Sewall v. Glidden

1 Ala. 52
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1 Ala. 52 (Sewall v. Glidden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sewall v. Glidden, 1 Ala. 52 (Ala. 1840).

Opinion

COLLIER, C. J.

— First. It was argued for the defendants in error that the deed from Lewis Sewali, professing to convey to his son a title to the slaves in controversy is inoperative and void against the defendant, who was a subsequent purchaser without notice ; because the same was not recorded pursuant to law. At the time the deed of gift, under which the plaintiff claims, was executed, the only law providing for the registration of such a writing, was the second section of the statute of frauds. So much of that section as is material to the point, is in these words : — “ And moreover, if any conveyance be of goods and chattels, and be not, on consideration, deemed valuable iu the law, it shall be taken to be fraudulent within this act ; unless the same be by will, duly proved and recorded ; or by deed in writing acknowledged and proved. If the same deed include lands also, in such manner as conveyances of lands are by law directed to be acknowledged or proved, or if it be of goods and chattels only, then acknowledged or proved by one or more witnesses, in the Superior Court or County Court, wherein one of the parties lives, within twelve months after the execution thereof ; or unless possession shall really and bona fide remain with the donee..” Here it is expressly required that in order to the legality of the registration of a deed founded on a [56]*56consideration not ‘ deemed valuable in the law,” it should be “ acknowledged or proved &c.” “in the Superior or County Court &c.” The smallness of the pecuniary consideration recited in the deed, and the great disproportion which it bears to what must have been the true value of the slaves given — the relationship of the parties and the very tender years of the dorfee, are circumstances all going to show most conclusively, that the moving cause to the exécution of the deed was the “ natural love and affection” which the donor bore to his son. Such being the consideration of the deed, as ascertained by the verdict it comes directly within the provision oí the act cited, and to be operative to pass a title to the slaves named in it, it should have been “ acknowledged or proved in the Superior (then the Circuit) or County Court wherein one of the parties lived, within twelve months after the execution thereof.” By the record it appears the deed was only acknowledged before the clerk of the County Court where the donor lived. The clerk had no authority to take the acknowledgment; the registration was consequently irregular and the deed itself as against a subsequent purchaser without notice, became a nullity. That the defendant purchased in ignorance of the claim of the plaintiff, is expressly affirmed by the finding of the jury.

Second. — The deed being void, we will now inquire whether the finding of the jury shows that there was a gift by parol. In saying that the deed is void, we desire not to be understood as determining it to be invalid for all purposes, but merely declare it inoperative to pass title. It may, however, be regarded as equivalent to a parol declaration of the donor’s wishes, and if the constituents of a gift inter vivos are shown, the plaintiff’s right must prevail.

^It is laid down in the books that at common law, in order to pass the title to a chattel by a parol gift, there must be an actual delivery of the thing. Á mere intention or naked promise to give, without some act to pass the property, is not a gift. There exists the locus penit entice so long as the gift is incomplete and left imperfect in the mode of executing it; and a Court of equity will not interfere and give effect to a gift left inchoate and imperfect.' [57]*57[Hooper vs. Goodwin, 1 Swanst. Rep. 485; Bunn vs. Markham 7 Taunt. Rep. 224; Irons vs. Smallpeice, 2 Barnw. & Ald. Rep. 551; Antrobus vs. Smith, 12 Ves. Rep. 30; Pennington vs. Gittings, 2 Gill. & John. Rep. 221; Frisbie & wife vs. McCarty, 1 Stew’t. & Porters’ Rep. 56.]

The deed we have seen, declares the intention of the donor that the slaves should cease to be his property, and a title to them, vest in his son, the plaintiff. The jury find that “subsequently” to the execution of the deed and the payment of one dollar for each slave, “a formal delivery of the slaves, was “made.” When, to whom, and upon what occasion this delivery was made, is not ascertained by the finding. Whether it was made to the plaintiff, and whether it had reference to the deed, orto any previously declared intention of Lewis Sewall to vest the property in his son, we are wholly uninformed. These are questions to which the jury should have furnished a response by their verdict, and we are not authorized to infer from its silence a conclusion favorable to the plaintiff.

It is a well established principle that the Court will not aid a defective special verdict by intending facts to have been proved to the satisfaction of the jury, even if those facts appear from the record to have been given in evidence. A verdict is the act of the jury and cannot be aided either by intendment, or a reference to extrinsic facts; otherwise it might become the act of the Court. “Such an assumption” (say this Court in Lee vs. Campbell’s heirs, 4 Porter’s Rep. 202.) “ we would consider a palpable, if not an alarming invasion of the rights of the jury. (See also Bolling vs. Mayor, &c. 3 Rand. Rep. 577 ; Brown, &c. vs. Ralston, &c. 4 Rand. Rep. 516.)

The finding of the jury then, in the particulars staled, is too uncertain and defective to have authorized the rendition of a judgment in favor of the plaintiff; yet the facts found are such as to show, that there were other facts touching which there was evidence ; in regard to these the verdict is silent; and the Court without rendering a judgment for the defendant, should have awarded a venire facias de novo. It is laid down by the elementary writers where an uncertain, ambiguous of defective [58]*58verdict has been rendered, the Court should award a venire facias de novo. (Steph. Plead. 120—21; Viners Ab. 466 — 1 ; Sellon’s Prae. 495.) That means according to our practice, nothing more, than submitting the case to another jury for trial. (In Lee vs. Campbell’s heirs, 4 Porter’s Rep. 204.) This Court awarded a venire facias de novo, because the verdict did not find facts to authorize the plaintiff to recover, or show the insufficiency of the defence.

In Brown, &c. v. Ralston, &c. (4 Rand. Rep. 518), the Court of Appeals of Virginia, considered the difference between a neiv trial and a venire facias de novo, and in what cases the latter would be the appropriate procedure where the jury have returned a special verdict. Judge Carr, in his opinion, cites (Witham v. Lewis, 1 Wils. Rep. 54 and ’5) a ease, in which the twelve Judges of England associated with the Lord Chancellor Hardwicke, examine the same question. Lord Chief Justice Willes, in delivering the opinion of the Court remarks, “ a "venire facias de novo and a new trial are very different things, though alike in some points.” They agree in this, that a new trial takes place in both, and that the Court may or may not grant either. They differ in this, that the venire facias is the ancient proceeding of the Common Law; (he new trial, a modern invention, to mitigate the severity of the proceeding by attaint. New trials are generally granted where a general verdict is found; a venire de novo, upon a special verdict. The most material difference between them is, that a venire

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ala. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sewall-v-glidden-ala-1840.