State v. . Bennett

20 N.C. 170
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 20 N.C. 170 (State v. . Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Bennett, 20 N.C. 170 (N.C. 1838).

Opinion

On behalf of the prosecution it was proved that Benjamin Curry, a free man of color, was living in the house mentioned in the indictment, and cultivating the land on which it was situated, and on the day of the alleged trespass was ploughing in oats near the house; that he bought the land about twelve years before, about which time he also bought the negro woman Phillis, who was his wife and the mother of the other slaves; that he lived on the land ever since he bought it, during all which time, with the exception of a few weeks, he had possession of the *Page 136 negroes and other personal property, up to the time of the trespass; that on the day of the alleged trespass the defendant Bennett, in company (172) with the other defendants, came to the house in the possession of Curry, and in despite of his repeated remonstrances, violently took and carried away the negroes and other personal property, and forcibly ejected Curry from the house, and put Hix, one of the defendants, in possession of it, who resided there until a few weeks before the trial, when he left the premises unoccupied.

The defense was put upon the ground that Curry was not in possession, and the defendants' counsel stated that they expected to prove that Bennett was in possession, for that Curry had sold the land, negroes, and other property to him, and executed deeds therefor, and that afterwards was surrendered to Bennett, and that he, to continue his own possession, placed these negroes there to live, and gave permission to Curry to stay there as a guest or lodger, or as his agent or overseer, he, Curry, taking care of the property in consideration of this permission to live with his wife and children. The defendants' counsel then read in evidence three deeds from Curry to Bennett, for the land, negroes, and other property in question. This evidence was objected to by the Solicitor General of the State. The defendants' counsel then introduced two witnesses, Hunt and Newsom, who gave evidence tending to establish the facts alleged in the defense.

The Solicitor General then stated that he had much evidence to offer, but being aware that it would be objected to, he would ask permission to state it to the court, that he might obtain the opinion of the court whether the whole or any part of it was admissible. He was requested to state it, which he did as follows: That the defendants' witness Hunt, and one Lindsay, had some time before the executions of the deeds by Curry to Bennett, by means of usury and extortion, obtained from Curry evidence of debt to a considerable amount, secured by a deed of trust, fraudulently obtained, upon Curry's land and negroes; that Lindsay and Hunt caused the trustee to advertise the negroes for sale, and that Curry, under great apprehension that his wife and children would be sold and carried out of the State, applied to the defendant Bennett for assistance; that Bennett promised him that if he would put the negroes in pawn to him, Bennett, he would stand his security and enable him to (173) enjoin the sale and bring Hunt and Lindsay to a fair settlement; that while Curry was resting easy under this assurance, Bennett, would came to a secret understanding with Lindsay; that he, Bennett, would buy the negroes from Curry with Lindsay's claims, and Lindsay agreed to wait with him until he could send the negroes off and sell them; that a few days before the sale under the trust was to take place Lindsay refused to stand to his agreement with Bennett, upon which Bennett *Page 137 informed Curry that he could not assist him as he had promised; whereupon Curry took the negroes and carried them to Greensborough, and applied to counsel to have a bill of injunction prepared against Lindsay and Hunt; that Lindsay and Hunt, hearing of this, went to Bennett and agreed to take one hundred dollars less for their claims than had been before agreed upon if he would hasten off and prevent Curry from filing his bill, and induce him to return with the negroes; that Bennett accordingly posted off to Greensborough, and by artful representations and fair promises of assistance, prevailed upon Curry to return with the negroes; that on the day of the sale, and just before the sale was to take place, Bennett procured Curry to execute the deeds above-mentioned, with an understanding that Bennett would bring Hunt and Lindsay to a fair settlement, and also that if Curry should pay to Bennett in twelve months the balance he, Bennett, should have to pay on the claims of Hunt and Lindsay, then the negroes and all the other property should be re-conveyed to Curry, and in the meantime he, Curry, should retain the possession; that Curry believed that all this was expressed in the deeds; that on the same day Lindsay handed over to Bennett all the evidences of debt and surrendered to him the deeds of trust, Bennett giving him his bond for the amount last agreed on. That some short time afterwards Bennett told Lindsay that Curry was determined to file a bill and expose all his usury and frauds, and moreover that Curry alleged that one of the notes was a forgery; that Lindsay thereupon agreed to compromise upon almost any terms, and finally surrendered to Bennett the bond which he, Bennett, had given him, endorsed "received and satisfied in full," and took from him a bond for less than one-fourth of the amount of the former to be paid when Bennett should sell the negroes. That all this was transacted before Bennett committed (174) the alleged forcible trespass.

The defendants' counsel objected to all this evidence. The court was of opinion that only such parts of it as tended to explain the possession and to show whether the possession was in Curry or Bennett, were admissible, as the title of the land was not at issue; and the court excluded all the evidence relative to what had been done and transacted before Bennett undertook to assist Curry, and also excluded all the evidence as to what took place between Bennett and Lindsay after the execution of the deeds by Curry, and the surrender of the trusts and evidences of debt by Lindsay and Bennett. The Solicitor then called the witnesses, who stated the transactions, substantially as set forth by the Solicitor between the time when Bennett undertook to assist Curry, and the execution of the deeds, and the surrender of the trust and evidences of debt. *Page 138

The defendants' counsel, in the argument, insisted that forcible trespass could not be committed unless the person in possession had some estate in the property, and moved the court to charge that unless the jury were satisfied that Curry had an estate in the property they should find for the defendants.

His Honor charged that to sustain the indictment the State must prove that Curry was in possession of the house, negroes, and other property; that being so in possession and being actually present, he was forcibly and with a strong hand deprived of the possession by the defendants; that in this indictment it was a matter of indifference who had the title, for the law forbids even the owner of property forcibly to take that property from the possession of another who was present, because of its tendency to a breach of the peace; and that the reason why the defendants had been permitted to read in evidence the deeds under which Bennett claimed was not to enable the jury to decide who had the title to the property, but to explain the possession and enable the jury to decide whether in point of fact at the time of the alleged trespass Bennett or Curry was in possession.

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87 S.E. 532 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1916)
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72 S.E. 7 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.C. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bennett-nc-1838.