Turner v. Campbell

1 Patton & Heath 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Patton & Heath 256 (Turner v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Campbell, 1 Patton & Heath 256 (Va. Ct. App. 1855).

Opinion

GILMER, J.

This case has been before the Court of Appeals, and is reported in 3 Grat. 77. After the case went back from that court, the plaintiffs in the Circuit Court filed a supplemental bill, for the purpose of putting in issue the title to Fanny, one of the children of Lucy, named in the original bill of sale from Turner to Rag-land ; and also that to one of her children named Lewis, born after the date of the bill of sale. The judge of the Circuit Court decreed, that Fanny and Lewis belonged to the estate of Richard Turner, and *that they should be divided with his other slaves. The appeal brings up the question of the correctness of that decree. The difference between the title set up to Lucy and the other slaves which were in controversy in the original suit, and that to Fanny and Lewis is, that Shelton Ragland, on the 1st of November, 1811, executed a paper in these words:

“I do hereby relinquish my right to a negro girl, named Fanny, to Elizabeth Turner, of the county of Caroline, for and in consideration of fort3r-five pounds, to me in hand paid.”

The first question that presents itself is, what is the true character and meaning of this paper? It is not in the common form of a bill of sale ; it does not purport upon its face to convey to Elizabeth a negro; no bargain and sale are set forth, and there is no warranty of title: but it purports to be a relinquishment by Ragland to her, of his right to the negro. The first enquiry, then, is, what was that right thus relinquished? what did Ragland part with? what did Elizabeth Turner acquire? Let the facts in the record answer the question. In October, 1806, Richard Turner, the father of the said Elizabeth, conveyed, by bill of sale, absolute on its face, the said slaves, Lucy and Fanny, to Shelton Ragland. The intention of Turner, as is proved beyond all controversy (and as the Court of Appeals decided, in 3 Grat., above referred to), was to protect his negroes from his creditors, by pretending to sell them to Ragland, under a secret trust for the benefit of his wife and children. It is also proved, beyond all doubt, that Ragland took possession of the negroes, and agreed to hold them, under the secret trust aforesaid. It is also proved that he was a man of integrity and truth, and that he regretted, after the bill of sale had been made to him by Turner, that he had permitted it to be done: he over and over again disclaimed all title to the slaves, and stated that he only held them under the trust. Soon after the bill of sale was made, the negroes were sent to Rag-land, and remained there *a few days, and it is not proved that he ever had possession of any of them afterwards — - much less is it proved that he had possession of Fanny at the time when this relinquishment was made, or that he ever delivered possession of her to Elizabeth Turner. Not only is it proved that he disclaimed title, on many occasions, to the negroes, but it is also proved that on his death-bed he solemnly did so again, in the presence of witnesses, and said he had given them up. This disclaimer applied to all the slaves in controversy, and especially to Lucy and Fanny, for they are named in the bill of sale, and, as before stated, were both, shortly after its date, returned by Ragland to Turner; it was a declaration against the interest of Ragland, and made in solemn form, and therefore should have full credit.

These are some of the circumstances by which the parties were surrounded when this transaction took place, and they are sufficient to show what claim Ragland set up to Fanny when he executed the paper relinquishing his right to her to Elizabeth Turner. He had nominally, it is true, the legal title — what is, in common parlance, in the country, called “the right” — but he in fact only claimed to act as trustee. Fanny was at the time in possession of Mrs. Frances Turner, the widow of Richard Turner, who, under the secret trust, was entitled to all the negroes during her life, and Elizabeth, who was then quite young, and unmarried, was (so far as the proof discloses) living with her mother. My understanding of this paper is, that Ragland, wishing, most probably, to carry out some family arrangement, agreed to let Elizabeth keep Fanny, and executed the paper for the purpose of binding himself not to exercise his authority under his “right” (bill of sale), by taking her away from her; thus permitting her to hold Fanny in subordination to the trust. Rag-land had no right to sell under the secret trust: he could only have acquired the right by claiming, not under, but against it — and this, I am satisfied, he never did, or intended to do, for such an act and intention are contradicted, *not only by his declarations, but by his acts up to the time of his death. By this construction, Ragland’s conduct and declarations are consistent with each other and with his character; but they would be rendered, by the construction- contended for by the appellants, wholly irreconcilable.

Ragland held an absolute bill of sale for Lucy, and, after the death of Richard Turner, he hired her to his widow for a year, calling her, in his letter, “his negro woman, Lucy,” and yet the Court-of Appeals decided, with this evidence before it, that Lucy belonged to the estate of Richard Turner, on the ground that Ragland had admitted that he claimed under the trust. I think there is stronger ground for claiming Lucy as the property of Ragland than for claiming Fanny — -there is no more proof that he ever received the for Fanny than that he received the $10 for the hire of [543]*543Lucy, and I have no idea that he ever received any part of either. The bill of sale from Turner to Ragland for Lucy and Fanny is for ninety pounds, and the relinquishment by Ragland of his right to Fanny purports to be for forty-five pounds, just half that amount. The appellants here have got the full benefit of the secret trust (of which the3r express, in their answer, so much ignorance and such horror), by receiving their portion of the slaves under the division — all of which, but for the trust, would have belonged to Ragland’s estate, and it is too late now for them to set up this defence: they cannot be allowed thus to claim under and against it, to repudiate the trust as to Fanny, and to claim under it as to all the other slaves. The possession of Elizabeth Turner was (as is said in the case in 3 Grat.) the possession of one of several co-cestuis que trust, who had been, in part, at least, supported by the trust slaves. She got possession from the trustee, who claimed in that character alone, and being one of the cestuis que trust, participating in the trust fund, she must be held to have had notice of the trust.

If I am right in what has been said, the appellant *cannot be protected by the statute of limitations. I can see no principle on which the statute can be applied to bar the claim to Fanny, that would not as well have applied to bar the claim set up in the original suit to Lucy — they were conveyed at the same time, by the same bill of sale, under the same trust from Turner to Ragland, and I have already stated that Turner’s claim to Lucy was more unequivocal in its terms than that to Fanny. That claim alone would have vested the title in Ragland, had it been made against the trust, much more would the claim and his long possession, taken together; for if his claim had been adverse to the trust, as it appeared to be, Mrs. Turner’s possession of the slaves, claiming under him, would have been his possession, and was long enough to have vested the title in him by the statute; yet the Court of Appeals decided, in the former suit, that the negroes belonged to Turner’s estate. I do not think the case of Huston’s adm’r v. Cantril et ais., 11 Leigh, 136, applies to this case.

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1 Patton & Heath 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-campbell-vactapp-1855.