Mathews v. Springer

16 F. Cas. 1096, 2 Abb. 283
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 1096 (Mathews v. Springer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathews v. Springer, 16 F. Cas. 1096, 2 Abb. 283 (circtsdms 1871).

Opinion

HILL, District Judge.

This cause is now submitted upon bill, answer, exhibits, and proof, from which the following facts appear, and upon which the questions to be determined arise:

Robert L. Mathews, a resident of Warren county, in this state, a man possessed of a considerable estate within this state, both personal and real, was in the year 1858, the owner of a slave named Harriet, the mother of complainants, who were then his slaves, and whom he also claimed as his natural children, and whom he was anxious to emancipate and set free, Isaiah being then about seven, and Caroline about five years of age.

Not being permitted by the laws of this state to emancipate them here, and have them continue their residence here, he took them with him to the state of Ohio; and in the court of common pleas at the May term, 185S, of Hamilton county, in said state, exe-ecuted a writing by which he declared them free and no longer slaves, and procured a decree of said court declaring them free persons of color, and remained with them in Ohio for some weeks, when he returned with them to Carroll county, in this state, where they remained until shortly after the death of said Mathews, which took place early in 1859; when, by the directions of Springer, one of the executors named in the will of said Mathews, they returned to the state of Ohio, where they have since remained. Said Mathews on February 20, 1859, made and published his last will and testament, • and on March 26, 1859, died in said county of Carroll, in this state; and on April 25, 1S59, said last will and testament was duly proved and admitted .of record in the probate court of Warren county, the place of residence of said testator at the time of his death.

The testator, leaving no widow or legitimate children as the natural objects of his bounty, after providing in his will for a number of specific legacies to his collateral relatives and friends, directed that his executors should sell and convert the residue of his estate, real and personal, into cash, and deposit the same in the State Bank of Louisiana; that complainants should be maintained and educated out of said funds until they were twenty-one years of age, when the remainder should be divided between them, the said Isaiah Jefferson receiving two-thirds, and Caroline Josephine one-third; with the further provision that if anything should happen by death or otherwise that his said children should not receive said bequest, that the same should go to said bank for the use of the stockholders.

In June, I860, the heirs at law and next of kin to said testator filed in the probate court of Warren county their petition against said Springer, who had qualified as such executor, and had proceeded to the execution of the trusts under the will, and also against Downs and Johnson, the other two persons nominated in the will as co-executors with said Springer, and against the said bank, and naming the complainants as defendants thereto, but taking no other steps against them. The petition alleged that complainants were slaves, and could not take the bequests provided for them in said will, and that the bequest to the bank was void, because there was no such corporation in ex[1097]*1097istence, and that the pretended devise and bequest to the bank was intended, not for the benefit of the bank, but for the benefit of complainants, and that this provision in the will, as well as the pretended emancipation of complainants, were both attempted frauds on the laws of the state of Mississippi, and against its policy, and void.

To this petition the said Springer and the Louisiana State Bank, which claimed to be the bank intended in the said will, answered the allegations in the same. The court dismissed the petition as to complainants, for the alleged reason that they were slaves, and could not take under the will; and dismissed the same as to said Downs and Johnson, because they had not qualified as executors; and as to said bank, for the reasons charged; and proceeded, according to the prayer of the petition, to declare said bequests to complainants and to the bank void, and ordered distribution of the estate, after the payment of the specific legacies, among the petitioners.

From this decree said Springer and the bank appealed to the high court of errors and appeals of the state, where the decree rendered by the probate court was affirmed; and proceedings were had to distribute the personal estate according to said decree. Subsequently, Springer made a final settlement, so far as he had executed the trusts under the will; and the defendant, Diggins, was appointed administrator de bonis non, with said will annexed. No notice of complainants or their interest was taken in the proceedings in said probate court, nor were they in any way brought before it.

Complainants, by their next friend, filed this bill at December term of this court, 1808, for the purpose of setting up and enforcing the provisions made for them in said will, notwithstanding the proceedings so had in the said probate court, and so affirmed by the high court of errors and appeals, alleging that their father, the said R. L. Mathews, took them to the state of Ohio with the purpose of emancipating them, and that he did so emancipate them, and with the purpose that they should remain citizens of that state, and receive' an education, and the advantages of free persons. That afterwards he returned with them to Mississippi, to remain a short time only; and in a short time they were to be returned to the state of Ohio as their permanent home. During their stay in Mississippi, after their emancipation, they occupied the position of citizens and residents of Ohio, as far as they were capable of doing so, and were only in Mississippi temporarily. That not having been parties to the proceedings in the probate court and high court of errors and appeals, they were not affected by any of the proceedings therein; and that they are now entitled to all the provisions in their behalf made in said will, so far as said estate can be collected.

To this bill, said Springer, Diggins, T. A. Marshal, and H. H. Miller, II. S. Buck, Reason Wooley and wife Elizabeth, and Hampton H. Griffith and wife Susan, have filed their answers, admitting the execution of the will, its probate, and the proceedings had under it, as first above stated, but denying that said Robert L. Mathews took complainants to Ohio with the intention of their remaining there; alleging that his proceedings were intended as a fraud and evasion of the laws of this state; and that complainants were, at the time of said Mathews’ death, his slaves in this state, and a part of his estate, and incapable to take anything under his said will; that any pretended rights they may claim under said will are concluded against them by said proceedings had in the probate court, and affirmed by the high court of errors and appeals of this state.

The questions to be determined by the court are: (1) Did the complainants become free persons of color in the state of Ohio; and if so, was their condition changed to a state of slavery when they were brought back to the state of Mississippi, and at the death of the testator? (2) If they were free persons of color at the death of the testator, were they capable of taking under the provisions in their favor in the will? (8) If free persons of color, and capable of taking under the will, are they now precluded from the provision made in their behalf, by reason of the proceedings and- decree of the courts above referred to?

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 1096, 2 Abb. 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathews-v-springer-circtsdms-1871.