Snow v. Grace

29 Ark. 131
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 131 (Snow v. Grace) 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
Snow v. Grace, 29 Ark. 131 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

Williams, Sp. J.

This case was before this court on a former occasion, and the judgment rendered therein by the circuit court of Jefferson county was reversed, and the cause was remanded. On the filing of the mandate of the supreme court the cause was regularly tried by a jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of appellee, upon which judgment was rendered. Erom this judgment defendants below have appealed to this court. Pending the trial defendants below excepted to sundry rulings and decisions of the court; and at the conclusion of the trial, pursuant to leave given by the court for time to prepare their bill of exceptions, presented the same, which contained all the evidence, instructions of the court, etc.

They also moved for a new trial on the grounds, as stated:

1. That the verdict is contrary to evidence.

2. That the verdict is contrary to law.

3. That it was contrary to the instructions of the court.

4. Because the court refused to give appellant’s instruction.

5. The court erred in giving appellee’s instruction.

6 and' 7. The court erred in admitting testimony tending to impeach appellants.

8. The court erred in admitting testimony of appellee, and in refusing testimony of appellants.

The court below overruled this motion, and appellants excepted.

The appellants here urge that the court below erred in allowing plaintiff to file a new declaration. The order states that defendants (appellants) waived their exception to the new •declaration and bond, and argued the motion to strike out the affidavit (in attachment), which was by the court sustained ; and that the court allowed the new declaration to be substituted, because the old one, from use, had become so defaced as to be almost illegible. There is nothing in this objection, even if appellant had not waived it.

It is next argued that the grounds of the motion for new trial are well taken, and that the verdict is against law and evidence; that Grace had no property in the bagging and ties, for the price of which this suit was brought, on the ground, first, that the express promise, on the part of the appellants to pay, which there is testimony tending to prove, is without consideration, if Grace had no property. To this it is sufficient to say, that the compromise of litigation, which the testimony proved existed in this case, is a sufficient consideration for an express promise; second, that there is for the same reason no implied promise to pay; that Key, who sold them to Grace, had no authority from Sheppard, the owner, to sell, and if he had authority from Sheppard, still it was abandoned property within the meaning of the act of congress, and had been confiscated, and that we must presume this confiscation from the facts proved.

The appellee introduced evidence on the ‘ trial tending to prove that a short time before the occupation of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, by the Federal army, in 1863, he had bought of one Key, who, the evidence tended to show, was the general agent and manager of James Sheppard, 250 bales of cotton, on the place of Sheppard, in Jefferson county, Arkansas, known as the Island place, together with all the bagging and ties and rope on said place, being bagging and rope enough to bale one thousand bales of cotton; that the bagging was worth one dollar per yard, and the rope and ties fifty cents per pound at the time appellants used them. The evidence tended to prove subsequent ratification by Sheppard of Key’s action, by receiving the price paid to him by Grace for the cotton and bagging, rope and ties, and that appellants had expressly promised to pay plaintiff for the bagging, etc. To this testimony appellants objected at the time of its introduction, and the court overruled the objection and permitted the testimony to go to the jury. This action of the court was made one of the grounds for the motion for new trial, the points having been properly saved during the progress of the trial.

We see no error in thus admitting appellee’s testimony. If uncontroverted, it would have strongly tended to establish appellee’s case; and in view of appellant’s testimony, subsequently introduced, the whole case was one for the jury, and the court did not err in refusing to exclude this testimony from them.

The defendants below testified in the case, and their testimony tended to prove that James Sheppard, the owner of the plantation, was_absent at his home in Virginia at the time of the Federal occupation of Pine Bluff, and that Key, his manager, had left the plantation, and taken the negroes and live stock, etc., off the place, and had gone south; in this, acting under Sheppard’s instructions, leaving the bagging and ties in controversy, and cotton and corn, on the place; that appellants had made a contract with Powell Clayton, commander of the post at Pine Bluff, for the gathering of the cotton and corn on the place. Appellants contradict plaintiff’s testimony by denying any express promise to pay for the bagging and ties ; they also, against the testimony of plaintiff, testify that they delivered to Grace, in full compromise of all claims, a large amount of cotton. Grace admitted the receipt of the cotton, but stated that it was received only in settlement and compromise of his claim on the cotton; and that appellants expressly promised to pay for the bagging and ties. • Appellants further testified that Powell Clayton, the commander of the post, had ordered them to use the bagging and ties, which, they claim, protects them.

The acts of congress of the 6th of August, 1861 (12 Statutes at Large, 319), and of the 17th of July, 1862 (id., p. 591), both required confiscation to be decreed by a district court of the United States; and if appellants claim title by confiscation, -they must show title by the record, or at least make the record the foundation of it. Under the act of congress regulating ■captured and abandoned property, approved March 12, 1863 ■(12 Statutes at Large, 820, secs, 1 and 2), it would be necessary to show that their title was derived from a treasury agent in pursuance of the provisions of that law; and as a treasury agent was but a ministerial and not a judicial officer, whose ■decrees possess the power of concluding all questions, it would, perhaps, be necessary also to show all necessary facts which, ■under the law, gave him power to sell, or appraise, or appropriate to public use, as no title is here traced to a treasury ■agent. This question is not before us. If the appellants ■claimed exemption from suit under the provisions of the first ■section of the act of congress of May 11,1866, even if that act applied here, it would have devolved on them to have established a military seizure of thq bagging and ties, and the evi■dence tending to prove this was properly left by the court to -,the jury to determine. And giving the appellants the fullest possible protection from any or all these acts of congress, still, in view of the evidence of a compromise and an express promise, we could not disturb the finding without violating those rules which have governed this court from its foundation; ■especially that rule which prescribes that where there is any ■evidence to support the verdict, we will not disturb it except ior errors of the court.

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29 Ark. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snow-v-grace-ark-1874.