58 N.C. 108 | N.C. | 1859
The bill is filed by the plaintiff as administrator, with the will annexed, of William Hagood, against the defendants, as the executors of Susan Hagood, his wife, praying a discovery as to a certain bond, or the proceeds thereof, which was taken for the sale of a negro slave, by the name of Frank, by the said Susan, and for the delivery of the said bond or the proceeds to him.
The answer admits that the testator of the defendants did effect a sale of the negro man Frank to one Watson, at the price of $753, and took a bond for the same in the lifetime of her husband, William Hagood, and payable to him; that she collected the money on the same and handed it over to William P. Rose to loan out for her; that Mr. Rose loaned the money to one Egerton, and took his bond for the same, payable to himself, and after the death of Mrs. Hagood, these (109) defendants collected of Rose, who had received it from Egerton, a part of the amount and took the latter's bond for the remainder, $500, which they say they still have on hand, believing it to belong to the estate of their testatrix. They say that William Hagood authorized and commissioned his wife to make the sale of the negro Frank, and to receive the proceeds for her own separate use and benefit, and that he gave it to her; that he did not claim the said bond or the money thereon arising in his lifetime, and in his will made no disposition thereof. *98
There are proofs filed in the case on both sides, which are so fully recited in the opinion of the Court that it is not deemed requisite to set them forth again. The defendants, besides the defense that the money for the slave was given to their testatrix, insisted on the statute of limitations. William Hagood died in January, 1855, and the plaintiff qualified in the following month. The defendants' testatrix died in January, 1858, and the defendants qualified at the next county court of Warren, which was in the next month. The bill was filed on 27 March, 1858, and the defendants contend that the cause of action accrued more than three years before the suit was instituted.
It is a well-settled doctrine of the courts of chancery, both in England and in this State, that a husband may make gifts or presents to his wife, which will be supported against himself and his representatives. Lucas v. Lucas, 1 Atk., 270; Garner v. Garner,
With the principles of evidence applicable to post-nuptial gifts thus clearly enunciated for our guidance, let us examine whether the alleged *99 gift by the plaintiff's intestate to his wife, the defendant's testatrix, of the price of the slave mentioned in the pleadings is sustained by the proofs.
The only direct testimony relied upon by the defendants to establish the gift is found in the deposition of Mrs. Walker. She states that William Hagood, the plaintiff's intestate, came to her house a short time before the sale of the slave, when she said to him: "I suppose you have sold Frank." To which he replied: "No, that he had not sold him, but his wife had." The witness says she then asked him "if he was not going to have the money for the said slave." He replied: "No; that it was his wife's, and that he did not want it." He further said that "his wife had the bond, or money, for the said sale." As corroborative of this testimony, the defendants rely upon the (111) following receipt given by the wife to Edmund White, who was her son-in-law, and had assisted her in making sale of the slave:
"Received of Edmund White, one bond on William and John Watson for the sum of $753, payable to William Hagood, bearing interest from date, and dated 28 May, 1852. This 21 February, 1853.
"SUSAN (her X mark) HAGOOD.
"Test: JOHN C. JOHNSON."
The defendants rely also on the absence of proof that the intestate ever claimed the bond or the money due on it in his lifetime, or that he ever gave it in for taxation, and, further, that it is not mentioned or embraced in his will.
To rebut the evidence of this proof, the plaintiff refers to the deposition of William P. Rose, which states that Mrs. Hagood handed him a certain amount of money, through the hands of his wife, which he supposed was the proceeds of the slave in question, and asked him to lend it out for her, but not to let it be known whose money it was; that this was in the latter part of 1853; that he did lend it to James A. Egerton, and took therefor a bond payable to himself, and that he refused to tell Mr. Egerton more than that the money belonged to an old lady. He states further that he never thought about listing the money for taxation, and never paid any tax upon it. After the death of William Hagood he denied to his administrator that he had the money or any bond for it. The plaintiff relies, also, on the testimony of John Read, a justice of the peace, who says, when Mrs. Hagood came before him to give in her list of taxables in the year 1857, which was after the death of her husband, he asked her if she had any money at interest, to which she replied that she had not, and that "she was very poor and needy." Mr. Egerton states, in his deposition, that he did not know to whom the money which he borrowed belonged, but that since Mrs. Hagood's death he has taken up the bond he gave to Rose by giving *100 (112) to her executor another bond for $500, settling the residue with Mr. Rose.
Several witnesses testify that William Hagood and his wife lived unhappily together; that she was very cross, and she told one of the witnesses that she and her husband did not occupy the same bedchamber.
A careful consideration of all these proofs leads us to the conclusion that the alleged gift by the husband to the wife of the bond, or of the money paid on it, is not established by such clear proof of the fact and the intention as is required by a court of equity. Even the testimony of Mrs. Walker, supposing it were unaffected by any other proof in the cause, leaves us in doubt whether the plaintiff's intestate was not merely acquiescing in the usurped possession of the bond or money by his wife instead of acknowledging that he had made a free and voluntary donation of it to her. But when we reflect on the secrecy with which she kept and disposed of the money, and her denial on oath after the death of her husband that she had any at interest, we cannot reject the inference that she had obtained it unfairly and without the full knowledge and consent of her husband. The receipt which she gave for the bond to Edmund White proves nothing except that the possession was transferred from him to her. It was still her husband's property and left the question of a gift of it by him to her untouched.
The other circumstances relied on by the parties, respectively, are of not much importance. The burden of the proof was upon the wife, or those who represent her, and they have failed to satisfy us by such clear and incontrovertible evidence as the Court is bound to require that there ever was a free and voluntary gift of the bond or money by the husband to his wife.
But supposing the defendants have failed in their proofs, they insist that the plaintiff has a complete remedy at law, and cannot, therefore, maintain a suit against them in this Court; and if they can, that it is barred by the statute of limitations. The reply is, that Mrs. Hagood and her son-in-law, White, sold the slave as the agent of her (113) husband; that White first, and she afterwards, held the bond in the same capacity; that she received the money and lent it out, through her agent, Rose, still as agent for her husband, and that he and his representative had a right to file a bill for a discovery and follow the fund, and, further, that the statute did not begin to run until a demand was made upon the agent.
If the inquiry made by the plaintiff of Rose, to know whether he did not have the money, is to be deemed a demand, still the statute is not a bar, because that inquiry was made in 1856, and the bill was filed in less than three years afterwards. *101
Our opinion is that none of the objections urged against the plaintiff's right to relief are available for the defendants, and he may, therefore, have a decree according to the prayer of his bill.
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: Warlick v. White,