Walker v. Watson's Admr.

152 S.W. 959, 151 Ky. 786, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 578
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 29, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 152 S.W. 959 (Walker v. Watson's Admr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Watson's Admr., 152 S.W. 959, 151 Ky. 786, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 578 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Turner

Reversing.

[787]*787In December, 1909, a negro man by the name of Biehard, or Dick Watson, died in Elliott County, Kentucky, intestate, aged about seventy years. He had never married and lived alone. He had accumulated some three hundred acres of valuable land, which he left at his death, together with several hundred dollars in personal property. An administrator was duly appointed and instituted this action to settle his estate. Two sets of claimants appeared in the action and filed pleadings claiming to be heirs at law of Watson. The. appellant, Jesse Walker, claiming to be his only brother, and the other party, Burgess and others, claiming to be' his brothers and sisters, or their heirs.

The lower court by its judgment found that neither set of claimants had by preponderance of evidence established their claims, and entered a judgment against both, Burgess and others appealed from that judgment and the same was affirmed by this court as to them (Burgess, et al. v. Walker, et al., 145 Ky., 559); but the court in the opinion expressly left open the question whether appellant, Walker, had established his claim.

Appellant asserts that the proper name of Bichard Watson was Biehard Walker, and that he and Bichard Walker were each the children of Jesse and Eliza Walker, who were slaves owned by John Walker, who lived at the mouth of Mill Creek on Troublesome Creek, now in Knott County, Kentucky. It was asserted by the other set of claimants that Biehard Watson’s proper name was Biehard Wallace, and that he was the son of Mariah Wallace of Lawrence County, Kentucky; it not' being claimed that there was any relationship between the Wallace claimants and the Walker claimant.

The claim of the Wallace’s having been disposed of,, it only remains to be seen whether appellant, Jesse • Walker, has established his relationship to Biehard Watson. Appellant testified that he was bom in 1844 or 1845 on Troublesome Creek, and that he was then owned by John Walker, a white man Who lived at that place, and that he was the son of Jesse and Eliza Walker, who were owned by John Walker, and that he had three brothers, Dick, Bill and John and four sisters, Susie,' Milla, Creeie and Adeline, all owned by John Walker; he says about the year 1860, he (appellant) was given by John Walker to his son Aleck Walker, who took him to Carter County, where he has ever since lived; that he [788]*788was small when his brother Richard wias sold about 1848. or 1849, and taken away, that his mother, brothers and sisters were all sold and taken away -at the same time, except himself and his brother Bill, and that being small-he did not remember who had bought him; that he had never seen his mother but once since, which was about five years before the giving of his deposition, having finally, located her in Tennessee, and that his mother told him that either Fred Moore or Bob Bates had bought Dick, and that the last -she heard of him, he was living with Rolla Watson in Elliott County, who had gotten him from Virginia. He says 'that Dick was the oldest child and that there were, two girls between him and Dick.

John H. Flanery, an ex-superintendent of Schools of Elliot County, states that he knew Dick Watson, and while witness was running a store in Elliott .County Dick frequently traded with him, and he talked to him- and that Dick told him his right name was Walker, and that was the name of the man that formerly owned him.

Lewis E. Ferguson states that he is a resident of Elliott County and knew Dick Watson and was friendly with him, and was present when one of the Wallace negroes claimed to be his brother, and Dick said he had a brother, but that was not the man.

Andy Adkins states in substance the same thing, and in addition, that Dick told him he remembered being at Fred Moore’s when he was a chunk of a boy, but did not remember what he said about how he came to be there.

Morge Baldridge states that he was seventy years old and was born and raised in Floyd County, and that he knew John Walker, who lived on Troublesome Creek, and was acquainted (with the Walker family. That he knew the colored woman named Eliza that belonged to John Walker, and that she was the mother of three boys, Dick, Jesse and Will, and that she also had’a girl; that Dick and the girl were sold and taken away, and that his recollection is, that Dick was the oldest boy. That about ten years previous to giving his deposition, he met Dick Watson in Grayson, Kentucky, which was the first time he had seen him since they were children, and that Dick told him that he lived on Newcomb Creek in Elliott County, that he was bom a slave of John Walker on Troublesome Creek, and that he spoke [789]*789of this in the conversation, and that made the witness know that he was Dick Walker that he had known when he was a boy; that he wanted witness to go home with him, ¡but he did not go; that he was present when Jesse Walker was given by John Walker to his son Aleck Walker; and that Alex thereafter brought Jesse to Carter County, ¡and that the other brother Will was given to Jim Walker; that Jesse and Dick resembled each other, but that Dick was a little darker than Jesse and not quite so tall.

Lewis Higgins, colored, states that he knew John Walker, and that he knew Taller Dick Combs and his mother Alcey, Combs; that Aloey had a boy named Jesse, but he was not the same man as Jesse Walker; that Alcey’s son Jesse was very light in color, and that Aloey herself was very light In- color, and that Jesse Walker’s mother was a very dark woman; that appellant only had two brothers, Dick and Bill.

Amanda Higgins, colored, states that she was raised in Letcher County, and was owned by a man by the name of Frances and then by a man named .Stamper. She knew Taller Dick Combs, Jesse Combs and the other Combs’; that their mother and Jesse Walker’s mother were different women, and that her information was that Jesse Walker had a brother named Dick and a brother named Bill, who were very dark; that she was a small girl (when she first got to going to John Walker’s, and that she knew all these boys and had danced with them all.

Thomas Frances ¡says that Taller Dick Combs ’ brother Jesse was killed in Perry County in the French and Eversole war.

John Watson .states he is a son of Holla Watson; .and that after the death of Holla Watson, some of his father’s papers came into his possession, and that among them was a bill of sale for a boy named Bichard, ten years of age, given by a man named Prater to his father, but that the paper was now lost; that Jesse Walker and Dick Watson resembled each other, although Dick was darker than Jesse.

B. J. Ferguson says that he knew Dick Watson and Jesse Walker, and that they resembled each other, but Dick was darker than Jesse.

Sallie Ferguson states that she is a stepdaughter of Bolla Watson, and lived in his home with him, and frequently read papers to him; that Bolla Watson, Sr., could not read writing very well, and she remembers of read[790]*790ing to Mm among other things, the hill of sale, the paper which he referred to as the4 4 deed for Dick. ” The papier was in the shape of ¡a deed or something like that, and was from a man by the name of Jim Prater to Rolla ‘Watson, and assigned to Watson a negro boy named Richard.

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Related

Burgess v. Walker
140 S.W. 1041 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 959, 151 Ky. 786, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-watsons-admr-kyctapp-1913.