Scull v. Vaugine

15 Ark. 695
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 Ark. 695 (Scull v. Vaugine) 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
Scull v. Vaugine, 15 Ark. 695 (Ark. 1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court.

All the parties, both complainants and defendants, have appealed to this court, and the material facts of the case may be thus stated: Stephen. Yaugine, son of .Francis Yaugine, deceased, died intestate, in Jefferson -county, in this State, in or about-the year 1831, seized and .possessed both of real and personal estate, and leaving him surviving a widow named Matilda — who is one of the defendants — and an only child, named Joseph, an infant offender years. Matilda, the widow -of Stephen and mother of Joseph, afterwards married Joseph J. Marshall, who is another one of the defendants. Joseph lived until the year 1846, when he also died, within age, intestate and without issue.

'The complainants are Mary -F. M. Scull, a daughter of Francis Yaugine, deceased, and several others of the name of Scull, who •describe themselves as the heirs and legal representatives of James Scull, deceased; several of the name of Dodge, who describe them■selves as the heirs and legal representatives of John Dodge, deceased, and Emma Dodge, deceased; the last named of whom was also a daughter of Francis Yaugine,- deceased: several of the -name ••of Yangine, who describe themselves as the heirs and legal representatives of Francis N. Yangine, deceased; the last named of ■whom was a son of Francis Yaugine, deceased; Paul Yangine, who is also a son of Francis Yangine, deceased: several who represent themselves as the heirs of Eulalia Taylor, deceased, who was also a daughter of Francis Yaugine, deceased.

They filed their bill in chancery in the Jefferson Circuit Court, -on the 15th day of April, 184J, against the two defendants already mentioned, and also against another named Mary Yaugine, who is the widow of the said Francis Vaugine, the latter having-departed this life intestate, as is alleged, soon after the death of his son Stephen. Mary Yaugine, the defendant, is not the mother of any-of the complainants, or of any oné -they represent, or of Stephen, hut the step-mother; hut she is the maternal grandmother of Joseph, being the mother of Matilda.

The complainants claim, hy their bill, the whole of the property, real and personal, which, by operation of law, came to Joseph, on the part of his father Stephen, upon the death of the latter. This claim, the defendants, Marshall and-wife, deny m toto; and, so far as tbe personal estate is concerned, they are fully sustained by tbe construction of our statute of descents and distributions, made during tbe present term, in tbe case of Kelly's Heirs et al. vs. McGuire & wife et al.; because Mrs. Marshall,.under tbe facts of this case, as we have stated them above, was tbe sole distributee of her deceased son Josepb, to tbe exclusion of all other persons. But tbe real estate, having been inherited by Joseph, from bis deceased father Stephen, was in bis bands an ancestral estate, ex parte paterna, according to tbe doctrines settled in the case cited, and upon bis death without issue, passed by inheritance to bis (Joseph’s) next of kin of tbe blood of bis father, who was tbe last purchaser of tbe estate. And J osepb leaving him surviving, no father, and no mother capable of inheriting, and no brothers, or sisters, or their descendants, his paternal grandfather, grandmother, uncles and aunts, and their descendants, were the next class called to thé inheritance. Of these, he had only uncles and aunts, and their descendants; the latter, to-take per stirpes, the equal share of him or her they represent. These appear as complainants along with others, who seem to have no interest in, or claim to, the inheritance.

The rights of those entitled to inherit, however, are subject to the rights in the land which vested in Mrs. Marshall, as the widow of Stephen, the last purchaser, under the territorial laws: (Steele & Mc. C. Digest, 222, 223, 224 and 55; 210, 212); and until these parties do equity to her, (who, although she has not sought her rights by cross bill, has, in her answer, interposed the fact that she has never yet received dower in the estate of her deceased husband) they cannot, in conscience, recover from her, to say nothing, by way of objection, to the frame of their pleadings.

In addition to these alleged rights of the complainants below, which have been thus disposed of, they set up claim, as against these defendants, to a certain negro woman named Monnette and her increase,, upon the foundation of a state of facts which we will now proceed to set out in the manner insisted upon by them, without any regard to various objections made, on the part of the defendants, as to the failure and deficiency of proof, as to some of them, or as to the incompetency of some of the evidence allowed by the court below, to prove several of these alleged facts, against the objection of the defendants. It being unnecessary, as will be seen, in the view that we take of this part of the case, to consider these objections.

In the year 1826, Francis Yaugine being then a widower, married a seeond wife, Mary Derreuisseaux, who is the Mary Yau-gine, one of the defendants in this suit.' With her, he made a marriage agreement, in which among other things, he stipulated that all her property brought into the marriage, should go to the children of the marriage, if any, and if none, then to Mary’s own children by her marriage with Derreuisseaux; and that he would secure to her, by will or otherwise, eighty acres of land, and improvements upon it, with two thousand dollars in slaves, cattle, &c.

On the 1st of January, 1831, whieh was a few weeks before the death of Francis Yaugine, he executed a deed, conveying to Mary F. Scull, Ulalia Taylor, and Elizabeth Taylor, children of Creed Taylor, Emma Dodge, F. N. Yaugine and Paul Yaugine, a number of parcels of land, describing each; a number of negroes, specifying each by name; a number of cattle, hogs, household and kitchen furniture, farming utensils, &c., and all other property the grantor then had, or might dAe possessed of, to have and to hold,'&c., then following a clause, “It being expressly understood that said property, real and personal, by the grantor here disposed of, is to remain in his possession during his own life time, and on his decease, said property is to be taken possession of by Creed Taylor, James Scull and Francis N. Yaugine, they being of the same degree of kin to the grantor, and having severally paid equal proportions of the five thousand dollars before specified, they to divide the said property equally between the grantees.” It having been recited in this deed, that it was executed upon the consideration of love and affection to the grantées, and of five .thousand-dollars in hand .paid, and of the further eonside-ration, of tbe grantees'-collectively paying,. after the grantor’s-death, the unpaid part of.his just and lawful debts.

No subscribing witness, appears to this deed but from the certificate-of John Fisher, it appears to have been acknowledged before him as a justice of ‘thepeace, on.the 1st day of January, 1830, which, was one year before its-date.

On the 25th April, 1831,.

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15 Ark. 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scull-v-vaugine-ark-1855.