17 Ala. 602 | Ala. | 1850
Before proceeding to the consideration of the main points in this case, we will briefly notice the exceptions taken to the ruling of the Circuit Court in the admission as well as rejection of several portions of the testimony, and as the bill of exceptions abounds with so many points, we must, for the sake of brevity, classify them as well as we may.
The first, second, third and fourth objeetions presented in the order in which the bill of exceptions states them, are of a kin
It is well settled that the declarations of a party in possession, either of real or personal property, explanatory of his possession, constitute a part of the res gestee and may properly be allowed as evidence. In the case before us, the pertinency of the declaration of Athanasius Thomas, that the land he lived on he claimed to own in his own right, to the question of title to the slaves, is not very obvious; but when we take into consideration the fact that the claimant is the daughter of the declarant, that they lived together on the land, and that the slaves in dispute were also engaged as servants about the place, we do not think the claim of ownership of the land is so disconnected with the title to the slaves and their possession as to make it irrelevant. If the slaves labored upon the land of Atha
The court properly excluded that portion of Mrs. Todd’s deposition in which she says that James Thomas claimed the mother of one of the slaves in controversy, and that she was then known as his property. It is not shown that he was in the possession of the slave at the time, nor that what was said in regard to her ownership by him was not mere hearsay. We think that before the declarations of a party can be received in evidence as explanatory-of his possession, the main fact, the possession, must be shown to the satisfaction of the court; otherwise the declaration would be made evidence of possession, or title, rather than explanatory of the tenure. — See this case in 14 Ala. 681. Besides, the proof at most conduced to establish title in a third person, as between whom and the claimant it was not proposed to show at the time it was offered any connection, so that upon that ground it -might well have been rejected, and this is decisive of the remaining exceptions to the testimony, except the twelfth, and as to this wre are constrained to hold that the court committed an error. The plaintiff had proved that Athanasius Thomas was in possession of the property. He had 'examined one witness expressly and directly to this point, and who proved the possession. Indeed the burden of his proof was to satisfy the jury that Athanasius Thomas was the possessor and owner of the slaves, and he seeks to oondemn them as his property. It was competent then for the claimant to prove his declarations, explanatory of the possession, which the plaintiff in execution had proved. It-was not for the plaintiff -in execution to say, I have proved possession and control of the slaves in the defendant in the execution, sufficient to establish his title, but the proof is not so satisfactory as to authorise his contemporaneous declarations explanatory of that possession.
We should-further observe,-lest our silence might mislead the parties, that, connected with proof that -the claimant held under a purchase from James Thomas, the matter of the tenth exception should not have been excluded. It was the declaration of James, made in the presence of Athanasius Thomas, claiming the slaves as his, and which the said A. Thomas -did
A few words may dispose of the charges. Asa general rule, the validity of a contract is to be decided by the law of the place where it is made. If valid there, it is, says Judge Story, by the general law of nations, jure gentium, held valid everywhere, by the tacit or implied consent of the parties. — Story’s Conf. Laws, § 242. So, on the other hand, if the contract be void or illegal, by the law of the place where it is made, it will, as a general rule, be held invalid everywhere. This, says the same learned author, would seem to be a principle derived from the very elements of. natural justice. — Story’s Conf. L. 203, § 243.
The gift in this case, if one was ever made, was made in the State of South Carolina, and by the law of that State, as shown ■in the bill of exceptions, “no parol gift of any chattel shall be 'valid against subsequent creditors, or purchasers, or mortgagees, ■except when the donee shall live separate and apart from the ■donor, and actual possession shall at the time of the gift be delivered to, remain with, and continue in the donee, his or her executors, administrators, or assigns.” This act was passed on the 20th Dec. 1832. Upon the subject of this statute, the Circuit Court charged the jury, that if they believed from the evidence, tliat about 1812 there was a gift, which was imperfect for want of delivery, and afterwards in 1S34, Athanasius allowed
But in charging the jury that if there was no other proof of a gift to James Thomas, except the statement of Mrs. Todd in regard to a gift and delivery of the slave Lucy, that the jury would not be authorised to regard that proof and to find that there was a gift, because, in the opinion of the court, delivery was a legal conclusion and not a fact, was manifestly erroneous. Delivery, or the act of delivering, is a fact. When we speak of it in reference to conveyancing, we mean the transfering of a deed from the grantor to the grantee, and this may be bywords, without acts, or by the acts of the parties, without words, or, as is most usually the case, by both. But when we speak of a delivery of specific articles, in connection with contracts, we mean the transmitting the possession of a thing from one person into the power and possession 'of another.— Bouv. Law Dic. title, Delivery. This is the original and primary meaning of the term, and this is the sense in which, unexplained, we must
If the object of the first charge asked, and which the court refused to give, was to obtain the judgment or opinion of the court upon the effect of the testimony, it was clearly improper and therefore rightly rejected. This, we think, may be considered a fair construction of it. The question, in the aspect in which we view the charge, is, can the court, when the question raised by the proof is one of fraudulent intent, be called upon to charge the jury upon the effect of the evidence? This precise point was decided in the case of Costillo & Keho v. Thompson, 9 Ala. 937, where this court held that the court below could not properly pass upon the effect of testimony, when the question to be determined is the fraudulent intent with which the act was done.
In this State the law is settled, that a gift as against subsisting creditors is absolutely void, hut that to avoid it as against subsequent creditors, it must be shown to have been made with a fraudulent intent. — See Miller v. Thompson, 3 Port. R. 196; Moore v. Spence, 6 Ala. 506 — see. also, the American authorities on this point collated in 1 Amer. Lead. Cases, 51 to 69. These views will sufficiently direct the future disposition of the case.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.