Shields v. Thomas

59 U.S. 253, 15 L. Ed. 368, 18 How. 253, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 59 U.S. 253 (Shields v. Thomas) 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
Shields v. Thomas, 59 U.S. 253, 15 L. Ed. 368, 18 How. 253, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 695 (1856).

Opinion

Mr.'Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion.of the court.

■ Upon án appeal from a decree in chancery by. the district court of the northern district of Iowa.

This case, although upon the record a good deal extended in volume, is in effect, narrowed to the questions of law arising upop the pleadings.

The facts of the case, so far as a statement of these is necessary to an accurate comprehension of the legal questions-discussed and decided, were as follows: In the year 1839, a portion of the .appellees, as heirs and distributees of John Goldsbury, by their bill filed in the circuit court for Grayson county, in the State of Kentucky, alleged that their' ancestor died in Nelson county, in the State aforesaid, intestate, leaving a widow, Eleanor Goldsbury, and four, children — three daughters, Elizabeth, «Nancy, and Mary, and one son, Bennett Goldsbury — all these children infants at the time of their father’s death. That John Goldsbury died, possessed of one male and one female slave, and of other, personal property, and perfectly free from debt. That the widow Eleanor Goldsbury, who was appointed *256 the ádministratrix of her husband, and as such took possession ■ of the estate within a year from the period of his death, intermarried with one James Shields, in conjunction with whom she had continued to hold the entire estate, and to apply it to their exclusive use, without having made any settlement or distribution thereof. The bill further charged, that Shields and wife, after enjoying the services and hires of the male slave for several years, had ultimately sold him, and that, in the year 1818, they removed from Kentucky to the State of Missouri, carrying with them the female slave belonging to the estate of John Goldsbury, together with her descendants, seven in number, and of great value; that upon application to said Shields and wife, for a surrender of those slaves, and for an account of the estate of John Goldsbury, so possessed and used by them, this request was refused, and that, by a fraudulent confederacy between Shields and wife, and John G. Shields, their son, and Henry Yates, their son-in-law, the slaves had by the son arid son-in-law been secreted, carried off and sold, in parts unknown to the complainants, and the other personal estate of John Goldsbury fraudulently disposed of in like manner. The bill also made defendants the representatives of the surety of Eleanor Goldsbury, in her bond given as administratrix of her ■first husband. The bill also made defendants though not in an adversary interest, Isaac Thomas, and Mary, his wife, Elizabeth. John and Ann Goldsbury, which said Elizabeth, John, and Ann, are the infant children of Bennett Goldsbury, son of John Goldsbury, deceased.

After the filing of the bill in this case, it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that James Shields, and Eleanor, his wife, Elizabeth, John, and Ann Goldsbury, John Shields, and Henry Yates, were not inhabitants of the State of Kentucky, there, was, on the 25th of December, 1839, under the authority of the statute of Kentucky with reference to absent defendants, issued by the court what is termed a Warning order, by which the absent defendants were required to appear at the next April .term qf the court, and answer the complainants’ bill.

Afterwards, namely, on the 28th of April, 1840, the -absent defendants still not appearing, under the like authority of the law of the State, the clerk of the court, by its order, filed on behalf of those defendants a traverse denying the allegations of the complainants’ bill.

Subsequently to this proceeding, namely, on the 30th of’October, 1841, the said John G. Shields filed his .answer to the complainants’ bill, thereby recognizing as to himself personally the jurisdiction of the court.

Upon these pleadings, the cause after an examination of wit *257 nesses, and upon a report of the master, came to a hearing before the circuit court, and this tribunal ■ decreed against the representative of the surety in the administration bond of Mrs. Goldsbury, (afterwards Mrs. Shields,) and against James Shields her husband, she having departed this life, John G. Shields, the son, and Henry Yates, the son-in-law, in favor of the heirs and distributees of John. Goldsbury, the portions reported to be due tb them respectively of the general effects of John Goldsbury, deceased, and of the values and hires of the slaves. Upon an appeal taken from this decree to the supreme court of Kentucky, it being the opinion of the latter that, under the circumstances, the surety in the administration bond should not be charged, and also that an amount equal to the price of the slave Mat, sold by the administratrix and her- husband, and to the hues of the remaining 'slaves, had been properly applied to the dower of the widow and.to the use of the heirs of John Goldsbury, it ordered the decree of the circuit court to be re-formed in conformity with the opinion of the supreme court. By a final decree of the circuit court of Grayson county, made on the 28th day of October, 1846, the bill as to the. representative of the surety in the administration bond was dismissed, and the defendants, James Shields, John G. Shields, and Henry Yates, and each of -them, who had, by fraudulent combination, secreted and carried^ off, and disposed of the descendants of the female slave, originally the property of John Goldsbury, were decreed and ordered to pay to the heirs of said John Goldsbury severally, the amounts ascertained to be due to them as their respective and separate portions of the value of the slaves thus fraudulently disposed of, without any allowance for the hires of those slaves.

To obtain the benefit of this last decree, the suit now before us was instituted in the names of the appellees, Isaac Thomas and Mary, his wife, Uriah Pirtle and Nancy, his wife, citizens of the. State of Kentucky, and John B. Goldsbury, a citizen of the State of Missouri, the said Mary Thomas, and Nancy Pirtle, and John B. Goldsbury, being heirs and distributees of John Golds-bury, deceased, against John G. Shields, a citizen of the State of Iowa. The bill refers to the proceedings in the Kentucky suit, which proceedings are set forth in extenso as an exhibit in this cause; it further assigns as a reason for the non-joinder of a portion of the heirs of John Goldsbury as defendants, the fact that their residence precluded as to them the jurisdiction of the district court of Iowa. It sets out the sums of money severally and specifically decreed to the complainants by the circuit court of Grayson county, Kentucky, and -prays that the defendant, John G. Shields, may be compelled to perform that decree by *258 the payment to the complainants respectively the sums so awarded them, and concludes with a,prayer' for general relief.

By an amendment to the original bill in this case, the several heirs and distributees of John Goldsbury, residing in the State of Missouri, beyond the jurisdiction of the district court of Iowa, and who","for that reason, were not made defendants by the original bill, were admitted as complainants in this suit, and united in the prayer for enforcing the decree, in their favor, as rendered by the circuit court of Grayson county, Kentucky.

To the original and amended bills in this case, the defendant, John G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 U.S. 253, 15 L. Ed. 368, 18 How. 253, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-thomas-scotus-1856.