McNeill v. Arnold

17 Ark. 154
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 Ark. 154 (McNeill v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeill v. Arnold, 17 Ark. 154 (Ark. 1856).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A preliminary question is to be settled in this case.

The case was brought here, on appeal, at Jannary Term, 1855, and after it was docketed and before j oinder in error, the counsel of the appellees obtained a continuance, for the purpose of procuring an amendment of the record in the court below, and bringing np a transcript thereof by eertiorari. At the July Term following, having, in the meantime, procured the amendment be-lojv, they moved for a eertiorari in order to perfect the record here. Thereupon, a transcript of the amendment was filed, with an agreement of the counsel of the parties, that it should have like effect, as if brought here on eertiora/ri.

The counsel for appellant insist that the court below had no power to make the amendment, after the lapse of the term at which the cause was tried, and that the matter contained in the transcript of the amendment, ought not to be treated as part of the record here.

The matter of the amendment is this: It seems that, on the trial of the cause, the appellees read in evidence the original trust deed from Samuel Burke to Nathan Glover, executed, acknowledged and recorded in Mississippi, under which they claimed title to the slaves sued for. After the trial, they obtained leave of the court to withdraw the original deed, on filing a copy, desiring to use the original in another suit pending in Ouachita county. They accordingly withdrew the original, substituting in lieu thereof, a certified copy of the deed, from the record thereof, in Mississippi. But the clei’k omitted to enter of record the order of court, permitting the original deed to be withdrawn, &c., and failed to note the filing of the copy substituted. That, in consequence of these omissions of the clerk, and the copy of the deed from the Mississippi record, so substituted for the original, being transcribed in a bill of exceptions taken at the trial, and brought up in the original transcript, it was made to appear that the appellees read in evidence, upon the trial, the record copy of said deed, instead of the original, &c.

The court below, in term, upon application of the appellees, on due notice to the appellant, and iqion satisfactory proof of the facts stated above, ordered tbe original deed, and certificates attached thereto, to be re-filed and made part of the record, as of the date it was originally filed on the trial of the cause.

A transcript of the proceedings to amend the record, including the original deed, &e., so re-filed, was afterwards made out, and brought here, as upon certioran-i, as above stated.

Tbe power of the Circuit Court to amend its record, so as to make it speak the truth, and the mode of doing it, have been sufficiently discussed and settled in tbe case of King & Houston vs. The State Bank, 4 Eng. Rep. 185, and Arrington vs. Conrey et al., decided at tbe present term. The proceedings to amend in this case, being substantially in conformity with these decisions, we shall treat the matter of the amendment, as part of the record in the cause here.

ON the MERITS, &c. — In August, 1853, Rufus E. Arnold, (suing in right of his wife Mildred M.) and Mildred M. Arnold his wife, and the said Rufus E. Arnold suing as the guardian of Joel Burke, Samuel Burke, and Malcom McNeill Burke, minors, &c., brought an action of replevin, in the detinet, against Hector McNeill, in the Dallas Circuit Court, for the recovery of a negro woman named Lizzy, and her children called Eliza, Aga, Ann, Phoebe and an infant child without a name.

The declaration alleged that the defendant, on the 1st day of September, 1851, received the woman Lizzy, and her children Eliza,, Ago,, Ann and Phoebe, tbe property of the plaintiffs, from one Yirgil J. Burke, to be delivered to tbe plaintiffs, with their increase, on request, &c., and that, after the reception by the defendant of the woman IAzzg, she gave birth to a child, the name and sex whereof were unknown to the plaintiffs, and which from its birth had been, and was still, in the possession of defendant, &c.; and that the defendant, although often requested so to do, had not delivered said slaves, or any of them, or said increase, to the plaintiffs, &c.

The writ, reciting that the plaintiffs complained that the defendant unjustly detained from them the woman Lizzy, and her fern' children, Eliza, Aga, Ann, and Phoebe, commanded the sheriff, upon the plaintiffs’ giving bond, &c., to replevy said “goods and chattels,” and deliver them to the plaintiffs, &c.

The sheriff returned upon the writ, that on the 3d of August, 1853, the day it issued, he replevied and delivered to the said Enfus E. Arnold, the slaves Lizzy and her four children, Eliza, Aga, Ann, and Phoebe — no mention is made in the writ, or the return of the sheriff, of the unnamed infant child of the woman Lizzy, described in the declaration.

At the return term, (Sept. 853.) the defendant filed three pleas : 1st. Non detinet; 2 d. IS on eepit, (f) and third, property in himself, to which issues were made up.

At the September Term, 1854-, the death of Mrs. Arnold was suggested, and the cause was ordered to abate as to her, and progress in the names of the other plaintiffs. Whereupon, the cause was submitted to a jury, who returned a verdict that the slaves Lizzy, and her four children, Eliza, Aga, Ann and Phoebe, and also the unnamed child of Lizzy described in the declaration, were the property of the plaintiffs, and assessed damages by way of hire, at $116 66. The court rendered judgment, as follows, upon the verdict: “ It is therefore considered by the court, that the plaintiffs, Rufus E. Arnold, in right of his wife, Mildred M. Arnold, and the said Rufus K. Arnold, as guardian of Samuel Burke, Joel Burke, and Malcom McNeill Burke, minors, do have and retain the possession of the negro slaves in said declaration mentioned, and that they recover of, and from said defendant, Hector McNeill, the sum of $116 66, for their damages sustained, besides all their costs,” &c.

The defendant moved for a new trial, on the grounds that the verdict was contrary t.o law and evidence; and that the court erred in its decisions upon a number of points raised pending the trial. The motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted, and appealed to this court.

There being no total want of evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury, upon any material matter in issue, the evidence need not be stated further than may be necessary to understand the several questions of law decided by the court, and complained of as erroneous by the appellant.

1. It is insisted by the appellant, that the suit should have been brought in the name of Nathaniel Glover, and not in the names of the appellees. The appellees claimed title to the slaves, under the following deed, purporting to have been executed by Samuel Burke, &c.

“This deed of bargain and sale, made and entered into, this, the 15th day of March, A.

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17 Ark. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneill-v-arnold-ark-1856.