10 Ala. 819 | Ala. | 1846
It will be seen, this cause went off by a non-suit in the court below, for the supposed defect in making Bradford a plaintiff without joining his wife. In determining the question thus presented, we shall endeavor to avoid every thing like a committal upon the point, whether the plaintiffs have, or have not, any title under the will of Mr. Pack, to enable them to recover for the conversion of the slave. We think it well established, at least in the courts of this State, as well as several of the other slave holding States, that when an estate in remainder of slaves has vested in the wife, and' the possession is with the person having the precedent estate, then the husband, by virtue of his marital rights, becomes the owner, and is entitled to the slaves, although his wife may be dead, when the precedent estate falls in. [Pitts v. Curtis, 4 Ala. Rep. 350; Dade v. Alexander, 1 Wash. 30; Banks v. Marsbury, 3 Litt. 275.] In North Carolina the different decisions seem to have been made at different periods. See cases cited 2 Iredell’s Digest, 533, § 7. In the report of Neal v. Haddock, 2 Hayw. 183, Judge Haywood expresses considerable dissatisfaction with the judgment then given — that being adverse to the right of the husband — and states that although he had ever been of the same opinion, further consideration had compelled him to change it. In a more recent case however, the same court considered such a remainder as the subject of levy and sale, by a fi,
It being thus shown, that when the right of the wife, upon the intermarriage is one in action, it remains to inquire if such is the condition of the right in this case.
To apply the rules thus ascertained to the case before us, it appears, that when Bradford intermarried with one of the joint tenants in remainder, that estate had previously been discontinued, and turned into a right of action, by the sale of the slave. The consequence is, that the marital rights of Bradford do not attach, until he has reduced the property to possession, by suit at law, and probably the same effect might arise from a suit in equity, ascertaining the right in remainder, and securing it by inventory, or otherwise, to the remainder man.
Judgment affirmed.