Black v. Youmans

120 Ark. 209 | Ark. | 1915

Kirby, J.

This is a controversy ¡about a forty-acre tract of land in Lafayette County, Arkansas.

Tom Bridges, a negro, acquired it from the government by patent as a homestead, and ¡died in possession in 1912, leaving him surviving his widow, Ellen Bridges, and sister, Dolly Black, who claimed to be his only heir. They conveyed the land on July 25,1911, to ft. L. Montgomery, who afterward conveyed it to Burton, one of ¡appellants.

Appellee purchased the land from George Williams, a ¡grandson, ¡of Tom, .alleged to be the only heir ¡of Viney Williams, the only child ¡of Tom Bridges. And in this .suit to cancel the deeds from Dolly Black and Montgomery to Burton ¡as clouds upon the title, recovered a decree below from which this appeal is prosecuted.

It ¡appears from the testimony that Tom Bridges, a slave, was married to Mandy ¡Cryer, another slave, ¡after the manner of .slavery marriages, and lived with her as his wife until her death ¡after emancipation, and ¡that there was bom to them an only child called Viney, Who was recognized 'by them as their child, and that George Williams, appellee’s grantor, was the only child ¡and heir of said Viney Williams.

The testimony shows, too, not only that Viney "Williams was recognized as their child toy her parents hut generally toy all as the child of Tom Bridges and Mandy, who lived together during slavery as 'hustoand and wife and .after the war until Mandy’s death, and, although there is testimony tending to show that old Tom ranged widely from his own fireside and was rather promiscuous in his attention to other women, and from some of these excursions other children were bom, of which he was the reputed father, we are not atole to say that 'the chancellor’s finding is clearly against the preponderance of the testimony.

'Section 3, act February 6, 1867,* provides:

‘ ‘ That all negroes .and mulattoes who are now cohabiting ,as hustoand and wife, and recognizing each other as such, shall be deemed lawfully married from the passage of this act, and shall be subject to 'all the obligations, and entitled to all the rights appertaining to the marriage relations ; and in all cases where such persons now are, or have heretofore been, cohabiting as hustoand .and wife, and may have offspring recognized by them as their own, such offspring shall be deemed in all respects- legitimate, as fully ns if born in lawful wedlock. ’ ’

Said .act, for some unknown reason, has not been carried into the digests of the statutes of Arkansas, but it has not been repealed, and the conditions requiring its passage for the protection of the children of slaves who could not legally marry, and the transmission of property acquired toy them, have not passed, nor the reason therefor failed. Marriages between negroes, falling within its provisions, have been 'held valid, and children horn of and recognized as their offspring by the parties have been held legitimate and capable of transmitting inheritances, and the statute has not become obsolete nor inoperative from long disuse. Scoggins v. State, 32 Ark. 205; Gregley v. Jackson, 38 Ark. 487.

Viney, the recognized child of this slave marriage, was legitimate, and her .son, George Williams, inherited the land in controversy from (his grandfather, Tom Bridges.

The decree is affirmed.

Act No. 35, p. .98, Session Laws of 1867 (Rep.).

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