Meridith v. Nichols
Meridith v. Nichols
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Walter Scott having departed this life in Montgomery county, state of Maryland, administration of his estate was in March, 1793, granted by the orphan’s court of that county, to Cassandra Scott, his widow and relict.
The estate of the said Waller consisted of a negro man, valued in the appraisement and inventory thereof, at Z76; a negro woman, valued at 160; a negro boy, valued at 115, and other articles and credits, making therewith, in the whole, 1360. The said Scott left one child, a daughter, named Elizabeth Margaret Scott, and his wife Cassandra, ensient of a son born about six months after his decease, who died at between twelve and twenty months of age.— The Said Cassandra intermarried about eighteen months after the decease of the said Walter, with a certain Thomas Nichols, (of Simon)who, with his wife, the said Cassandra, on the 13th of August, 1805, exhibited in the orphan’s court Of that county, an account of their administration of the said estate, in which they charged themselves with the amount according to.the inventory and appraisement made and returned therein, while the said Cassandra was sole ad-ministratrix, and claimed payments and disbursements to the amount of about 1241 1C 8‡, which account was examined, passed, and ordered to be recorded bv the said court. Andón the29th of that month, the said Nichols was appointed by that court guardian to the said Elizabeth M. Scott, she having made choipe of him as such; whereupon he executed the bond usual in such cases, with Solomon Holland and Kenzey Gettings his sureties — and shortly after removed to the state of Kentucky, bringing with him the said Elizabeth and the negroes aforesaid.
The said Elizabeth having, not long after the removal aforesaid to Kentucky, arrived at the age of sixteen >ears, intermarried with the said William L. Meridith; and on the lOtli da' of July, 1809, she and her said husband, William L. Meridith, executed to the said Thomas and Cat?» jtandra the following writing:— * •
‘‘Received of Thomas Nichols and bis wife Cassandra, ‘‘three hundred and thirty-seven dollars and fifty four cents, frit being tire amount of principal and interest due Eliza
“Elizabeth M. Meridith.
“Test — George H. Offult.”
The negro woman aforesaid had several children, and some of har children'bad children, so that when this suit was instituted there were, in all, twelve or thirteen slaves; to obtain two-thirds of which in kind, the said William and wife on the 11th day of June, 1818, instituted this suit, in which they also claimed hire for their proportion, during the period of their detention.
They alledgc in their bill and amended bill, that at the time they received the money from the said Thomas and Cassandra, and gave the receipt above recited, they were ignorant of their rights. That by '(he laws of Maryland (of which they were then ignorant) the said Elizabeth was entitled to two-thirds of the said slaves in kind, and that it was not competent for the said Thomas and Cassandra to take the sai.d property, and charge themselves therewith, and that their having done so, and the examination and passage of their account evincive of that fact, by the orphan’s court, did not alter their rights. They charge the'defendants with fraudulently concealing from them, at the time of the settlement, before and since, the true state of their claim, and of the facts in relation to the negroes aforesaid. The complainant, William, alledges particularly,' that he never was in the state of Maryland, and knew nothing of its laws, and that as soon (or very shortly thereafter) as he Came to know his rights, he commenced this suit.
The defendants deny fraud or fraudulent intent; — they deny that complainants were, at the time of the settlement and receipt aforesaid, ignorant of their rights, or that there was, on their part, any concealment, or misrepresentation of the facts of the case in relation to tiic said negroes, or any other part of their administration of the estate of the said Waiter, deceased. They say that upon their intermarriage, the estate of the said Walter was indebted and embarrassed; and that to prevent the said slaves from being sacrificed at public sale pursuant to an order of the orphan’s court, for the payment of the debts, which order might, in such cases, under the laws of that country, have been obtained; the said Thomas and tile said Cassandra concluded it) take them at their valuation by the appraisers, and pay
The cause came on to be heard, and upon a final hearing the bill was dismissed by the chancellor, from which decree of dismissal complainants appealed.
Li this case this court are free to acknowledge they have experienced considerable difficulty in forming an opinion entirely satisfactory to themselves. What is the power of the orphan’s court in the state of Maryland, and what aré the laws and usages in relation to the powers, privileges
If there was no fraud in the conduct of either of the ap-pellees, if none is proved (and we think there is none) in this transaction, and there are doubts as to the nature and extent of the rights of the parties thereto — it remains to be enquired, whether a possession of these slaves (innocent, probably erroneous, certainly not fraudulent,) for near twenty-live years, should, under the circumstances of this case, be disturbed?
The impression of the appellees was, that they were entitled to but one third of this estate; they paid (as we think they believed) for the oilier two-thirds — we are strongly inclined to believe they were entitled to one half. But theb belief that they were entitled to but one third of these slaves, is evinced by their acting conformably to that criterion throughout, up as late as the year 1809, when they settled with, and paid ihe complainants for, the two-thirds of their estimated value, as ascertained by the appraisers-In that year, the complainants having been intermarried ion about two years, assert their claim to their proportion of this* estate. The account in which the appellees had charged ■ themselves with the amount thereof, according to its appraised valuation1, is exhibited to them, and forms the bask of their settlement; and they receive two-thirds of the re- , sidue thereof, after the payment of the debts. At this time Meridith had certainly arrived at his full age, if he were an infant at the time of bis marriage, as he alledges; and his wife it appears had married at the age of sixteen (which is alledged to be her age of maturity according to the laws Of Maryland,) long before. But they were ignorant, it is «Hedged, of their rights, Of the facts in the case they
In this case we have not been able to discern any proof pf fraud on the part of the appellees. Indeed we think it ⅛ negatived not only by the proof of the declarations of one of the complainants, but by the circumstances of the case, and the conduct of the appellees, as has been ’above remarked. Upon the supposition that the appellees were mistaken as to the law and the adjudication of the orphan’s court of Maryland; the reflection that the conseijuences of
The negroes might have been sold by order of the court for the payment of the debts, and there is no proof, nor is there any reason to believe that they would have sold for more than their appraised valuation; or they might, in case there had been no necessity to sell them, have been divided by order of the orphan’s court, or decree of the chancellor, in which case there is every reason to suppose that Peggy would have been allotted to the widow; every consideration of fitness, of feeling and of delicacy, in relation both to the mother and the child, would have influenced either court so to have made that allotment. There would, moreover, have been convenience as well as justice and fitness in that shape of allotment. The value of Peggy was just one third of the value of the remaining two. Had Peggy been allotted, ás we think under the circumstance she would, and ought, to have been, to Cassandra, the mother, the offspring of Peggy would have belonged to the appel-lees, according to the maxim ‘■•partus sequtur ventrem.”— These, and many of the foregoing considerations, while they do not form the basis of the opinion we are about to give, are not without their influence in the construction which leads to that opinion. The opinion is formed mainly upoti the affirmance by the appellants of the tenure of the appellees in 1809 in the settlement then made, the payment and receipt of the money, and the construction of the receipt tiler f ir, executed hv the appellees to the appellants, and the subsequent acquiescence of the appellees. It must be acknowledged that either fraud or mistake, in a transaction, may be released by the party injured thereby, and the transaction affirmed, the fraud or mistake notwithstanding. Upon the supposition that the claim of the ap-pellees was bottomed upon a mistake of the law of Maryland in relation thereto, we think the settlement of 1809, a waiver of that mistake by the appellants. It will not do to unsettle the transactions of men, and alter the state of property after the lapse of man» -tears, upon the supposition that the parties thereto were ignorant, not of the fact, but of the law, which prevailed at the time. We will not
In any view, therefore, which we have been able to take of the case, we have not been able to discern fraud, mistake, or error, which will justify us in reversing the decree of the court below, and altering that state of things which had so long existed, and had been so long affirmed by the parties.
The decree must, therefore, be affirmed with costs,.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.