1 Tex. 463 | Tex. | 1846
It will be necessary to the investigation of the points presented for our consideration in this case, to substantially recite the petition or bill of the appellee in the court below. The petition states that David A. Monegan is the guardian of Jesse Carr, a lunatic. That petitioner had been duly appointed guardian by the county court in Marengo county in the state of Alabama, the county of the domicile of the said lunatic, and of his guardian, the petitioner. That proceedings had been instituted fey the said guardian against the said "Wellborn, in the county of Marshall, the county of the domicile of the defendant, in the said state in the court of chancery, to set aside a pretended sale of certain negroes made by the said lunatic to the said "Wellborn, that a decree was rendered by the Honorable Alexander Bowie, chancellor of the said court, setting aside the said pretended sale as fraudulent and divesting the said Wellborn of all right and title to the said slaves under the said pretended sale, and vesting the title to the same in the petitioner as guardian of the said lunatic and decreeing that they should be delivered up to him as such guardian. It stated that Wellborn had run the said slaves off to Hed river in the republic of Texas. It prays that he should be required to deliver the said slaves and their increase to the petitioner as guardian, and for the value of their services for their detention. It called on the defendant to answer as to the increase of the said slaves, their number, and whether they were not in his possession or what disposition he had made of them. There was a great deal more stated in the petition by way of inducement to the action, and may be regarded as a mere detail of the proceedings in Alabama, but are not thought to
The answer of Wellborn admits his possession of the slaves, the names, ages and sex, with the names and ages of their increase; that these are all then in his possession, excepting one that had died in the state of Alabama; that he sold none of them. He makes no answer or reference to the proceedings of the court of chancery, and the decree of the chancellor. But goes on to set up the validity of the sale, and the capacity of the said Jesse Carr to contract for himself; the fairness of the transaction, and much other matter that would have been proper to have been considered, but no doubt was considered by the chancellor on the final hearing in the state of Alabama. He denies that he had secretly fled with the negroes from Alabama. On the trial of the case the plaintiff in the court below, who is the ap-pellee in this court, produced in evidence an exemplification of the proceedings, and the decree of the chancellor in Alabama, authenticated by the certificate of the . clerk and master, by the chancellor and the governor with the seal of the state, which was admitted although objected by the defendant and excepted to; and the judge charged the jury that the decree was conclusive. Which charge was also excepted to by the appellant.
The jury then found that the record was proven according to the certificates; meaning, I presume accprding to the attesting certificates, but found that the use of the property was not worth more than the support of the slaves.
This case was once before this court under its former organization as the supreme court of the late republic of Texas, on an appeal from the judgment of the court below in favor of the defendant’s general demurrer to the petition, which judgment was reversed, and the demurrer overruled. The opinion of the court went fully into the law of the case, and took and sustained the distinction between proceedings and judgments i/n personam and in rem. It held that the ceedings and decree of the court of chancery in Alabama were in rem and vested the property in the slaves in the guardian, for the use' of the lunatic, Carr.
One of the questions now presented for our consideration is, did the court below err in its charge to the jury, that the decree of the chancellor- was conclusive? We have at the present term of this court, in the case of Phillips v. Lyon, decided that a foreign judgment, in proceedings in personam was prima facie evidence of the debt; and if the language of the court was not explicit in making
The next point presented for consideration is the admissibility of the exemplification of the record of the proceedings in the state of Alabama, as it appears to have been authenticated. This question came directly before us in the case of Phillips v. Lyons, and it was ruled not to be admissible evidence. We shall not repeat the grounds of our opinion, as it will be found by a reference to that case, that they are there stated. In that case the court mainly relied on the rules laid down by Chief Justice Marshall, in Church v. Hubbart, 2 Cranch, 187; and on this point we would be constrained to reverse the judgment, if under the issues, the testimony received was necessary. The rule that all the allegations in a bill not traversed by the answers are to be taken as admitted is believed to be too well settled at this time to admit of argument. It will be seen that the fact of the proceedings in the chancery court of Alabama, and the decree of the