Ryburn v. Pryor

14 Ark. 505
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 Ark. 505 (Ryburn v. Pryor) 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
Ryburn v. Pryor, 14 Ark. 505 (Ark. 1854).

Opinion

Strain, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of trover from the Hempstead Circuit Court, instituted by Pryor against Ryburn, for a negro woman and her two children. There was verdict, and judgment for the plaintiff, motion for new trial, which was overruled and Ryburn appealed to this court.

For the purpose of establishing his claim to the negroes, Pryor proved in the court below, that in the year 1826, he was married to Martha Ann Ryburn, the sister of the defendant and the daughter of Matthew Ryburn, in the State of Tennessee; and that Matthew Ryburn gave the negro woman to Pryor after the marriage: and that some time afterwards, when the negro was about to be sold for Pryor’s debts, Matthew Ryburn expressly refused to forbid the sale, saying that he had given the negro to his daughter,. Mrs. Pryor; and that Pryor held continued possession of her until 1835 or 1836, with the exception of a year or two about 1830, when Pryor’s father held the negro in possession. In the fall of 1836, Matthew Ryburn removed from Tennessee to Texas, and on his way received the negro woman from Pryor and took her to Texas with him, Pryor furnishing her with a horse to ride. On the road to Texas Matthew Ryburn called her Pryor’s negro. She was hired for the year 1837, as Pryor’s negro, with the rest of his negroes. In the year 1838, Pryor and his father-in-law made a crop together, and the negro woman was put in as Pry- or’s property with his other negroes, and Pryor received one-third of the crop. They continued thus to live and crop together till about February, 1843, when Matthew Ryburn, having moved away, sent his son, Montgomery Ryburn, who came with a gun and took the negro woman forcibly from Pryor. After this, Matthew Ryburn kept the negro in possession till the 1st January,. 1844, when he executed a bill of sale for her and her child Maria, to the defendant, for $750, and delivered them to him Since 1826 the negro woman has had three children, now in possession of the defendant. Pryor also introduced a witness to prove that in 1837 or 1838, Matthew Ryburn declared more than once that the negro woman was the property of Pryor or Pryor’s wife. The competency of the evidence of this witness was objected to by Ryburn, but overruled by the court and the evidence permitted to go to the jury.

Another witness stated in his depositions: “That E. L. Pryor continued to hold said negro as his property, till the year 1830, when I as constable levied an attachment on her as E. L. Pry or’s property in favor of Sami. Pryor as will more fully appear by the transcript from the Comity Court of Montgomery county, Tennessee, hereto annexed,, marked A., which is made part of this deposition. My recollection is that at the sale of the negro above named under said attachment, Sami. Pryor, the father of plaintiff, purchased the said negro girl. He took her into possession and retained possession for some time, and sent the negro to E. L. Pryor, who had removed to the Western District of Tennessee. I think this was in 1831 or 1832,1 am not certain which.”

“Attached to this deposition was what purported to be a transcript containing, First: A copy of a writ of attachment, issued out of and returnable to “the County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions,” of Montgomery county, Tennesse, dated 20th January, 1830, commanding E. L. Pryor to be attached to answer the complaint of Sami. Pryor; Second: Copy of affidavit of indebtedness-by Sami.. Pryor, sworn to the same day before Charles Barby, a justice of the peace, who issued and signed the writ: Third, Attachment bond of Sami. Pryor and surety; Fourth: Return on the writ; showing levy, after levy of other attachments in favor of Hynes & Slaughter, upon many articles of personal property, Pryor’s interest in 80 acres of land, “one negro girl, Julia,” and “one negro boy, Armstead.” Levy endorsed as made 20th Jan uary, 1830. Fifth. Judgment in favor of Sami, Pryor vs. E. L. Pryor, for $1,427 50, and a memorandum that execution issued to the sheriff of Montgomery county, on the 5th of August, 1830, but had not been returned.”

Ryburn then offered to prove by a witness that his father, Matthew Ryburn, had frequently on various occasions declared in. 1842 and 1843, that he had merely loaned the negro woman to. Pryor, and that Pryor had often re-delivered her and acknowledged the loan. The testimony was objected to and rejected by the court.

Pryor objected to all testimony as to the statements of Matthew Ryburn since 1826, offered to show that he had only loaned the negro to Pryor..

The following instructions to the jury were asked by Pryor and given by the court, and excepted to by Ryburn:

1st. That the measure of damages was the value of the property at the time of conversion, and interest thereon at six per cent.

2d. That taking a bill, of sale for the negro, assuming and claiming ownership, acting as owner and denying Pryor’s claim, constituted a conversion; and no demand was necessary.

3d. That a bill of sale is not necessary to pass the title to negroes, but they may as weU pass by delivery; and a. gift accompanied by actual deliveryjmd subsequent peaceable possession can no more be revoked i^R a sale.

4th. That as to the valujpf the woman and child, the defendant not having produced tfin, and shown them not to be of the best quality, the jury mayTairly presume the strongest against him, and make the highest value proven the measure of damages.”

Among other instructions asked by Ryburn and given by the court, the three following were objected to by Pryor and excluded by the court, to which Ryburn excepted:

1st. “That if the jury-^Éfelieve from the evidence that Matthew Ryburn held and retained possession of the negro slaves sued for, as his own property and claimed them as such, the jury are bound to find for the defendant, unless there was some instrument of writing duly recorded, showing that the title was not in said Matthew Ryburn.”
2d. “That if the jury believe from the evidence that the negroes in controversy, before the alleged sale, were merely loaned by Matthew Ryburn to Pryor, temporarily, with the right to reclaim them at any time, no sale under execution or otherwise, or process against Pryor, would alter, take away, or destroy the rights of Ryburn, unless he (Ryburn), so concealed such loan as to enable Pryor, by using the property as his own for a length of time, to acquire credit on the strength of that possession of the property. But if there was no such concealment on the part of Ryburn, either actual or constructive, he might reclaim the property after such sale, to the same extent as before, whether the property remained in the hands of the purchaser at such sale, or in the hands of a subsequent purchaser.”
3d. “That the sale in Tennessee, if any such sale and subsequent gift took place, (and the jury are to determine from the evidence whether any such sale or gift took place) in no respect changed the attitude of Ryburn and Pryor, in regard to the property.”

Ryburn filed his motion for new trial on the ground,

1st. The admission of irrelevant and incompetent evidence for plaintiff; 2d, The exclusion of projK- and competent evidence offered by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ark. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryburn-v-pryor-ark-1854.