Napier v. Davis

30 Ky. 283, 7 J.J. Marsh. 283, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 30, 1832
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Ky. 283 (Napier v. Davis) 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
Napier v. Davis, 30 Ky. 283, 7 J.J. Marsh. 283, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 76 (Ky. Ct. App. 1832).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

.lehvemi the Opinion of the Court.

In the year 1810, John M. Lowther, resident in Montgomery county, Tennessee, made and published the following will, which was, in the same year, duly proved and admitted to record in the Court of Pr obate, in the said county—

“I, John tVl. Lowther, of Montgomery county, and state of Tennessee, do hereby ordain, &c. 1st. I give to my beloved wife Nancy Lowtner, one moity or half of negroes Sail, Tilly, and Peter, together with all my household furniture (except one bed and furniture,) my farming utensils, and my stock of [284]*284cattle, hogs and sheep, and my sorrel mare and her two fillies. And also my plantation and laud during her widowhood. 2. 1 give to (my) son, William Lewis, my land and plantation alter his mother’s death, or termination of her widowhood, and my negro boy Charles. 3. I give to my daughter Minerva one moity, or one half of my negroes Sail, Tilly, and Peter, a bed and furniture, and a hoise, bridle and saddle, when she arrives to maturity — . which horse, bridle and saddle, is to be made or come out of the pro¡ e.'ty I have given my wise Nancy, and which horse, bridle and saddle, shall be worth one hundred dollars My cotton gin, the surplus bacon, if any, the board of James Blanks and Pallas Cooper, to appropriate to payment of just debts. My sorrel horse shall be sold to the best advantage for cash, which shall he appropriated to the use of my wife, until the maturity of my son William Lewis, when she shall make or give to him a horse, saddle and bridle, worth one hundred dollars. My wife is to and shall have my children educated out of the property given to her and them. In testimony, &c.”

It seems that about four or five years after the death of J. M. Lowther, his widow was married to David Davis, by whom she liad two children (the defendants in error) — that not long after the death of the second husband (Davis) — tne wife surviving— William Lewis Lowtaer, one of the devisees, died (in Tennessee) intestate and childless, and before he had attained twenty one years of age; that, after-wards, Nancy Davis, (the former widow of J. M. Lowther) removed to Kentucky — where she died intestate, m the y; ar 1823; and that the plaintiffs in error— í humas N.ipier and his wife (Minerva one of the devisees) intermarried when she was only about fourteen years old, and had acquired the possesion of Tilly prior to the death of Mrs. Davis, who retained the possession of the other slaves and their issue until her death And all of whom were retained by tiie administrator upon her estate until August, 1828, when the county court of i odd county, made an or-'er directing the administrator to do ■liver them to Napier and wife.

By the s(u~ tu¡es ol I ennessee brothers and sisto's of ball blood take equally with those of the full blood of d-oeused bn tiler’s or sister’s 0-St.ate, whether real or personal.

To enjoin the order of the county court (which ap tears to have been tx parte) and to obtain partitio i of the slaves, the defendants in error (the children of Mrs. Davis by her last marriage) filed a bill in chancery against Napier and wife, and other persons, who held the slaves on hire from the administrator. Alter stating the foregoing facts, the hill alleged that Mrs. Davis, for herself and the defendants in error, had, prior to 1822, made an amicable partition of the slaves with Napier and wife, and liad .delivered to them, in consequence thereof, Cintiles and George — that afterwards, sometime m the ) ear 1822, she (Mrs. Davis) purchased all the right of Napier and wife in the siaves, Charles and George at a sale under a fieri facias in her favor against Napier.

The answer of Napier and wife denied the alleged partition with ,vsrs. Davis, and preferred large claims for hire since the marriage with Davis, whereby, (as they insisted) all her light, as devisee, expired. The answer was made a cross-bill. Jin amended bill was filed, insisting that the devise by J. .VI. Lowther to his wife was {with the exception of the land) unlimited.

Neither the cross lull nor amended bill was answered. The circuit court decreed that Napier and wife were entitled to one half of all the slaves except Charles and George — to one ninth of Charles and to one third of George, both of whom were directed to be sold; and appointed a commissioner to make partition and sale accordingly. - To reverse that decree, this writ of error is prosecuted with a supersedeas.

When Mrs. Napier attained twenty one years of age, and not until then (which was in 1828,) one moitv of all the slaves except Charles vested in her a I her husband in consequence of the devise to her. Upon the death of her brother, he became entitled to only one third of Cliarles by the operation of the law of Tennessee, according to what we deem the true import of the statutes certified in this case as the law of that State, and the reading of which was not objected to by the plaintiffs. According to our interpretation of those statutes each of the defendants was entitled, as a sister of the hail’blood, to one [286]*286third, and Mrs. Napier, though sister of full blood, to only one third of the estate, real and personal, of their intestate brother. But the records and proceedings in Tennessee, in 1822, and which were read without objection, shew that all the interest of Napier (the husband) in Charles, was bought in 1822 by Mrs. Davis, under an execution which had been issued in her favor against him, and levid on Charles. We therefore suppose that, as the interest of the wife (one third) had vested absolutely in the husband, that interest passed to Mrs. Davis in consequence of the sheriff’s sale — and was, after her death, distributable, according to the law of this state, (where she died) equally among her three daughters — and, of course, Napier and wife are entitled to only one ninth part of Charles.

Deviso, by husband to ■wife of properly, real and personal, “during her widowhood,” forfeited upon the marriage of the widow, and property construed to pass to the heirs of tho dcvi'or, tho’ no Jimitaiion over of negroes nr nersonal property-

Wo are of opinion that the interest devised to the widow (afterwards Mrs, Davis) was forfeited by her subsequent marriage, and that, thereupon, Mrs. Napier and her brother, William Lewis, became entitled to the whole of it as the only legal distributees of their father. The will was not drawn with as much precision as is always desirable and important in such cases; and therefore the intention of the testator may be somewhat doubted. But taking the first clause of the will by itself and construing it according to the letter — the punctuation, the rules of grammar ami of common sense, it should be interpreted, we think, as limiting her entire interest to her life or widowhood. The whole will, taken together, does not change the import of the isolated devise to the widow. There is nothing in any other part of the will which is ■ inconsistent with our construction of that clause, or which tends to establish any other interpretation. On the contrary, we are inclined to the opinion, that the will, as a whole, tends to fortify our construction of the first clause, and, altogether, evinces a determination that the testator’s wife should hold no part of his estate, as devisee, longer than she should live in widowhood. 'We deem it unnecessary to enter into a consideration of all the various reasons which might be urged for and against this conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ky. 283, 7 J.J. Marsh. 283, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/napier-v-davis-kyctapp-1832.