Plummer v. . Baskerville

36 N.C. 252
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 36 N.C. 252 (Plummer v. . Baskerville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plummer v. . Baskerville, 36 N.C. 252 (N.C. 1840).

Opinion

Ruffin, Chief Justice.

This bill was filed September 29th, 1831, and states, that in December, 1796, two grants were issued by this State to John Willis, late of Warren *253 county, each for 2,500 acre's of land, situate in the Western District, now the State of Tennessee, on the fork of Deer River, and described by metes and bounds in the bill; and that Willis, for a valuable consideration, sold both of the tracts to William Falkener the elder, 1 ate of Warrenton, and, as the plaintiffs believe, executed a regular conveyance therefor; that, never having seen the deed nor any copy thereof, the plaintiffs are unable to state what was the amonnt of the consideration, but that, at the date of the conveyance, which they believe to be in 1798, Willis was indebted to said Falkener by bonds and on accounts in a large sum, amounting to upwards of $2,500, and that no part thereof has been discharged, except by a conveyance of said lands, and that Willis had no other means of satisfying the debt; and that Willis made, and Falkener received, the conveyance aforesaid, in satisfaction and discharge of his debt. The bill then further states, that William Falkener the elder, on the 20th day of October, 1798, conveyed the said two tracts of land to his son, William A. K. Falkener, in trust for the satisfaction of certain of his creditors, and also, by another deed of the same date, subject to the last mentioned- conveyance, did convey both of the said tracts to William, the son, and his heirs; which two conveyances, the plaintiffs charge, were made with the knowledge, consent and approbation of Willis, who attested the same as one of the subscribing witnesses thereto. The bill further states that sometime in that year-, 1798, William, the son, transmitted to the house of Smith and Rodman, composed of Willet Smith and Thomas Rodman, of Philadelphia, who were among the creditors of William the father and named in the trust deed, the said original grants, together with the conveyance of the said Willis, the deeds from William, his father, to himself, and a power of attorney from William, the son, authorizing Smith and Rod-man to sell the said two tracts of land, in order to assure them and the other creditors, -in the deed of trust mentioned, of the payment of their demands against the father; that no sale was ever made, because William the son paid all those demands, and that, after haying done so, he required the restitution of the papers; and that, in the year 1812, in pursu *254 anee of said requisition, all were returned, except the deed of Willis and the power of attorney from William the son, but, instead of those, was sent a certificate of Willet Smith, one of the firm of Smith and Rodman, made before a notary public, and setting forth and declaring that the deed from John Willis to William Falkener and the said power of attorney had been lost. The bill then charges, that there can be no doubt but that Willis did make the conveyance as stated, for that, since the year 1798, he, Willis, never pretended but always disclaimed any interest in said lands, and in fact, in the year 1802, being utterly insolvent, took the oath of insolvency, and was duly discharged from imprisonment as an insolvent. The bill further states that, as the plaintiffs suppose, the deed was registered in Warren county, where it was made and the parties resided, but. that they have been unable to find the same either there or in Tennessee; and they aver that the book of the Register of Warren, containing the deeds registered between 1797 and 1802, has been destroyed by fire: And therefore the bill charges that both the deed and the registration thereof have been lost, so that neither can be produced. The bill then states the death of William Falkener, the son, in March, 1819, intestate, leaving the plaintiff, W. Falkener, and Sarah his two infant children and heirs at law; that Sarah, while an infant, intermarried with the other plaintiff, Henry L. Plummer, and the plaintiff William was still an infant at the filing of the bill; and that in the latter part of the year 1819, old Mr. Falkener, the grandfather of the plaintiffs, Sarah and William, also died; and that in 1806, John Willis died insolvent and intestate, leaving an only child, Elizabeth, now the wife of Geo. D. Baskerville, who are the defendants in this suit. The bill further states that Baskerville and wife have taken possession of the two tracts of land, claiming them as having descended from Willis to his said daughter; and that, for want of legal evidence of the conveyance from John Willis to the eldest Mr. Falkner, the plaintiffs are unable to bring an action at law' to recover the land. Whereupon the bill (after many minute interrogatories upon the matters charged in it, as to the knowledge, information or belief of the de *255 fendants respectively,) proceeds to pray that the defendants should be decreed to surrender to the plaintiffs the possession of the lands, to execute to them a new conveyance in fee simple therefor, and to account for the profits.

The defendants put in an answer, of which the material facts are as follows. The defendants admit the deaths of William Falkener, the father, and bf William, the son, at the times stated in the bill, and that the plaintiffs William and Sarah are the children and heirs of the latter, and of the ages stated in the bill. They also admit the insolvency of John Willis, that he took the oath of insolvency and died intestate, as charged in the bill; and the defendant Elizabeth is his only child and heir, and the wife of the other defendant; and they admit that the grants issued to John Willis, as charged. The answer then sets forth that the defendants do not admit, nor do they believe, that John Willis ever did sell the lands to William Falkener; nor do they admit or believe that Willis was indebted to said Falkener in any manner; that the defendants have no personal knowledge upon these subjects, and had not heard of the grants until, after the death of William the son, their existence and his possession of them became known, by their being found among his papers; and that their information touching these matters was derived principally from the late Governor James Turner, who died before the filing of this bill, and who was well acquainted with the Messrs. Falkeners and John Willis, resided for many years in the same village with them, and had every opportunity of acquiring a knowledge of their dealings, and married the widow of Willis and mother of Mrs. Baskerville. By him, shortly after the death of William A. K. Falkener, the defendants were informed that it was his, Governor Turner’s belief, founded on his personal knowledge of the dealings of Willis and William Falkener, the elder, that the former was not indebted to the latter, and, if said Falkener did receive the grants from Willis, it was not upon a sale to him, but for the purpose of raising money by a sale in Philadelphia, where Falkener was well known and Willis was an entire stranger, in order to carry on the operations of a gaming table, called A. B., with which Willis was in the habit of *256 (ravelling about, for the benefit of himself and Falkener. The ' answer avers the belief of the defendants in the correctness of the foregoing information.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.C. 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plummer-v-baskerville-nc-1840.