Shelby v. Guy

24 U.S. 361, 6 L. Ed. 495, 11 Wheat. 361, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by108 cases

This text of 24 U.S. 361 (Shelby v. Guy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelby v. Guy, 24 U.S. 361, 6 L. Ed. 495, 11 Wheat. 361, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 317 (1826).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiffs here, were defendants in the Court below, in an action of detinue brought by Thomas Guy, to recover sundry slaves.

The defendants below plead non detinet, and the act of limitations of the State of Tennessee, which, bars the action of detinue in three years.

The plaintiff joins issue upon the plea of non detinet., and files a special replication to the plea *362 of the statute, the object of which is to bring himself within the saving in favour of absentees. The defendants demurred to this replication, but the demurrer being overruled, the parties went to trial on the general issue, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff in the form now usual in the action of detinue.

To revise the judgment of the Court in overruling the demurrer, and its decisions upon various points of law raised in the progress of the trial, this writ of error is brought.

The case-was this. One Dickerson, a citizen of Virginia, the father of the plaintiff’s mother, was owner of a female slave named Amy, from whom the slave claimed had descended. Upon the marriage of Thomas Terry. Guy with the plaintiff’s mother, or soon after, and prior to the year. 1778, the slave Amy parsed into the possession of T. T. G., but whether by loan, or parol gift, is a point litigated, and upon which some of the principal questions in the cause arise.

From the year 1778 to 1794, the slaves remained in Virginia, in the possession of the plaintiff’s father T. T. G., when he sold her and her increase to David Shelby, who thereupon removed with the slaves to' Tennessee, where he and they have ever since resided.

In the year 1788, Dickerson made his will ana died ; and the will was proved and recorded in July,.1788. In this will he says, “ I lend to my son-in-law T. T. G., the negroes which, he now has in his possession, that I lent him in the lifetime of his wife, during his .natural life, viz. *363 Cuffee,'Gilbert, and Amy; and at his death I give the aforesaid slaves, with their increase, to my grandsons John and Thomas Guy, and their heirs, for ever.”

Thomas Guy, here named, is the plaintiff in this action; the executory devise to him and John, took effect by the death of their father in 1795. John died unmarried, underage, and intestate, after his father, but before the action brought, and neither of the brothers had been in the State of Tennessee until within three years prior to the institution of the suit, but had resided in the State of Virginia.

These are the material facts in the cause. Ther points argued have been very numerous; but if the plaintiff has tripped in pleading, by a vicious replication, the questions on the merits .are put out of the case. The points arising on the demurrer, therefore, must first be considered.

Alleged defects in the pleadings.

The replication demurred to, states, in substance, the right of Dickerson to the negro Amy, -and the continuance of that right Up to his death ; the bequest to the father of the plaintiff for life, and to the plaintiff and John aftér his death ; the death of the father, and of John ;, the qualifying ' of the executors on the will, and their assent to the legacy; the sale by the-father to Shelby in 1794; Shelby’s removal with the slaves to Tennessee, and subsequent residence there, and the residence of'John .up to his death, and of the plaintiff, to within three years of the bringing of this suit, in the State of Virginia.

*364 The demurrer filed to this replication is special, and assigns for cause,

1. That it states the evidence of title, and does not allege a fact.

2. That it is double, in relying on the facts both of title and of non-residence.

But, claiming the right of looking back to the first fault, and other benefits appertaining to a general demurrer, to which, no doubt, he is entitled, the counsel for the defendant have raised a variety of other questions in the cause, of more interest than those specified.

As, first, that the counts in the declaration are repugnant, the one being essentially a count in trover, the other in detinue ; and,

Secondly, that the replication involves a departure, inasmuch as the writ tclaims the whole próperty, and the replication shows him to be entitled to no more than a moiety.

That the replication is more characterized by prolixity, than by science, the Court will readily admit; but that, it is essentially vicious, cannot be maintained.

The general object of the plaintiff is to fortify his title or demand, and this is a legitimate object. Nor Can we perceive, that in doing this, he has either stated evidence where he ought to allege facts, or tendered to the defendant a double answer to his plea, or, rather, “ distinct matters to one and the same thing, whereunto several answers are required.” That it is redundant, and abounds in surplusage, with reference to the issue tendered, is obvious : but it prefers only one *365 answer that will fit the plea, which is, absence from the State of Tennessee during the term when the statute would bar . him.

Yet, as he has thbught proper to amplify upon the nature of his demand, if he had prostrated his own action, the law would visit him with the consequences.

The argument on this point is, that having set out a joint devise to himself and his brother, he is incapable of maintaining alone a suit for the entirety of the thing devised. But, in this, we are of opinion, that the law is with him.

It is true, that tenants in common must ordinarily join in an action, and that the laws of Virginia produce a severance upon. the death of a joint tenant, so that the right of survivorship is abolished. But, it is also true, that in suits for an indivisible thing, a right of action survives to a tenant in common ; and this, from the necessity of the case, as we conceive the authorities sufficiently maintain. (Co. Litt. 198 a. Bro. Abr. tit. Tenant in Common, pl. 18.)

The exceptions to the counts clearly cannot be sustained. They áre con substantial, and the same plea and judgment proper to both. Averring that the defendant came to the possession of the chattel by finding, does not constitute a count in trover; an alleged conversion characterizes that form of action. Nor is it any objection to the counts, that one of them states a right to recovery founded in,a possession merely, without the direct allegation of property, since a tortious Intention mav well be of that which another has *366 no imprest in, but to the temporary usé or custody. (Co. Litt. 286. Roll. Abr. 575.) Thus, a bailee, or common carrier, or sheriff, may maintain this action, and expressly against one who has them by delivery or finding. (2 Saund. 47. Cro. Jac. 73. et

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 U.S. 361, 6 L. Ed. 495, 11 Wheat. 361, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelby-v-guy-scotus-1826.