Bryan v. Weems

STONE, J.

We are fully satisfied with the views of the chancellor, and the result which he attains on all the points necessary to a decision of this case.

1. However the rule might be, if the trustee in this case were appointed by will, (Hill on Trustees, 239,) his estate and interest did not terminate with the life of Mrs. Bush. The deed of Simmons Harrison conveyed the property to the trustee, “ his heirs, executors and administrators,” * * “in trust and for the following uses, interests and purposes — viz., in trust and for the separate and exclusive use'and benefit of the said Mfcy R. Bush during her natural life, and in no wise or manner to be subject or liable to or for the contracts or debts of the said husband, Nathan B. Bush ; and after her death, for the use, benefit and behoof of the children of the *427said Mary B, Bush by her present husband, the said Nathan B. Bush, and their heirs forever.”- There are no words in this deed, indicating an intention that the estate in fee, which the deed creates in the trustee, shall be cut down into a less estate. The estate of the trustee continued after the death of both Mrs. and Mr. Bush. — Wykham v. Wykham, 18 Vesey, 395; Coleman v. Tindall. Y. & J. 605; Jones v. Strong, 6 Ired. 367 ; Murritt v. Wendley, 3 Dev. 399 ; Martin v. Prage, 4 B. Monroe, 524; Fry v. Smith, 2 Dana, 38.

Our own decisions are not in conflict with this. In Smith v. Buddie, 15 Ala. 28, the deed directed that at the death of the said Elizabeth EL, the property, both real and personal, was to go to and be equally divided between the children. Elizabeth H. was dead; and of course the estate of the trustee was atan end.

In Comby v. McMichael, 19 Ala. 747, the deed directed the trustee to “'convey the property to such of the issue” of the cestui que trust, as should be living at her death. Mrs. McMichael was dead ; and Ch. J. Dargan held, that the legal title of the trustee had determined, because the deed clearly contemplated that result.

Couthway v. Berghaus, 25 Ala. 393-406, simply decides, that a tender in that case to the cestui que trust was sufficient. The trustee lived out of the State, and was a mere naked trustee without interest* The cestui que trust liad himself made the purchase of the property, taking the title in the name of his sister ; while he, the beneficiary, was in possession of the property, receiving the rents and profits. The court rightly held, that the money was due to Berghaus, and that the tender to him was sufficient.

2. While Mr. Bush held the possession of the slaves, he must be regarded as holding in subordination to the title of the trustee. His declarations to Mr. Green, and to Mr. Whitfield, shortly before his death, would establish this proposition, if i.t needed confirmation. A short time before ■ the death of Mr. Bush, he expressed to the trust^ten inclination and wish to make a will, and to mak£ nSe ample provision for Penelope, who afterwards married Mr. Weems; speaking of her as his “poor afflicted daughter.” The testimony of-Mr. Green, the trustee," who was examined as a *428witness, satisfies us that he, Green, knew of the making of a will by Bush, and its “ general character,” before such will was admitted to probate. This was, at least, enough to put him on inquiry ; and is equivalent to notice. — Smith v. Zurcher, 9 Ala. 208, and authorities cited. The bill, after stating that Mr. Bush executed his will and died in June, 1844, proceeds as follows : “ Whereupon Alexander Sledge, the executor named in said will, caused the same to be duly admitted to probate in the orphans’ court of said county obtained letters testamentary upon said estate,from the same court; undertook the execution of said will, and possessed himself as such executor as aforesaid of all the slaves and other personal property mentioned therein.” The will mentions all the slaves in controversy, except some children born since the probate, of females bequeathed by the will ; a part of which children are with their mothers in the possession of each legatee. The answer admits these aver-ments, but states that the executor possessed himself of the property before the will was probated. These several facts constituted the executor an adverse holder, from and after the probate of the will, and possession of the property under it by him. From that time the statute commenced running against Green, the trustee. — Findley v. Patterson, 2 B. Monroe, 76 ; Den, ex dem., v. Shanklin, 4 Dev. & Bat. Law, 289.

3. Between the time of the probate of the will of Mr. Bush, and the commencement of this suit, more than six years elapsed. The trustee was then barred of his action of detinue. ^Thoj-ule is ceatainly^gell settled, that if a trustee delay the a-ssertion of his rights untiLthe statute perfects a bar against nimf”Vüñcestui que trust will also be barred. — Colburn v. Broughton 9 Ala. 301-363 ; Hovenden v. Lord Annesley, 2 Sch. & Lef. 628-9 ; Angeli on Limitation, 514, § 6 ; Bond v. Hopkins, 1 Sch. & Lef. 429 ; Freeman v. Perry, 2 Dev. Eq. 243 ; Couch v. Couch, 9 B. Monroe, 160 ; Falls v. Torrence^! Hawks’ Law & Eq. 412.

4. It v^pbe#seen that we have assimilated the complainant’s right tó relief in this case to the trustee’s right to-maintain detinue. If, at the time the bill in this case was filed, Green, the trustee, had instituted his action of detinue or trover for *429the slaves, against Sledge, the executor,-the six years statute *lf~"ple'adecb wouldJiaxe_.barred either .^action, not only as to ^ the slaves bequeathed by the will, but also as to. the offspring, oTlilite'fbmales, boria"afterTEcT ádverse~holding#~<Morris v* ' Terregay, 1" Cratt.' 3T3;WIÍlte v* MartíñJ" 1 Potter, 215»

When defendant’s right tr> property is established hy_n, , successful interposition of the plea of the statute of limita* tions. it relateiPback to the time of the first taking, and ' carries with it all the intermediate profits, and the increase" oTlhe females while in theadverse possession of such defend^ ant, unless, as to such increase, some act be done before the Par against recovery of toe mother Is perfected, whicE prevents the opera tim-T of this. ruleT Fartus sequitur ventrgm. ■ To hold otherwise, would lead to strange results in the case of female slaves. An adverse holding of six years would : vest the title in the holder. During the time she was adversely held, she may, at intervals, have given birth to children; she and the children all the time remaining together, out of the possession of the claimant. She may have given birth to an infant within á very short time before the completion of the six years. .According to the argument, all claim to the mothen-woulA be.-forfeited,’ while to, bar the right, to recewer her child would require another period of__aear six

Another illustration may serve to present this argument in a stronger light. Suppose the property adversely held consist of domestic animals, who multiply at an early age, and rapidly. Before the six years expire, the females, in all probability, will have increased abundantly; and perhaps at no point of coming time, will there be a female that has reached the age of six years, without yielding her increase. If the offspring do not follow the mother as an incident, but», each successive scion must itself be adversely held for the term of six years before the statute runs, unless, before its birth, the parent stock had existed and been adversely held for a like period, the entire interest of the former owner would not probably be extinguished in any conceivable number of years. This point was not raised in argument; but we have felt it our duty to notice it, as the court is not unanimous.

*430The claim for hire, and for profits of the labor of the slaves, while in the possession of Mr. Bush, is barred both by lapse of time, and by the statute of non-claim#

Undei^ these principles, the right of complainants is barred. Whether Mr. Bush, or those claiming under him, can set up fraucl in the original deed to Mr. Marrison, and from him to "Mr. Green in trust, we need not inquire. — See Walton v. Bonham, 24 Ala. 513 ; Twine’s case, 3 Bop. 83 ; Roberts on Conveyances, 10-11.

The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.

RICE-, O. J.-

There are many cases, in which the true owner of property, by electing a particulaf form of "action-, atíd prosecuting it to judgment and satisfaction, or by electing to sue for only part of an entire demand, has been held to have waived and lost his right to that full measure of redress to which he would otherwise ha&e been entitled. Tims, if a female slave has been permanently converted, and the owner elects to bring trover for such conversion, and recovers her value, and receives satisfaction, he thereby elects to treat the conversion as a purchase by the person guilty of the conversion; and as soon as the judgment is satisfied, the title to the slave passes, by operation of law, to the defendant in the judgment, and relates back to the time of the conversion.. Consequently, the children born of such slave after the conversion, and pending the suit for the conversion, become the property of the defendant in the suit, as soon as the owner of their mother accepts satisfaction of the judgment therein-rendered. That result is worked out by the application of the doctrines of election, waiver, and relation. — See White v. Martin, 1 Porter, 215; Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Cochran, 21 Ala. R. 228; Wittick v. Traun, ib. 562.

But those doctrines have no application to the present case; for the complainants have not brought any former suit, nor done any act which can be construed into an election or a waiver, or which can enable the defendant to invoke the doctrine of relation. They have been merely passive, and if they have lost their right to any of the slaves in controversy, it is by mere force of that part of the statute of limitations, which requires the owner of personal chattels adversely held to sue *431for them within six years after the commencement of the adverse possession.

The legal effect of that part of that statute, is not, in my opinion, what my brethren have pronounced it to be in the opinion just delivered. They hold, that it bars the complainants as to slaves who were not six years old when this suit was commenced, and who had not been .held adversely for six years, and who were bom of a mother who had not been held adversely for six, years at, birth.._Lcaimftt ^assent. to that position^

Where slavery‘exists, the children of a female slave belong to him who, at the time of their birth, was the general and absolute owner of their mother* The children born of her whilst she. is in the possession' of an adverse holder, but before the adverse holding has continued six years, are as completely the property of the person who, at the time of their birth, is the absolute owner of their mother, as if they had been born whilst she was in the actual possession of that absolute owner.

The children born of her after the adverse holder has, by an adverse possession of six years,-acquired the title to her, belong to the adverse holder. The statute of limitations has no effect whatever upon the title of the true owner to the mother, until she has been in the adverse possession of another for the full period of six years. So far as that statute is concerned, her children, as soon as they are born, are, in legal contemplation, as separate and distinct from her, as if in fact they were not in any wise related to her. Each child, as soon as born, ^is a personal chattel, separate and distinct from its mother, and from every other child. The detention of each child born before the mother has been adversely held for six years, is a new, separate, and distinct cause of action, which the true owner may enforce in a separate and distinct suit. — Wittick v. Traun, supra. The cause of action for the detention of a child could notpossibly accruebeforeit was born. The statute of limitations does not commence running against a cause of action before it accrues. One separate and distinct cause of* action is not barred by that statute, merely because another, which accrued at a different time, is barred. That statute does not give to the adverse possessor title to a slave which has neither been held adversely for six years, *432nor been born of a mother who had been held adversely for six years before its birth. In other words, to give title to a slave to an adverse possessor, under the statute of limitations, it is at least essential that the slave should have been held adversely for six years^-OR should have been born of one who had been held adversely for six years prior to its birth. If a child is born before its mother has been held, adversely for six years, it is legally impossible that the true owner can be barred as to the child, by the mere operation of the statute of limitations of six years, before the*child. is six years old.

According to the opinion of my brethren, that statute may bar the owner, as to the child, before the child is three days old! They work out this s'trange result, by what seems to me a very plain misapplication of the doctrine of relation, and by overlooking the effect of the undeniable proposition, that the detention of each child bori\ before the mother has been held adversely for six years, is in itself a cause of action, new, distinct, and different from that which arose from the detention of the mother. — Ivev v. Owens. 28 Ala. Rep. 641.

One illustration will be sufficient to demonstrate tE& unfitness of the application of the doctrine of relation to any case like the present: Suppose A. has held adversely, for lour years, the female slave of B. At the end of the four years, and whilst adversely held, she gives birth to a child. When the child is one year old, B., the real owner of the mother and child, finds the child in the highway, takes it peaceably into his possession, and keeps it until after the six years adverse r possession of its mother has run out, and the title to her..has?' thereby become vested in the adverse possessor. The adverse possessor, as soon as he has thus acquired title to the mother, brings detinue for the child against the owner who had taken the child in the highway as aforesaid! He invokes the doctrine of relation, and calls upon the court to apply the doctrine, and give him a judgment for the child.— Would any court, upon such facts, think of applying the doctrine of relation, or giving to the adverse possessor a judgment for the child ? If my brethren are right in their opinion, the adverse possessor would recover the child, upon the doctrine of relation. His title to the mother being clear, by adverse possession of six years, and the child having been born whilst, *433his adverse possession was continuing, although it had continued only four years at the birth of the child, — the law, aslaid down by my brethren, would give him the child, by making his title to the mother relate back to the commencement of the adverse possession.

Without saying anything as to other parts of the opinion of my brethren, I here record my dissent from the reasoning and conclusions attained by them,.