Pratt v. Wright

5 Mo. 192
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Mo. 192 (Pratt v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pratt v. Wright, 5 Mo. 192 (Mo. 1838).

Opinion

Opinion of

McGirk, Judge.

William Wright, the defendant in error, brought an action of replevin in the Marion circuit court, against the plaintiffs in error, to recover a slave. On the issues the parties went to trial before the court, as to the law and the facts, without the intervention of a jury. The [193]*193court found the issue for the plaintiff, Wright-, and gave judgment accordingly.

By a marriage agreement between 'husband and wife, before marriage, the Slaves of the wife were conveyed to a trustee for the benefit of the wife, subject to her Sole use and disposition. After the-death of the wife intestate, the admr. of the wife brought replevin against the husband, to recover the possession of one of the slaves. It was held-:

It appears by the bill ot exceptions, that in August, 1835, an agreement was made by and between "Virgil Pratt and one Martha Wood to enter into marriage; and that about an hour or two before the marriage took place, Virgil Pratt and Martha Wood, together with one John C. Wright, entered into an agreement, signed and sealed by them, as follows:

“This indenture, made'this twenty-fifth day of August, 1835, between Martha Wood of the first part, John C. Wright of the second part, and Virgil Pratt, of the town of Palmyra, county of Marion, State of Missouri, witnesseth, that, whereas a marriage is about to take place between Martha Wood and Virgil Pratt, and the said Virgil, for the purpose of securing to .the said Martha her property, hereby agrees that she may have full power to convey the same to John C. Wright in trust for her own use and benefit; and the said Martha hereby sells and conveys to the said John C-. Wright her negroes,Thomas, Polly,(and others, naming them,) for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar, in trust, for the sole use and benefit of the said Martha,by her to be retained in possession for her own use and benefit, with full power to dispose of the same by will at her decease; and the said John 0. Wright hereby agrees, that he will faithfully •discharge the duties of the trust aforesaid, and permit the said Martha to have the full use and’enjoyment oí the said slaves, and with the consent of the said Martha to sell the same; and it is hereby agreed between the parties aforesaid, that the said slaves are not to be subject to the control, or liable for the debts* of the said Virgil Pratt, which may accrue or may have accrued in any manner, directly or indirectly, but’that they are to be held by the said trustee for the sole úse and benefit of the said Martha. In testimony whereof,1’ See.

It was also proved that the marriage took place; and that the wife died in February, 1837- There is no dispute about the fact of the plaintiffs in error having the property in possession at the commencement of this suit. Some other Verbal testimony was given, but, it seems to me none of it has any relation to the points upon which the court must decide. When the plaintiff closed his evidence, the defendant gave none, but prayed the court to decide by way of instruction:

1. If the deed given m evidence was a valid and binding conveyance, it vested the legal title of tbé said [194]*194slave, Tom, in JohnC. Wright, and there is no evidence in the cause that such legal title has been divested.

3. If said deed be not a valid and binding conveyance, the legal title of the slave, Tom, remained in Martha Wood, the former owner of Tom; and V. Pratt, by his intermarriage with Miss Wood, and his subsequent possession of the slave, became the lawful owner of said slave.

3. There is no evidence in the cause of any legal title in the plaintiff to the slave in question, and therefore be cannot recover in this action; which decisions the court refused to make, and decided that the said deed vested the legal title of the slave, Tom, in John C, Wright, the trustee, only during coverture, and that at the death of Mrs. Pratt, the legal title passed to her representatives. Several other instructions were asked by the defendants, and given by the court.

The defendants moved the court for a new trial, which was overruled. The reasons for a new trial are, that the verdict was against law, evidence, and the decision of the court.

Witii regard to th,e new trial, nothing can be done. The record does not show what the whole evidence was. The court cannot, therefore, know whether the verdict is against the evidence or not; nor can the court know •that the verdict is against the law in the whole case, unless the record will show all the facts op which the Jaw arises.

As to the finding of the court as a jury being against the instruction given, I .do not see how that is true.

I will now proceed to consider the instructions the court save in favor of the plaintiff, Wright, and those refused to the defendants.

The first refused was, that if the deed given in evidence be a binding and valid one, then the title of the slave is in John C. Wright, and there is no evidence the title passed out of him. In my opinion the court did well to refuse this instruction.' One reason why it was rightly refused may have been, that it affirmed a fact which was not true. It cannot' be seen by the record whether or not there was such evidence. If there was such evidence before the court, then the refusal was right. As the matter stands, I conclude the court did right, and its opinion cannot be reversed unless we can see the court did wrong. •

The second instruction refused, asks the court to say, if this deed is not valid as a conveyance, then the eonseq- vV.eo is that, by the marriage of the parties and [195]*195the possession of the slaves by Pratt in the lifetime oí the wife, on her death the slaves were his. As to the right of Mr. Pratt to the slaves in the cáse supposed, no one can have any doubt. If there had been a jury in the case, then 1 could easily see it would be entirely wrong to give the instruction prayed. It would be to refer the question of law to the jury: What is the legal effect of this deed? Did it convey the property to the trustee or not? If the party wished to have the legal effect of the deed ascertained, he should have asked the court to say the deed had no effect to convey the property to the trustee. This being refused, there would be a tangible point which might be corrected; and this being given, then it would be proper to ask the court to declare further that the consequence was, the property ón the death of Mrs.- Pratt belonged absolutely to the husband; but without this, the whole matter of law, as to the legal effect of the deed, would be by the court referred to the jury without the least light to guide them. For these reasons, I am satisfied there was no error committed by refusing the second instruction. Nor is there any error committed by refusing the third instruction asked; that affirms there is no evidence in the cause to show the plaintiff had any title to the slave. In the first place, the plaintiff had,the trust deed hefore the court; and let it be granted for the present that it furnished no such evidence, yet, for any thing appearing upon the record, there might have been other and good evidence of that matter, and the bill of exceptions no where informs the court that the plaintiff had no other evidence. The refusal to give that instruction might have been right, because the faet affirmed was not true.

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Related

Cushing v. Blake
29 N.J. Eq. 399 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1878)
Wright v. Pratt
17 Mo. 43 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1852)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Mo. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-wright-mo-1838.