Ex'rs. of Hill v. Hill
Ex'rs. of Hill v. Hill
Opinion of the Court
Cuma, per
The facts of this case are invel-oped in a great deal of obscurity, as is often the case in family transactions of this sort. With regard to the right of Arnold undér whom the defendant claim it is now too late to suffer such a question to be raised. Nor could such an enquiry, whatever might be the result, affect the rights of these parties after such a lapse of time. How Colonel Hill acquired a right to dispose of these negroes by will, does not appear, unless it was by possession from the year 1810, when Andrew Hill left him to the year 1816 when he died. It appears however that Colonel Hill himself entertained doubts of his right by his annex ing as a condition to the devise of the land to AndrewT that he should relinquish his right to the negroes. The-devise itself did not divest ahui e w oi nis right. ^¿But he
New trial granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.