Whitehorn v. Hines

1 Va. 557
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 4, 1810
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. 557 (Whitehorn v. Hines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehorn v. Hines, 1 Va. 557 (Va. 1810).

Opinion

The Judges pronounced their opinions.

JUDGE TUCKER.

This is a bill to set aside 'a conveyance of lands and negroes, made the 20th of February, 1783, by William Howell to his cousin John Clanton, both deceased, on the grounds stated in the bill.

The bill states, that “Howell, from the time of his birth to the time of his death, laboured under a lamentable and invincible weakness of understanding and intellect, which rendered him absolutely incapable of regulating his own affairs, and classed him, with propriety, among those who are called idiots;” that this was universally, known, and assented to, by all who knew him; that, soon after he arrived at the age of twenty-one, his cousin John Clanton, to-whom his situation had been long and perfectly known, induced him, although he had a sister then living, who is one of the complainants, to execute a deed, for all his lands and slaves, as his absolute property and estate, for the incompetent consideration of finding and providing for him sufficient and plentiful meat, drink, washing, lodging and clothing, in a comfortable and plentiful manner, during the said Howell’s, life, or remaining abatchelor; as will more fully appear by the deed, in which there is. the following clause, not mentioned, or in any way noticed in the bill; “Provided nevertheless, and it is hereby agreed on by and between the parties to these presents, to be the true intent and meaning of these presents, that, in case the said William Howell shall hereafter intermarry, that the estate above conveyed, as well land as slaves, with the increase of the said slaves, shall revert unto the said Howell and his wife, during their joint and several lives; and, in case the said Howell shall have lawful issue, that the said estate, and every part thereof, shall be subject to his disposal among them, by deed or will; or, in case of his failing to make such distribution, then it shall pass, and go, and descend agreeably to the act of Assembly, in case of his dying intestate; but if no such issue, the same to revert to Clanton and his heirs, after the death of Howell and his wife.” The bill then proceeds to state that, after this deed had been thus fraudulently obtained from an unfortunate and wretched being, who was ignorant of its operation, the said Clanton having had the same, after several ineffectual attempts, proved and recorded, treated Howell as a vagabond and outcast, and a slave; and, in 577 *order to manifest, more plainly, the palpable and infamous fraud practised on this occasion by the said Clanton-, the complainants aver and offer to prove that the deed above mentioned when offered, at first and several times after, to the Court for probate, was rejected by the Court, and not permitted to be recorded, from their individual knowledge of the facts before stated; and after stating some other circumstances not material to be noticed in [229]*229this part of the cause, they pray that the Court may declare and render null to all intents and purposes the aforesaid fraudulent deed, &c.

The answer of Sarah Whitehorn, who was the wife of John Clanton, saith, that the complainants are very much mistaken in the representation which they have made; that Howell was about nineteen or twenty when his mother died; and she avers that, for several years before his mother’s death, he had been afflicted with sores and ulcers which sometimes covered a great part of his body; that he continued in that situation, or worse, until he died, which was about the year 1789; that, when the ulcers dried, as they occasionally did, his bodily pains and afflictions seemed to increase. She believes that the ulcers rose inwardly, because there were frequent discharges of matter from his mouth and nose; which will account for his unsightly appearance, and the society in which he might sometimes been seen: that he was afflicted in this way when he came to live with her deceased husband Clanton; that, when at home, he always dined with the family when he pleased, and was lodged as comfortably as his diseased condition would admit; that he Was not an idiot, as the complainants suppose. It is true that, from continued and excessive affliction, his mind was impaired ; but he generally had understanding enough, not only to preserve his person from mischief, but to converse rationally and sociably, and to guard against any decepition or advantage which others might be disposed to take of him. She further saith, that the said William proposed to the said John to make such a conveyance as is •contained in the deed, several times before it was actually executed; that that deed, as well as the one which the complainants alluded to as having been rejected when offered for record, is attested by David Mason ; that which is dated the first of October, 1783, (which is admitted by consent, and appears at the end of this record,) was not recorded, because, as she has been told, it was thought to be informal, ¿78 *and not because there was any suspicion of advantage. She adds; that the bargain was, in her estimation, a proper one, because the confinement, to which his disease often condemned him, would have made it inconvenient, if not impracticable, for him to manage his estate.

About two thirds of the witnesses (of whom there are near thirty) testify either their own, or the general opinion of the neighbourhood, that Howell was a person of extremely weak intellect; but it was conceded by the appellees’ counsel that there is no proof that he was an idiot. The rest of the witnesses corroborate the account given of him in the answer. There is, however, this obvious distinction between the answer and the depositions taken in support of the bill. The answer states facts; the latter, in general, opinions only. If it be objected, that the answer is not entitled to the same credit as the deposition of a witness, who is supposed to be disinterested ; there are circumstances apparent upon this record, that, in my opinion, place this answer, in point of credibility, upon very high ground. Hirst, it is perfectly responsive to the bill, and stands uncontradicted even by a shadow of evidence, in a most material point, which I shall hereafter notice. Secondly, it appears from the will of John Clanton (among the exhibits) that his widow, upon her marriage with the defendant Whitehorn, forfeited every provision made for her in Clanton’s will. She, therefore, is presumably a defendant without interest in the cause, whose answer, where it is responsive to the bill, is thereby entitled to the utmost credit; especially, where it stands uncontradicted as to the fact alleged.. It states, then, in my opinion, in a very candid manner, a good and sufficient inducement to the contract on the part of Howell. Helpless and forlorn, as he appears to have been, from the whole current of the testimony, it was certainly an object with him (if he had any intellect at all) to secure to himself, during his miserable existence, 1 ‘sufficient and plentiful meat, drink, washing, lodging, and clothing, in a comfortable and plentiful manner.” These are the cogent inducements to the bargain, and some of the considerations (and certainly the principal) mentioned in the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehorn-v-hines-va-1810.