Spencer v. McDonald

22 Ark. 466
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ark. 466 (Spencer v. McDonald) 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
Spencer v. McDonald, 22 Ark. 466 (Ark. 1861).

Opinion

Hon. Harris Flanagin, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of replevin in the cepit and detinel against the defendant as administratrix of Robert J. Raiford, for twelve slaves. The defendant intermarried with John B. McDonald, and the case was ordered to progress in the names of the husband and wife, as administrators de bonis non of the intestate.

The defendants afterwards plead as follows:

First. The defendant did not unlawfully detain; second, the defendant does not unlawfully, detain; third, the defendant did not unlawfully detain at the commencement of this suit; fourth, the defendant did not at the institution of this suit unlawfully detain; fifth, limitation of two yeárs; sixth, limitation of three years; seventh, non accrevit within five years; eighth, the defendant has been in peaceable possession for more than five years; ninth, the defendant and Raiford have had peacéable possession for more than five years; tenth, the defendant and Raiford have had peaceable possession for more than five years without demand; eleventh, the defendant and Raiford have been in the peaceable and uninterrupted possession for five years; twelfth, the defendant has had peaceable and uninterrupted possession for more than five years; thirteenth, the defendant and Robert Raiford have had peaceable and adverse possession for more than five years fourteenth, that the slaves were the property of the defendant as administrator; fifteenth, non cepit; sixteenth, property in the defendant as administrator de bonis non.

The first four pleas were to the first count; the fifth to the thirteenth inclusive, are to both counts, and the last three to the second count. The second, third and fourth pleas were stricken out on motion; a demurrer was sustained to the fifth, seventh and tenth pleas, and the thirteenth plea was withdrawn before trial.

The object of pleading is to ascertain the matter in dispute between litigants, by letting them affirm and deny specific facts upon which the relief asked depends, and the truth of which facts in afterwards to be ascertained by a jury. When two or more are filed which would be sustained by the same testimony, a court should, upon motion, compel the pleader to elect upon which plea he will stand. Lawson et al. vs. the State, 5 Ling. 36, and Sumpter vs. Tucker, 14 Ark. 185. Pleas of this nature are only calculated to render obscure the matters in litigation.

In this case there are sixteen pleas, more than twenty demurrers, fourteen replications, as many rejoinders, and five surre-joinders. It would be a wonder if a judge in the hurry of nisi frius practice, should decide the law on all these points correctly.

This case was tried on the first, sixth, eighth, ninth, eleventh, twelfth, fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth pleas. The first, sixth, eighth, ninth, fourteenth and fifteenth pleas will admit all the defence offered below. The eighth and ninth pleas would be sustained by the same testimony as. would be required by the twelfth and thirteenth, and the same testimon}^ would sustain the fourteenth as would be required to sustain the sixteenth.

It will only be necessary to notice the eighth, ninth and eleventh pleas to decide the legal points raised in relation to the pleadings, and the only question presented is whether a demurrer is rightly sustained to a replication or surrejoinder, which responds to a plea oí five years peaceable possession, or a rejoinder setting up the same fact, “ that the possession was not adverse,” or “ that the defendant held as bailee,” or “ that the negroes were loaned to defendant, and that he held them as such.”

Our statute prescribes that “ peaceable possession of slaves etc., for the space of five years shall be sufficient to give the possessor the right of property therein.”

It has been often ruled, and may be said to be settled law? that where a right of property is given by statute it is sufficient for the pleader to assert his claim in the words used by the lawmaking power. In this case, it is five years peaceable possession that gives title, and the defendant can only be required to plead five years peaceable possession, and can only be required to prove what he pleads. But what does the word possession, .when used in acts of limitation, mean?

It will hardly be contended that possession, as used generally in statutes of limitation, must not be adverse, or in other words, under claim of title, however unfounded that claim may be. Wood vs. Bucker, 2 Har. & M. Hen. R. 145; Callis vs. Totson, 7 Gill & Johnson's Md. R. 81; Art gel on Limitation, 829, 896, et seq.; Weeks vs. Weeks, 5 Iredel N. C. 111.

In regard to the statute under which this defence is interposed, this court held in Pryor vs. Ryburn, that Ryburn’s title was good, for the reason that his possession was adverse. Pryor vs. Ryburn, 16 Ark. 671. In Machin vs. Thompson, 16 Ark. 199, the possession was adverse, and the court seem to rely upon this in sustaining the case. In Crabtree vs. McDaniel, the answer says the defendant had “ continuous peaceable possession as his own property,” and the court say there was no evidence of any adverse claim. 17 Ark. 222. In Harriet vs. Swan, 18 Ark. 399, the defendant set up five years possession. The court say “ But the difficulty in the vray of that theory is the want of the indipensable prerequisite, adverse possession on her part. In Saddler et al. vs. Saddler, 16 Ark. 628, there was adverse possession. In Anderson vs. Du.nn, 19 Ark. 650, the court say, that under the general issue the defendant may have title to a slave by adverse possession and lapse of time.

The court seems, in all these cases, to have studiously avoided the raising of an inference that possession was sufficient if it was not adverse, while in Harriet vs. Swan, it is positively decided that the possession must be adverse. Was this question a new one we would have no difficultly in holding that a possession under another and not adverse to the true owner, would not be sufficient to sustain the defence.

Under this plea of peaceable possession for five years when possession was proven, it would be presumed to be adverse, unless the proof showed the contrary, and the finding such a plea proven would include the fact that the defendant had been in adverse possession for five years. The plaintiff, by a replication traversing the plea and concluding to the country, could introduce any proof which tended to show that the defendant did not have adverse possession. This court has ruled in several cases that a party is not prejudiced by a demurrer being sustained, when the same evidence which would support the pleading could be introduced under other pleading in the case.

The plaintiff replied to the eighth plea; first, traversing the plea and concluding to the country; second, the possession was not adverse; third, that the negroes were received by Raiford as a loan.

The defendant took issue to the first, demurred to the second, and filed three rejoinders to the third. The plaintiff filed surre-joinders to the second and third rejoinders, to one of which the defendant demurred. The court sustained the demurrer to the second replication and also the demurrer to the surrejoinder, and held chat it be held to reach back to and be sustained to the third replication.

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Related

Shelby v. Guy
24 U.S. 361 (Supreme Court, 1826)
Sumpter v. Tucker
14 Ark. 185 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1853)
Johnson v. Frank
16 Ark. 199 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1855)
Sadler v. Sadler
16 Ark. 628 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1856)
Pryor v. Ryburn
16 Ark. 671 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1856)
Crabtree v. McDaniel
17 Ark. 222 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1856)
Blackburn v. Morton
18 Ark. 384 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1857)
Jackson v. Bob
18 Ark. 399 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1857)
Anderson v. Dunn
19 Ark. 650 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1858)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ark. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-mcdonald-ark-1861.