Wallace v. Burden

Hemphill, Ch. J.

The plaintiff claims Esther, the slave in controversy, by virtue of a gift or sale to herself by her father, Parker S. Doss, of Hilly, the mother of said slave. The instrument of gift or sale was executed in 1821 or 1822. The plaintiff lived with her father until 1829, when, at the age of twenty-two years, she intermarried with Willis S. Wallace, who departed this life in 1853, some months before the commencement of this suit. The woman Hilly remained in the possession of the father subsequent to the gift, and was left in his possession after the marriage of the plaintiff, though for what reason she was so left is not known to the witnesses ; one of them says that the father had several slaves, and had no need of the services of the girl Hilly ; that he knows no reason why she should have been left, unless that Mr. Wallace had several servants of his own, and had no need of her services ; that the father acknowledged the claim of the plaintiff to the girl Hilly ; what became of her during the twenty-five years which intervened between the marriage of plaintiff and *469the inception of this suit, does not distinctly appear, except that the last time he saw Hilly she was in the possession of the plaintiff, after the death of her father about one year, by will. From this it appears that the plaintiff was at one time holding Hilly under the will of her father ; but when this was, is not shown. This is not intended as a full statement of the facts of the case, but a reference to such only as will suffice to render the points in the Opinion intelligible.

If it be admitted that the fact of the gift in 1821 or 1822 was established by sufficient or competent proof, it must follow, from the evidence, that the plaintiff went into possession and control of the woman Hilly on her (the plaintiff’s) arriving at age ; and if so, on her marriage a year afterwards, the property, by the Common Law, (admitted to be in force in Tennessee, the place of the marriage,) vested immediately and absolutely in her husband. (2 Kent, Com. 143 ; Coke Litt. 351, b.; 27 Ala. 117, 118 ; Bright, Hus. and Wife 34 ; 6 Humphreys ; Bacon’s Abridgment, 479.)

It may be admitted that during the minority of the plaintiff, the possession was with her father as her natural guardian. But even then, it seems that he refused to hire the woman, without the consent of his daughter. This might happen in some cases, out of mere indulgence in a parent, to gratify the whim or caprice of a child, with the idea of property of its own, without intention of a gift; but the act of the parent, under the circumstances of this case, cannot but be considered as an acknowledgment of right in the plaintiff. Admitting, then, his possession as guardian during her minority, his control and possession would cease on her arriving at age. There is nothing in the proof to show that she did not control the slave at the time of her marriage, or that she might not have exercised such control at her pleasure. The father, according to the evidence, admitted Hilly to be the property of the plaintiff. There is nothing to show that the father, at the time of the plaintiff’s marriage, had any such actual possession, *470under legal right, say for instance by hiring from the daughter for the year, as would have prevented the husband from taking immediate, actual and absolute possession. Even if there had been any such obstacle to immediate, actual possession, yet such impediment could not be presumed to have continued for twenty-four years, or during the life of the husband.

The plaintiff contends that her husband never did reduce Milly into possession, and that she is entitled to her, and, consequently, to Esther, her daughter, by survivorship. We do not intend any elaborate investigation of the Common Law doctrine of the right of the wife by survivorship. The law on this subject is foreign—is not and never was recognized as of force in this State, and it is not necessary to trace it further than to ascertain the correct rule for the decision of the immediate cause. We will refer to some cases, and we believe it will appear that where the wife has the right of immediate, absolute possession, the property vests in the husband.

In Sausey v. Gardner, 2 Hill, South Ca. 192, a negro child, named Phillis, was allotted to the wife in the distribution of her father’s estate. The wife and husband were present at the division, and the husband declined taking the child from her mother on account of her tender years, but left her with the executor: Held that if the possession of the executor, after partition, was for the wife, then it was her possession, consequently her husband’s, and his marital rights would attach. She had a clear legal estate, and a right to immediate possession in severalty, and no act on the part of the husband was necessary to complete his title. It was also held that the husband having the legal possession, and declining to take the child, and leaving it with the executor, constituted the latter his agent, and his actual possession was that of the. husband. The Court referred to Davis v. Rhame, 1 McCord, Chan. R., 195, in which on actual partition, and negroes allotted to a minor and placed in possession of her guardian, it was held that the possession of the guardian was that of the minor, and con*471sequently that of her after taken husband. (See also 2 Nott and McCord, 151, note a ; 1 Hill, S. Ca. Chan. Rep. 397.)

The right of the wife, by survivorship, has been discussed in numerous cases in English and American Courts, and there appears to be considerable diversity of opinion. As a proof of this diversity, I will refer to Mason v. McNeill’s Executor, 23 Ala. 201, in which it was held that where counsel are retained by husband and wife jointly to sue for and recover the wife’s property, and a decree therefor is rendered in their joint names, if the husband dies before the execution of the decree by a delivery of the property to him, or to some person who holds for Mm, as bailee, the wife is entitled to it as property never reduced into the husband’s possession. In this case the English and some of the American authorities were reviewed, and other cases in the Supreme Court of Alabama were particularly scrutinized, and it was shown that there had been much conflict of opinion on the question of the wife’s right by survivorship. This was no doubt intended as an authoritative decision on the point, but in Gibson v. Land, 27 Alabama 117, it was announced by one of "the Judges that he did not consider himself committed by the reasoning or decision in the ^ase above cited, viz : Mason v. McNeill, 23 Ala. 201. (See 4 Iredell, Eq. 76—385 ; 1 Kelly, 367 ; 1 Ashmead, 323 : 2 Ashmead, 455 : 2 Richardson, Equity ; 5 Johns. Chan. Rep. 197.)

Amidst the great diversity of opinion, it is believed that in no case has a doctrine in opposition to the principle announced in Sausey v. Gardner, 1 Hill, So. Ca. 192, been maintained, viz : That where a wife has a clear legal estate in a personal chattel and the right to immediate possession in severalty, the marital rights of the husband would attach, and no act is necessary to complete his title.

On the proof in this case, the plaintiff, at her marriage, had •the clear legal estate in Milly. She had a right to immediate *472possession in severalty. This was disputed by none, and the right of her husband consequently attached.

If he left the girl with the father of the plaintiff, it was aa exercise of right which could not be resisted by the wife, as the marriage, ipso facto, transferred the property to the husband.

The property having vested in the husband, the wife cannot claim it in her separate right by survivorship, and there is therefore no error in the judgment for the defendant.

Other views might be taken of this case, which would be equally fatal to the claim of the plaintiff.

The demand is stale, and, unless on very clear right, should not be sustained, and suffered, after twenty-five years, to disturb third possessors, who would not probably have any knowledge of private family arrangements in relation to the right in Milly, the mother of the slave in suit.

Judgment affirmed.