Yarbrough v. Arnold

20 Ark. 592
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 20 Ark. 592 (Yarbrough v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yarbrough v. Arnold, 20 Ark. 592 (Ark. 1859).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Replevin for a slave named Tom, brought in the Ouachita Circuit Court, by Rufus E. Arnold and wife, Wildred 31., and Joel, Samuel, and Malcome M. Burlce, minors, by Arnold, as their guardian, against Wm. Yarbrough. The suit was commenced in August, 1853, and the slave sued for is described in the declaration as being a man of dark complexion, and about twenty-five years of age. The case was tried upon the pleas of non detinet, and property in defendant, verdict for plaintiffs, motion for new trial overruled, bill of exceptions, and appeal by defendant.

During the progress of the cause in the court below, the death of Mrs. Arnold was suggested, and the suit as to her abated. She was the daughter, and the minor appellees were the sons of Lucy Ann, wife of Dr. Virgil J. Burke.

On the trial, the appellees introduced a deed of trust, executed in Noxubee county, Mississippi, by Samuel Burke, in March, 1840, by which he conveyed to Nathaniel Glover, as trustee, certain slaves, and among them one described as a hoy Thomas, aged 12 years, for the use of Lucy Ann, wife of Dr. Burke, during her life, remainder to her children, etc. The deed purports to have been acknowledged by the grantor, before a Circuit Judge, and recorded in Noxubee county, etc.

Glover, the trustee, was sworn as a witness, and stated that he saw the deed executed, etc. The grantor resided in Kentucky, but was on a visit to Mississippi, at the time witness purchased for him, at his request, a negro woman and her children, named in the deed, etc. While the deed was being drawn by the judge, witness heard the grantor state to the judge that he had two boys named Tom, and he thought he would put one of them in the deed; and when the deed was read to witness, and before he signed it as trustee, a boy Tom, was named in it, etc. He accepted the trust, and the woman and children were delivered to him, but the boy Tom was not, ne never saw him, and knew nothing of him. Did not know that the grantor had any other negroes in Mississippi than the woman and children. Dr. Burke, was, at that time, improvident, and very much embarrassed, etc. Some three years after, witness was riding by the house of Dr. Burke, in Noxubee county, stopped at the gate, and while there, sitting on his horse, he saw a negro man, apparently grown, of black color, passing through a large gate into the field, and Dr. Burke, or some of the family, remarked that that was the boy Tom mentioned in the deed — witness did not stop at Dr. Burke’s on business connected with the deed. Did not speak to the boy, or notice him particularly — only saw he was black — whether that was the boy Tom, named in the deed, witness knew nothing except what was told him by Dr. Burke, or some of the family, as before stated. About nine years after, in Arkansas, Rufus E. Arnold pointed out to witness a negro man, who, he said, was the boy Tom mentionedyn the deed, which witness believed was the same negro pointed out to him by Dr. Burke, or some of his family, as before stated, as being the boy Tom mentioned in the deed; though witness did not think he should have recognized the boy if he had not been pointed out to him. The only means he had of identifying the boy as the same was that he was of black color.

(1.) “ The appellant objected to so much of the testimony of Glover as was founded on the declarations of Dr. Burke, or his family, as to the boy pointed out to the witness as the boy mentioned in the deed, but the court overruled the objection.”

(2.) Against the objection of the appellant, the appellees were permitted to read in evidence two bills of sale; the first executed by Lucy Ann Burke, 15th March, 1850, in Ouachita county, by which she sold and conveyed to Elizabeth C. Pouder, “a certain negro boy slave by the name of Tom, about nineteen years old,” etc. The second bill of sale was executed by Elizabeth C. Pouder, and her husband, 2d January, 1852, to appellant, Yarbrough, for “ slave named Tom.”

The deputy sheriff, who executed the writ of replevin, proved that he found in possession of the appellant a negro man named Tom, of dark color, about twenty-five years of age. tie had seen the same negro in possession of Dr. Burke, in 1849, and afterwards in possession of Dr. Burke, in 1849, and afterwards in possession of Dr. Pouder, (the husband of Elizabeth C. Pouder.)

It was also proven that Mrs. Lucy Ann Burke had departed this life, and that Mrs. Arnold, and the minor appellees were her children, etc.

(3 ) The bill of exceptions states that in an early stage of the trial, the appellees offered to read in evidence a book called Hutchinson’s Mississippi Code, the title page of which was as follows: “ Code of Mississippi, being an analytical compilation of the public and general Statutes of the Territory and State, with tabular reference to the local and private acts, from 1798 to 1848, with the National and State Constitutions, cessions of the country by the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians, and acts of Congress for the survey and sale of the lands, and granting donations thereof to the State — by A. Hutchinson, Jackson, Mississippi; published for the compiler by Price and Fall, State printers, 1848.”

The appellees also offered to read in evidence another book, the title page of which was as follows: “ The Revised Code of the Laws of Mississippi, in which are comprised all such acts of the General Assembly of a public nature, as ivere in force at the end of the year 1823, with a general index, published according to an act of the General Assembly, entitled an act declaring what laws of a public nature shall be incorporated in the Revised Code, and providing for the publication thereof, passed June 30th, 1822, and an act supplemental thereto, passed January 21sf 1823 — Natches: printed by Francis Burke, 1824.”

And it was agreed by the parties (the bill of exceptions farther states) that the books referred to should be taken as if set out in extenso in the bill of exceptions, and read upon the final hearing of the cause.

To the reading of which books as evidence of the laws of Mississippi, the appellant objected, but the court overruled the objection, and permitted the books to be read.

The appellant introduced no evidence upon the trial.

(4.) The appellant asked the court to give to the jury ten instructions, all of which the court gave but the 5th, 8th and 9th.

The 5th is as follows: “ The plaintiff -must prove to the satisfaction of the jury beyond a rational doubt that the boy Tom, mentioned in the declaration, and the one mentioned in the said deed (of trust) are one and the same.”

The substance of the 8th and 9th instructions is that the plaintiff, claiming the slave under a deed of trust executed in Mississippi, it was necessary for it to be recorded in the county in this State into which the slave was brought, in order to defeat the title of a person purchasing the slave in good faith, without notice, etc.

1. By a provision of the deed of trust, the trustee was authorized to permit the slaves to remain in possession of Mrs. Burke, for the maintenance and education of her children, etc. The remark of Dr.

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20 Ark. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarbrough-v-arnold-ark-1859.