Powell v. Conn
Powell v. Conn
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion op tiik court.
The appellee, Conn, being in the possession of the sixty- . two-acre tract of land in controversy, and claiming to be the owner of it, brought this action, in conjunction with • James "Williamson, his vendor, against Jacob Coleman, a colored man, and the unknown heirs of Lydia Hayburn, all colored, to quiet the appellee’s title to said land. The appellants, claiming- to be the heirs of Lydia Hayburn, upon their petition were made defendants to said action, and claimed to be the owners of said land, except one-fourth, which belonged to Jacob Coleman. The entire tract was sold at commissioner’s sale as the property of Jacob Coleman, and was purchased by the appellee, Williamson, who sold the same to the appellee, Conn.
Lydia Hayburn was at one time a slave, but she, in some way, not explained by the record, obtained her free- ' dom. As far back as 1839 she was a free woman, and evidently had been free several years. At said date she owned the tract of land in controversy; also at said date she had had only two children, girls, Hacbiel and Annie, who were born slaves; that prior to said date she had purchased both of said children; that Hachel (who died prior to 1839), after she was purchased by her mother, gave birth to Jacob Coleman; she also gave birth to a daughter, and she died leaving bastard children, one of whom is a claimant of one-fourth of the land in controversy, but by reason of the stain of bastardy, Jacob Coleman being legitimate, he can not recover in this
Annie died in about 1848, before her mother, Lydia Hayburn. Annie was born in slavery, and while she was a slave she had children, the descendants of whom are claimants of a portion of this property. Annie’s children were slaves until freed by the thirteenth constitutional amendment. ' According to the weight of the evidence Annie was never married, consequently her children were bastards, whose descendants can not inherit from their grandmother as against Jacob Coleman.
Besides, the proof is conclusive that Annie gave birth to no child or children after she was purchased by her mother, and that the children born to her were born slaves, and continued to be slaves until freed by the thirteenth constitutional amendment; also, it is established by the weight of the evidence that Rachel’s daughter was born and died in slavery; also, it is conclusive that Jacob Coleman was born after his mother was purchased by her mother, and he was from his birth up recognized as free. But it is said that his mother was the slave of her mother, consequently he was not born free, nor did he obtain his freedom until freed by the thirteenth constitutional amendment, therefore he could not acquire title, by inheritance, to said land, nor was he capable of holding possession of it m his own right until he.was freed by the thirteenth constitutional amendment, and empowered to inherit by the statute of 1866, at which time the appellants were also freed and rendered bapable of inheriting said land jointly with Jacob, and his possession of the land was their possession. We do
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.