Scott v. Haddock

11 Ga. 258
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1852
DocketNo. 36
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 11 Ga. 258 (Scott v. Haddock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Haddock, 11 Ga. 258 (Ga. 1852).

Opinion

By the Court.

Warner, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] The first assignment of error which we shall notice, is the rejection by the Court below, of the bill of sale offered by the defendant, to show that the slave, Harry, never was the property of the orphans of John Prosser, but the property of Willis S. Scott, acquired by virtue of his intermarriage with the mother of Mrs. Haddock, one of the complainants. The record shows, that Willis S. Scott was appointed guardian of John F. and Cynthia Prosser, orphan children óf John Prosser, deceased, by the Court of Ordinary of Jones County, in the year 1821. In his first return made after his appointment as such guardian, a schedule of the property belonging to his wards was rendered to the Court of Ordinary, upon oath, in which the slave, Harry, is included as a portion of their property; and he continued to charge himself as their guardian, with the hire of said slave, in his returns to the Court, for ten consecutive years.

The bill of sale, offered in evidence, was made by Sally Whit-worth, to Mrs. Prosser while she was a widow, and before her intermarriage with Willis S. Scott, which conveyed the boy Harry to her. Now, Scott, the administrator, says, in his answer to the bill filed by Haddock and wife (the latter of whom is one of the orphans of John Prosser) for her share of the slave, Harry, and his hire, that it is true Willis S. Scott did return the slave, Harry, to the Court of Ordinary as the property of the orphans, for the purpose, and with the design, ofpreventing the slave, Harry, from being seized and sold under ex-[262]*262editions then existing against Willis S. Scott, as his property, he having acquired a title thereto, by virtue of his intermarriage with Mrs. Prosser, to whom the slave had been previously conveyed by Sally Whitworth. The question is, could the defendant’s intestate, Willis S. Scott, if now in life, be permitted to shew, as against the complainants, that the slave, Harry, was not their property, but his individual property, in the face of his solemn admissions to the contrary, made in his returns to the Court of Ordinary, as before stated ? We are of the opinion that he could not; and consequently that his administrator is in no better condition. He would be estopped, on the ground of public policy and good faith, from repudiating his solemn acts and admissions, so repeatedly made in the course of the judicial proceedings had in the Court of .Ordinary in relation to that fact. 1 Greenleaf's Ev. 249, §§207, 208. Quick and Wife vs. Staines, 1 Bos. & Puller, 293.

[2.] The next and main ground of error insisted on is, that the Court below refused to give to the Jury the instruction asked in regard to the Statute of Limitations, and in charging them that the complainants were not barred by the Statute. It appears from the record, that Cynthia Haddock (formerly Cynthia Prosser) was born in 1816, and was married in 1835, being under twenty-one years of age at the time of her marriage. In 1836, Haddock and his wife, Cynthia, filed a bill against Willis S. Scott, her guardian, for her share of the slave, Harry, and his hire. In July, 1839, Scott answered the bill, in which he claimed the slave as his own, and denied the right and title of the complainants thereto. The bill filed by Haddock and wife in 1836, was dismissed in August, 1842. The present bill was filed in 1848 against Willis B. Scott, the administrator of Willis S. Scott, the latter having died intestate.

The instruction asked of the Court below to the Jury, by the counsel for the administrator, assumes the position, that the Statute of Limitations commenced running in favor of the in-. testate, from the time of filing his answer to the first bill, in July, 1839, at which time he claimed the slave, Harry, as his. own property and denied the title of his cestui que trust; that the [263]*263answer of the intestate, to the complainants’ bill, asserted an adverse title to the property in controversy, of which his cesivi que trust had knowledge, and more than four years having elapsed from the time of such adverse holding of the property, to the time of the commencement of the present suit, the complainants’ right to maintain the same, was barred by the Statute. ,

The instruction asked, the Court refused to give to the Jury; but instructed them “ that the right of action did not accrue until Willis S. Scott asserted a right to the property, and gave complainants notice of the same ; and that if Mrs. Haddock was then a married woman, and of full age, the defendant is not protected by the Statute of Limitations.” In view of the tacts of this case, there was no error in the Court below, in refusing the instructions asked, or in that which was given to the Jury.

The possession by Scott of the slave, Harry, wás consistent with the title of his cestui que trust, until July, 1839, when he repudiated the trust, and claimed to hold the property as his own, adverse to their title. The Statute then did not commence to run, according to the general rule, in favor of the intestate, until July, 1839, when he repudiated the trust. Mrs. Haddock was an infant at the time of her marriage, and continued a feme covert, until the repudiation of the trust by the trustee, in 1839.

[3.] The question has been discussed, particularly by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, whether cumulative disabilities, as infancy and coverture, can be tacked together, so as to operate as a bar to the Statute, until loth disabilities shall be removed. The rule in relation to that question, we understand to be, that where there are several co-existing disabilities in the same person, at the time the right of action accrues, he or she is not required to sue, in order to avoid the operation of the Statute, until all are removed. If, for example, as in this case, at the time of the repudiation of the trust by Scott, the trustee, Mrs. Haddock had been an infant and a feme covert, the Statute would not have commenced to run against her until loth disabilities had been removed; for the reason, that both disabilities existed at the time the cause of action accrued.

[4.] But if, at the time of the repudiation of the trust by [264]*264Scott, the disability of infancy only, had existed, the subsequent disability of coverture could not be tacked to that of infancy, so as to prevent the operation of the Statute, until both were removed ; for the reason, that at the time the cause of action accrued, there was only one disability which existed, to have prevented an immediate institution of the suit.

[5.] Disabilities which bring a person within the exceptions of the Statute, cannot be piled one upon another, so as to defeat its operation ; but a party claiming the benefit of the proviso in the Statute, can only claim the benefit of the disability existing when the right of action first accrued. Mercer vs. Selden, 1 Howard’s U. S. Rep. 37. Angel on Lim. 209, 522. Demarest vs. Wynkoop, 3 Johns. Ch. Rep. 129. Eager vs. The Commonwealth, 4 Mass. Rep. 182.

[6.]

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ga. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-haddock-ga-1852.