Nicholas v. Burruss
Nicholas v. Burruss
Opinion of the Court
it is well settled, that in considering the evidence, in cases of demurrers to evidence, the court will draw any inference against the demurrant, which could fairly be drawn by a jury. It does this of necessity, because it is put in the place of the jury; and it does it the more freely, because it is considered not favorable to justice, to encourage this withdrawal of the facts from the appropriate tribunal. The will of the testator Peyton, provides, that such of his slaves as were then 40 years old and upwards, should serve one year and no longer, and then be emancipated; and emancipates such of his slaves as were younger, prospectively, in classes, as they should attain to particular ages. Not long after the will was proved, in 1801, the executor, in open court, declared his assent to the liberation of four slaves, then entitled to their freedom under the will; and being asked by the court, said he considered the estate sufficient to pay the debts. It is also proved by other testimony, that the estate was fully sufficient, without the slaves, for the payment of all the testator’s debts; and that, at the time of the trial, there were, forming a part of his estate, 4000 acres of land in the western country, and 600 acres in Virginia. Notwithstanding these facts, an execution on a judgement obtained against the executor, was levied on the plaintiff, who was under the age prescribed by the will for his manumission, and had still some years to serve, when the execution was levied (how many we do not exactly know) and under this execution he was sold for 135 dollars ; the executor attending the sale, and rather encou
Cabell, J. concurred.
Tucker, P. This case has been very ably argued, upon various interesting points; but I am inclined to think it must turn at last upon the evidence set forth in the demurrer, and the general principles of law in relation to demurrers to evidence.
That a slave emancipated by will, cannot successfully assert his freedom by a proceeding in a court of law, without the previous assent of the executor to his emancipation, has certainly been the general impression of the profession in Virginia. I think it a correct one. The analogy is strong and apt, between emancipation and a specific legacy. Emancipation is a legacy of freedom to the slave, on the one hand, and, on the other, an abstraction of the value of the slave from that fund (the personalty) which, from the foundations of the common law, has been held sacred to the discharge of the debts of the testator. The anomalous cha
That a specific legatee shall not recover his legacy at law, without the assent of the executor, is a principle that grows out of the character of his trust, the nature of his interest in the personal estate, and the imperfection of common law proceedings. The executor is, especially, a trustee for the creditors of the decedent. The law casts the whole of the personalty upon him, at the instant of bis testator’s death, and injoins the payment of the debts of the estate as the first duty to be fulfilled, after discharging the sacred obligation of interring the deceased. In the performance of this duty, he is to disregard all the commands even of the testator’s will in conflict with it. He is not to lessen the fund for the payment of the creditors, by fulfilling his benevolences, or even supporting his bereaved family. Until the debts are paid, nothing is to be abstracted. The testator is required to be just before he is generous j and even the act of emancipation must yield to the demands of creditors.
To effect the objects of this trust, the law casts the property upon the executor. It considers him the absolute owner; and though after the discharge of all the debts, he
To the case of a slave who claims his freedom tinder the will of his master, all the reasons which confine the jurisdiction of suits for legacies before assent, apply with additional force. For (as we have all seen from the case of Patty v. Colin, 1 Hen. & Munf. 519. and the recent cases of Dunn v. Amey, 1 Leigh 465. and Paup v. Mingo, ante 163.) many formidable difficulties arise in these suits for freedom, peculiar to them, and insuperable unless by the aid of a court of equity. I am of opinion, therefore, that a slave cannot recover his freedom under a will, in a court of law, without proving the assent of the executor, if, as I shall attempt to shew, such assent is necessary.
It seems to have been supposed, however, in the argument, that by the statute concerning pauper suits, a slave may, if he pleases, assert his right to freedom in a court of law, and adopt the common law process, and yet be permitted to go into all those matters which belong peculiarly to a court of equity, and to have such redress as that court could afford him. This would certainly be very inconvenient, and is as certainly, I think, an incorrect interpretation of the statute. That a court of equity has jurisdiction, in proper cases, of suits for freedom, no longer admits of dispute, after the repeated decisions of this court, and the
Until this act was passed, the remedy of a person held in slavery for the recovery of his freedom, was unregulated. The writs of habeas corpus and de homine replegiando were, among others, resorted to.. They were vexatious in their character; and the latter has been accordingly repealed, while the provisions in relation to the former rendered it an objectionable and improper remedy for the trial of the right of a slave to his freedom. Therefore, by the act of 1795, ch. 11. a plain and easy remedy was provided. The preamble distinctly evinces, that it was suggested, less by an anxiety to facilitate the remedies of the slave, than by “the great and alarming mischiefs, which had arisen in other states of the Union, and were likely to arise in this, by voluntary associations of individuals” (commonly known under the appellation of emancipation societies) “ who had, in many instances, been the means of depriving masters of their property in slaves, and in others occasioned them heavy expenses in tedious and unfounded law suits.” Accordingly, its scheme seems to have been to require in the incipient stages of the proceeding, some evidence of’the probability of bis right, before he s’hould be either removed from his master’s possession, or entitled to call upon him to answer his complaint. Therefore, it provided, that the complaint should either be made to a magistrate out of court, or to the district (now circuit) or county or corporation court, and, not elsewhere ; a negative provision inserted for the master’s benefit, not for that of the slave. Upon offering his petition to the court, he is required to set forth the material facts of his case, supported by affidavit or otherwise; whereupon
Such I have no doubt was the scheme of the act, and accordingly I can see no reason for supposing, that a suit for freedom may be tried in a court of law upon equitable principles and equitable modes of proceeding. Nor does the idea receive countenance, as was supposed, from the language of the statute concerning pauper suits, that the court “ shall appoint, in pauper suits, all proper officers Sic.” and so, may appoint auditors to settle the administration account. For this clause was not a part of the act of 1795, ch. 11. and therefore cannot bear upon it, even if the inferences drawn by the counsel were at all admissible. I am, therefore, of opinion, upon the whole matter, that if the necessity for the assent of the executor to the legacy of freedom, stands upon the footing of the assent to other specific legacies, that assent is necessary to be proved, in order
I have already endeavoured to shew, why it is that the assent of the executor to a specific legacy, is essential to its vesting as a legal right. The executor holding the estate upon the sacred trust of appropriating it first to the discharge of debts, will never be compelled to deliver it over, until by his assent it is admitted, or by a judicial proceeding it is established, that there is no longer a necessity to withhold it. The latter lays the ground of the jurisdiction of equity in the matter; the former is the only ground on which that of courts of law has ever rested. Now, the reason for the executor’s assent, is as strong in the case of a bequest of freedom as in any other. Whether, metaphysically, we can with propriety call it a legacy, it is not important to consider. Practically, it is a withdrawal from the personal fund, destined by law for payment of debts, of a part of that fund ; and there is the same necessity in this as in the case of other specific legacies, for establishing, either by the assent of the executor, or the settlement of his administration account before a proper and competent tribunal, that it is no longer necessary to retain the fund.
It was said, however, that the legislature has pointed out the only method in which emancipated slaves shall be subjected to the payment of the debts of their former owners: that they shall be “ liable to be taken by execution to satisfy the antecedent debts” of such owner : and it is contended, that the executor has nothing- to do with an emancipated slave; that he constitutes no part of the assets, and that he can only be reached by the direct execution of the creditor. These are novel doctrines, and though sustained with great ability, we must not rashly subscribe to them. It is not necessary, that I should at this time go into a full examination of them; as, owing to the absence of two of our brethren, the court cannot settle a'new principle, or overthrow those which have been long established. Whenever we are called upon, imperatively, to pronounce upon them, many grave
I am, then, clearly of opinion, that the assent of the executor must be shewn in this case, to sustain the demand of the plaintiff.
But, upon a careful examination of the testimony, I think the jury would have been justified in inferring that assent from the facts proved. The proof is not as full, indeed, as could be wished ; but it certainly establishes the right of the slave to recover his freedom by bill in equity; and I would not, therefore, require as rigorous proof as might otherwise be demanded. From the testimony in the cause, it might well and fairly have been argued, that the estate was amply sufficient to pay the debts, without charging the slaves; that the executor knew this ; that knowing it, he assented at once to the emancipation of four who had then attained the proper age : that this assent to the freedom of four of the slaves is perhaps an assent to that of the rest; that if Nicholas had, at that time, been of the proper age, he would have expressly assented to his freedom; that a design to enslave him tortiously forever, could not have been fairly inferred against a man, who had so promptly manifested a just design to carry the will into execution; that when he was taken by execution, he had still some time to serve; that he was a negro man in the prime.of life; and that having sold for the insignificant sum of 135 dollars, it was fair to presume he was not sold for life, but only for his remaining term of service. The testimony, that the executor stated the title to be good, except so far as it was questioned by a particular claimant, being the testimony of the demurrant, cannot weigh against these inferences : and the jury might have concluded, without doing violence to the evidence in the cause, that the residue of JVicAoZas’s term alone was sold, and that it was so understood at the time of the sale. If so, those facts would amount to an assent on the part of the executor, and establish his right to freedom, which could
Judgement of the circuit court reversed, and that of the county court affirmed.
Gordon’s American edi. Philadelphia 1824.
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