Thompson v. Berry

26 Tex. 263
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 Tex. 263 (Thompson v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Berry, 26 Tex. 263 (Tex. 1862).

Opinion

Bell, J.

This suit was instituted in the District Court for McLennan county, by the appellee, John W. Berry, on the 2d ■day of June, A. D. 1856, to recover certain negro slaves from the possession of one Burwell J. Thompson.

Burwell J. Thompson filed his answer to the petition, claiming the slaves as his own property. He alleged in his answer that the slaves in controversy were the separate property of Milly Berry, (the mother of the plaintiff below,) in the State (then Territory) <of Arkansas, as early as the year 1830; that in the year 1831-, [264]*264the said Milly Berry removed with the said slaves into the State of Coahuila and Texas; that by the laws of Coahuila and Texas, the said slaves became, or were about to become, free; that in the year 1832 or 1833, the said Milly Berry smuggled the negroes into the State of Louisiana, where they were seized as contraband ;” and that about the time of their seizure, the said Milly Berry executed a bill of sale of all of said slaves, and delivered them into the possession of him, the said Burwell J. Thompson, and that he had ever since owned the said slaves, and held continuous, peaceable and adverse possession of them. On the 21st of October, A. D. 1857, the plaintiff below amended his petition, alleging that in the year 1855, and for many years previous thereto, the negroes in controversy were in the possession of one John H. Thompson, in the State of Louisiana. He alleged John H. Thompson to be a transient person. He stated further, that about the 27th day of February, A. D. 1855, he instituted suit against the said John H. Thompson, in the District Court for the parish of Sabine, in said State of Louisiana, for the recovery of said negroes, and sued out a writ of sequestration for the purpose of sequestering them to await the determination of the suit; and that the sheriff was prevented from serving the said writ of sequestration by the fraudulent acts of the said John H. Thompson. He alleged that the said John H. Thompson concealed the said negroes, and caused them to be brought into the State of Texas, and delivered into the possession of the defendant, Burwell J. Thompson; and he charged that John H. Thompson and Burwell J. Thompson were combining to defraud him, &e. He asked that John H. Thompson might be made a party defendant to the suit. Citation was issued to John H. Thompson, and was served on him on the 22d of October, 1857. On the 19th of March, A. D. 1858, the said John H„ Thompson filed what he styled his plea of intervention, in which (amongst other things) he alleged that John Berry, the father of the plaintiff, on the 17th of June, 1830, in the then Territory of Arkansas, entered into a marriage contract with Milly Wilborne,, the mother of the plaintiff, whereby he conveyed to the said Milly the slaves in controversy and others; that John Berry and Milly Wilborne married, and that the negroes became the separate pro,[265]*265perty of the said Milly; that John Berry died, and the said Milly being then a feme sole, conveyed the said negroes to him, the. said John II. Thompson, on the 23d of February, A. D. 1833; that he had possession of the said slaves so conveyed to him by Milly Berry in the State of Louisiana for many years; and that he caused them to be brought, openly and without any concealment to Texas, and placed in the possession of his agent, Burwell J. Thompson.

On the same 19th of March, A. D. 1858, Burwell J. Thompson, the original defendant, filed an amended answer, in which he alleged that so much of his former answer as set up title in himself to the negroes in controversy, was filed by mistake,; that the negroes belonged to John II. Thompson, and that he held them as agent for the said John H. Thompson. The defendants in the court below relied upon the statute of limitations of this State, and upon the prescription growing out of twenty years possession in the State of Louisiana.

The plaintiff in the court below proved that he was the only child of John Berry and his wife Milly Berry; that the- negroes in controversy were the separate property of his father, John Berry; that his father, John Beiry, died sometime in the year 1833; that his mother, Milly, died in the year 1840. There was some diversity in the testimony as to the time of the birth of the plaintiff, John W. Berry; but the evidence seems to establish that he was born in the town of Nacogdoches, in the month of February, A. D. 1832, though the fact is not material to the present suit, in the view we take of the ease.

It was shown upon the trial that the plaintiff instituted his suit, in Sabine parish, in the State of Louisiana, in February, 1855, against John II. Thompson, for the recovery of the slaves in controversy ; that a writ of sequestration was issued and was returned by the sheriff without being served, the sheriff stating in his return that the negroes could not be found; and further, that the Louisiana suit was dismissed in November, 1856, for want of prosecution by the plaintiff.

Upon the trial the defendant, John H. Thompson, introduced in [266]*266evidence what purported to he the last will and testament of John Berry, the father of the plaintiff in the court below. This will appears to have been admitted to probate by the alcalde of Nacogdoches, on the 10th of August, A. D. 1833. In the copy qf the will contained in the transcript before us, it purports to have been executed on the 27th day of December, A. D. eighteen hundred and thirty, which, if the instrument be genuine, must be a mistake. This will “bequeaths and donates” all the testator’s personal and real estate to his wife Milly and his son John W. Berry, “ being equally divided between them.” After naming two persons, the “ true and trusty friends ” of the testator, to divide his estate between his wife and son, the will uses these words: “ giving to them their equal parts, likewise their heirs or assigns'; and if either of the above mentioned, Milly Berry or John W. Berry, should die, the whole of said estate shall fall to the surviving one.” This will was introduced in evidence by the defendant, John H. Thompson, for the purpose of deducing from it the conclusion that one half of the testator’s property vested absolutely in Milly Berry, by virtue of the will, and that her conveyance of the negroes to him was therefore valid. We do not propose to discuss the question'how far the court below was bound to notice this will in the state of the pleadings, introduced, as it was, without any notice, and without any explanation of what had been done in pursuance ■of it, and after the defendant had averred that Milly Berry became possessed of the negroes in controversy by virtue of a marriage contract. The least that can be said, by way of disposing of any claim of the appellant by virtue of this will, is, that it was in contravention of law at the time it was made and probated; that it could only be valid, at the most, for the testator’s disposable portion, which, as he left a son, was one-fifth; and that any one claiming property through Mrs. Berry under it, must show that the property so claimed was no more than the testator’s disposable portion. This is not shown in this case. There is no acquiescence 'in the will by the son, John W. Berry, shown, if any could be-shown, that would be binding on him. We therefore leave the will out of our further consideration, and come to the main qués[267]*267tion in the case. This question arises upon the proper construction of the 4th section of the Act of the 16th of February, 1852, Oldham & White’s Digest, art. 1360.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Tex. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-berry-tex-1862.