for its recovery from an adverso claimant, without the assent of the ■executors to the legacy, or to the suit.

A second question as to the admissibility of evidence, grows out of the Circuit Court’s having permitted the plaintiff to ask, and the witness to answer, whether, since the commencement of the suit, he had heard the executors of Robert Mims say, that they had agreed to . . ,. . r . / , ,. , . its institution belore it was brought: to which permission the defendant excepted. But the bill of exceptions taken to this opinion, m the progress of the trial, does not state what answer the witness gave. And the general bill of exceptions taken to the opinion of the Court •overruling the motion for a new trial, states that the same witness swore that the executors had consented [270]*270that this suit might be brought in. the name of the plaintiff, and gives no statement corresponding with the particulars of the question objected to. The witness, for all ^at appears, may have answered the question in the negative, or he may, in answer to that question, have stated what, according to the import of the genei’al bill of exceptions, he seems to have stated in some part of his examination, simply that the executors had consented that the suit might be brought in the plaintiff’s name. And in either case, no improper evidence having been actually given, the mere permission of an improper question to be asked, (conceding the question to have been improper,) could not have prejudiced the defendant, and could, therefore, be no ground for reversal.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 267, 7 Dana 267, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-mims-kyctapp-1838.