Manns v. Givens

7 Va. 689
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1836
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Va. 689 (Manns v. Givens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manns v. Givens, 7 Va. 689 (Va. 1836).

Opinion

BnocivEnbhotjgh, J.

There are several questions in this case, on which I will briefly give my opinion. The first is whether the county court, acting as a court of probat, may not be compelled by mandamus to record the deed of emancipation in the proceedings mentioned, if the evidence offered be admissible and sufficient. On this point Dawson v. Thruston &c. 2 Hen. & Munf. 132. is decisive authority. It was there decided that the county court acts in this matter in a character merely ministerial, and when the proof is sufficient, is bound to admit the deed to record, without regard to the effect which it may have after it is recorded: and that the mandamus is the proper remedy to enforce the execution of this duty. The difference between the two cases is, that the grantor in that case, and the grantees in this, have made the application.

[697]*697It is contended that they have no right to this or any -ill other remedy; first, because the grantor m the deed being dead at the time of the application to admit it to probat, it will be oí’ no effect if recorded ; and secondly, because the statute points out the only mode by which slaves can sue for their freedom, namely, in forma pauperis, and as they have not pursued that method, they have no right to the mandamus.

As to the first point, I am not prepared to say that the deed will have no effect if recorded. The case of Thrift v. Hannah &c. 2 Leigh 300. does not go so far as has been supposed. That was a case of a feme sole, who executed an instrument of emancipation, which was not however perfected by acknowledgment, nor by the proper proof in court, before her marriage. By that event the property in the slaves became vested in her husband, who was a purchaser; and in a contest between the slaves and the husband, the court decided that his right should not be divested by the subsequent probat. It does not prove that where the emancipator dies between the execution and the probat of the instrument, the recording of it will not be effectual, in a contest between the pauper and the distributees or other voluntary claimants under the emancipator. It does not prove that there is no case in which the instrument, when recorded, may have relation to the period of its execution, or to some antecedent period. We know that in the case of wills granting emancipation, however long the period between the death of the testator and the probat of the will, the bequest has relation back to the death of the testator. And it is yet to be decided, where the deed does not affect intermediate vested rights, whether it may (like an escrow) or may not have relation to the first delivery to the grantee, or to the signing and sealing of it.

But if the doctrine of relation does not in any case apply to deeds of emancipation (which I cannot admit) [698]*698yet it does not follow that the deed should not be admitted to record. When so admitted, it may have full effect from the time of recording, against all volunteers claiming under the grantor; and at any rate it is not within the province of a court of probat to decide that matter. Their duty is to receive the proof, and if that is sufficient, to record the deed, leaving the effect of it to be decided by other tribunals.

Secondly, it is gravely argued that the slaves had no right to apply to the county court to record the deed, nor to the circuit court for a mandamus; that they can only sue in forma pauperis. This objection ought not to prevail. These slaves have already sued for their freedom in forma pauperis, and they have been repelled from the courts of common law, because their right to freedom has not been perfected. 6 Munf. 191. They have been, in effect, told by this court to go and record their deed before they sue. With what propriety, then, can the court of probat refuse to do that which is necessary to enable them to sue in forma pauperis with any prospect of success? It is true that slaves cannot hold property nor make contracts, but they can receive their freedom, and the}7 have such an interest in the deed which grants it to them, as to carry it, or have it carried, to the county court, to get it proved and recorded. If they produce the requisite proof, is not the court bound to hear it, and direct the clerk to record the deed ? and is not the clerk bound to obey the order ? If not, then may a most important law be defeated by the recusancy of these ministerial agents of the commonwealth. A privilege extended to masters, and a right conferred on their slaves, may be abrogated by an obstinate clerk and a contumacious court. I cannot think they have such-powers. If they have not, and if the slave having an inchoate right to freedom may have it perfected, it follows that he has the right to apply to a superiour court for the appropriate process to compel the perfor[699]*699manee of the act. It would be passing strange that the law should confer a right, and withhold the necessary means for carrying it into effect.

I must do the county court of Botetourt the justice to say that these are not the grounds on which they place their refusal. In their answer to the conditional mandamus, they sa.y that they refused to admit the deed to record because the evidence was inadmissible and insufficient; and this brings on the question whether they were correct or not in that opinion.

In the lapse of years which has occurred since this instrument was executed, the grantor has died, so that his acknowledgment of it cannot be obtained : one of the attesting witnesses is dead, and the other has removed from the commonwealth. Does the statute require that the two attesting witnesses should be personally present in court, and there prove it ? The language is, that the instrument is to be “proved in the county or corporation court by two witnesses.” There is nothing peculiar in this language, or that distinguishes it from the language of the general act for regulating conveyances. I cannot see why we should require greater strictness in construing a law which grants freedom to slaves, than one that directs a conveyance of property.

The general rule is that every bond, deed or other instrument produced in evidence, the execution of which is attested, must be proved by the witness himself, if he can be produced. But if he be dead,secondary evidence may be resorted to, and you may prove his handwriting. So if the witness resides in another country, you may prove his handwriting. 2 East 250. The same rule prevails as to the proof of wills, both in courts of common law and in chancery. 4 Yeates 845. 5 Ves. 404. In wills devising lands, the witnesses are called to prove not only the execution of the will by the testator, but that they attested it in his presence ; and if the [700]*700doctrine be correct as to wills, that you may prove the handwriting of a dead or absent witness, it is a fortiori true as to deeds.

I can see no reason why the principles of evidence which are adopted by courts of law and equity, should not gui”de the courts of probat. They were adopted by the court which admitted to probat the will of Mutter, on proving the handwriting of the two witnesses, one of whom resided in Maryland and the other in Massachusetts, Tate’s Dig. p. 524. note, and by the general court sitting as a court of probat, in the case referred to by judge Carr in Nalle v. Fenwick, 4 Rand. 589.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Va. 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manns-v-givens-va-1836.