54 N.C. 156 | N.C. | 1854
The case sufficiently appears from the opinion of the Court.
The bill seeks to set aside the deed by which the plaintiff's intestate conveyed her slaves to the defendant, upon the ground that it was obtained by fraud or the exercise of undue influence; or to convert the defendant into a trustee upon the ground that the slaves in question were conveyed to him upon a secret trust that he was to hold them in a qualified state of bondage. The allegations upon the first ground are denied in the answer; that denial, so far from being disproved, is fully supported by the testimony, and the position is now abandoned. There is some doubt upon the second ground, not as to the law, for that is clearly settled (see Lemmond v. Peoples,
(160)