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Barham v. Massey

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1844
27 N.C. 192 (N.C. 1844)

Opinion

(December Term, 1844.)

1. An execution under which an officer takes actual possession of the personal property levied on has precedence over one previously levied on the same property, but under which no actual possession has been taken and retained by the officer levying it.

2. Where a slave belongs to one for life, and to another in remainder, and an execution was against both, but the remainderman, prior to the lien of the execution, had conveyed his interest in the slave to a trustee to sell for the payment of debts: Held, that only the interest of the tenant for life was subject to the execution, the remainderman having parted with his legal estate, and having no such certain resulting trust as was liable to execution.

3. And although in the same deed of trust a tract of land was conveyed for the same purposes, and the debts were all satisfied by the sale of this land, after the institution of an action for the slave founded on the levy, yet this did not enlarge the interest in the slave which was obtained by the levy.

4. Where an action of replevin is brought to recover possession of a slave, in which an estate for the life of another is claimed, and the tenant for life dies pending the action, the plaintiff is only entitled to recover the value of the life estate and damages for the detention.

APPEAL from ROCKINGHAM, Fall Term, 1844; Pearson, J.

Morehead for plaintiff.

Kerr for defendant.


The facts in this case are fully set forth in the opinion delivered in this Court.


This is an action of replevin (under the act of Assembly, Rev. Stat., ch. 101) to recover a slave named Lindsey, and damages for his detention. The defendant avowed that he had title. The said slave had belonged to Elizabeth Lanier for her life, remainder to her son Andrew J. Lanier. The plaintiff was a constable, and had in his hands several justices' executions to an amount exceeding the value of the slave; some of them against Elizabeth Lanier and Andrew J. Lanier and some against A. J. Lanier alone. By virtue of these (193) executions he, on 11 May, 1842, levied on the slave Lindsey, and took him into his actual possession, and kept him there until the day of sale (27 June, 1842), when the defendant seized him and carried him away from the plaintiff's possession. The defendant was also a constable, and had in his hands justices' executions against the very same defendants (E. L. and A. J. L.), under which executions he, on 15 April, 1842, had levied on the said slave Lindsey; but he did not remove him, but left him in the possession of the defendants in those executions. Andrew J. Lanier, who owned the remainder in the slave, on 1 March, 1842, executed a deed to one King for the slave and a tract of land, in trust to secure one Reed a debt for $700; Reed, on 24 May, 1842, assigned all his interest in the deed in trust to Hill and Lomax, two creditors of the Laniers, in consideration they would pay him his debt. In September, 1842, King sold the land mentioned in the deed of trust, and out of the purchase money he satisfied all the debts covered by the deed in trust. Elizabeth Lanier, the tenant for life of the slave, died pending this action.

The judge was of opinion, first, that the levies made by the plaintiff under the executions in his hands had priority to those levies made by the defendant under the executions in his hands, although they in fact were first made, because the property levied on by the defendant was left by him in the possession of the debtors in the said executions.

Secondly, the judge thought that the plaintiff, by force of the said executions in his hands, and the levies under them, obtained only the title or special property in the slave which the tenant for life had, as at the time of the levy the remainderman had neither a legal nor equitable interest in the slave subject to the said executions. The deed to King carried the legal estate in remainder, and it was dated before the levies were made by the plaintiff. And the fact of the trusts in the deed being subsequently satisfied by the trustee selling the land (194) (to wit, in September, 1842, and after this suit brought) did not enlarge the plaintiff's interest in the slave which he obtained by the levy. The trusts in the deed to King being complicated, there was no resulting trust in A. J. L. of the slave, at the date of the levies, upon which they could attach under our act of 1812.

Thirdly, the judge charged that the plaintiff's title to the slave was coextensive only to that of the tenant for life, Mrs. Lanier; and as she had died before the trial, he was now entitled to recover, not the possession of the slave, but the value of the life estate, and damages for the detention. If he had brought trover, or trespass, which he might have done (Watson on Sher., 191), the damages must have been only for the value of the life estate and interest; and if he had brought detinue, he could not have recovered the slave, as Mrs. Lanier died before the trial. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment according to the charge of the judge, and we do not see any error in it.

PER CURIAM. No error.

Cited: Anderson v. Doak, 32 N.C. 297; Woodley v. Gilliam, 67 N.C. 240; Penland v. Leatherwood, 101 N.C. 515.


Summaries of

Barham v. Massey

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1844
27 N.C. 192 (N.C. 1844)
Case details for

Barham v. Massey

Case Details

Full title:ELI BARHAM v. JOHN MASSEY

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1844

Citations

27 N.C. 192 (N.C. 1844)

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