The terms "beyond seas" in the saving clause of a statute of
limitations are to be construed as equivalent to without the limits
of the state where the statute is enacted.
Quaere how far this construction has been adopted by
the courts of Tennessee?
Five years
bona fide possession of a slave constitutes
a title by the laws of Virginia upon which the possessor may
recover in detinue, and this title may be set up by the vendee of
such possessor in the courts of Tennessee as a defense to a suit
brought by a third party in those courts.
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs here were defendants in the court below in an
action of detinue brought by Thomas Guy to recover sundry
slaves.
The defendants below plead
non detinet and the act of
limitations of the State of Tennessee, which bars the action of
detinue in three years.
The plaintiff joins issue upon the plea of
non detinet
and files a special replication to the plea
Page 24 U. S. 362
of the statute, the object of which is to bring himself within
the saving in favor of absentees. The defendants demurred to this
replication, but the demurrer being overruled, the parties went to
trial on the general issue and a verdict was rendered for the
plaintiff in the form now usual in the action of detinue.
To revise the judgment of the court in overruling the demurrer,
and its decisions upon various points of law raised in the progress
of the trial, this writ of error is brought.
The case was this:
One Dickerson, a citizen of Virginia, the father of the
plaintiff's mother, was owner of a female slave named Amy, from
whom the slave claimed had descended. Upon the marriage of Thomas
Terry Guy with the plaintiff's mother, or soon after, and prior to
the year 1778, the slave Amy passed into the possession of T.T.G.,
but whether by loan, or parol gift, is a point litigated, and upon
which some of the principal questions in the cause arise.
From the year 1778 to 1794, the slaves remained in Virginia in
the possession of the plaintiff's father T.T.G., when he sold her
and her increase to David Shelby, who thereupon removed with the
slaves to Tennessee, where he and they have ever since resided.
In the year 1788, Dickerson made his will and died, and the will
was proved and recorded in July, 1788. In this will he says,
"I lend to my son-in-law T.T.G., the negroes which he now has in
his possession, that I lent him in the lifetime of his wife, during
his natural life,
viz.,
Page 24 U. S. 363
Cuffee, Gilbert, and Amy, and at his death I give the aforesaid
slaves, with their increase, to my grandsons John and Thomas Guy,
and their heirs forever."
Thomas Guy, here named, is the plaintiff in this action; the
executory devise to him and John took effect by the death of their
father in 1795. John died unmarried, under age, and intestate,
after his father, but before the action brought, and neither of the
brothers had been in the State of Tennessee until within three
years prior to the institution of the suit, but had resided in the
State of Virginia.
These are the material facts in the cause. The points argued
have been very numerous, but if the plaintiff has tripped in
pleading by a vicious replication, the questions on the merits are
put out of the case. The points arising on the demurrer, therefore,
must first be considered.
The replication demurred to states in substance the right of
Dickerson to the negro Amy and the continuance of that right up to
his death; the bequest to the father of the plaintiff for life, and
to the plaintiff and John after his death; the death of the father,
and of John; the qualifying of the executors on the will, and their
assent to the legacy; the sale by the father to Shelby in 1794;
Shelby's removal with the slaves to Tennessee, and subsequent
residence there, and the residence of John up to his death, and of
the plaintiff, to within three years of the bringing of this suit
in the State of Virginia.
Page 24 U. S. 364
The demurrer filed to this replication is special, and assigns
for cause
1. That it states the evidence of title, and does not allege a
fact.
2. That it is double in relying on the facts both of title and
of nonresidence.
But, claiming the right of looking back to the first fault and
other benefits appertaining to a general demurrer, to which, no
doubt, he is entitled, the counsel for the defendant have raised a
variety of other questions in the cause, of more interest than
those specified.
As, first, that the counts in the declaration are repugnant, the
one being essentially a count in trover, the other in detinue,
and
Secondly, that the replication involves a departure, inasmuch as
the writ claims the whole property, and the replication shows him
to be entitled to no more than a moiety.
That the replication is more characterized by prolixity than by
science the Court will readily admit, but that it is essentially
vicious cannot be maintained.
The general object of the plaintiff is to fortify his title or
demand, and this is a legitimate object. Nor can we perceive that
in doing this, he has either stated evidence where he ought to
allege facts or tendered to the defendant a double answer to his
plea, or rather "distinct matters to one and the same thing,
whereunto several answers are required." That it is redundant, and
abounds in surplusage, with reference to the issue tendered, is
obvious, but it prefers only one
Page 24 U. S. 365
answer that will fit the plea, which is absence from the State
of Tennessee during the term when the statute would bar him
Yet as he has thought proper to amplify upon the nature of his
demand, if he had prostrated his own action, the law would visit
him with the consequences.
The argument on this point is that having set out a joint devise
to himself and his brother, he is incapable of maintaining alone a
suit for the entirety of the thing devised. But in this we are of
opinion that the law is with him.
It is true that tenants in common must ordinarily join in an
action, and that the laws of Virginia produce a severance upon the
death of a joint tenant, so that the right of survivorship is
abolished. But it is also true that in suits for an indivisible
thing, a right of action survives to a tenant in common, and this,
from the necessity of the case, as we conceive the authorities
sufficiently maintain. Co.Litt. 198a; Bro.Abr. tit., Tenant in
Common, pl. 18.
The exceptions to the counts clearly cannot be sustained. They
are consubstantial, and the same plea and judgment proper to both.
Averring that the defendant came to the possession of the chattel
by finding does not constitute a count in trover; an alleged
conversion characterizes that form of action. Nor is it any
objection to the counts that one of them states a right to recovery
founded in a possession merely, without the direct allegation of
property, since a tortious detention may well be of that which
another has
Page 24 U. S. 366
no interest in, but to the temporary use or custody. Co.Litt.
286; Roll.Abr. 575. Thus a bailee or common carrier or sheriff may
maintain this action, and expressly against one who has them by
delivery or finding. 2 Saund. 47; Cro.Jac. 73
et passim.
We come, then, to the question raised by the demurrer upon the
statute of limitations of Tennessee, and here we are met by one of
those embarrassments which necessarily grow out of our peculiar
system.
North Carolina, in common with most of the old states, adopted
the language of the statute of James in its act of limitations.
This was the law of Tennessee before its separation from that
state, and continues so to this day. The persons excepted from its
operation, are infants,
femes covert, &c., and
"persons beyond seas."
During a century, nearly, that this law has been the local law
of that country, we cannot ascertain that the courts of either of
those states have been called on to decide whether it shall be
construed according to its literal meaning. In the meantime, solemn
adjudications have taken place in several of the states, to the
purport, that persons without the jurisdiction of the country,
though not actually beyond seas, are within the equity, if not
within the actual meaning, of the statutes containing the same
words, and borrowed from the same source. And in a case which came
up to this Court from Georgia, in the year 1818, it was solemnly
decided that it was impossible to give a sensible and
reasonable
Page 24 U. S. 367
construction to those words according to their literal
signification. But we are now informed, and as it is admitted by
the opposite counsel, we cannot question it, that a contrary
adjudication has taken place in the courts of Tennessee within the
last year, for the first time. It is obvious that without a more
particular report of that adjudication, this Court could not now
act finally upon its authority. But if the majority of the court
were of opinion, that an insulated decision on a point thus
circumstanced, ought to control the previous decision of this
Court, the course would undoubtedly be to hold up this cause for
advisement.
That the statute law of the states must furnish the rule of
decision to this Court, as far as they comport with the
Constitution of the United States, in all cases arising within the
respective states, is a position that no one doubts. Nor is it
questionable that a fixed and received construction of their
respective statute laws in their own courts makes, in fact, a part
of the statute law of the country, however we may doubt the
propriety of that construction. It is obvious that this admission
may at times involve us in seeming inconsistencies, as where states
have adopted the same statutes, and their courts differ in the
construction. Yet that course is necessarily indicated by the duty
imposed on us to administer, as between certain individuals, the
laws of the respective states, according to the best lights we
possess of what those laws are. This Court has uniformly manifested
its respect for
Page 24 U. S. 368
the adjudications of the state tribunals, and will be very
moderate in those claims which may be preferred on the ground of
comity. Yet in a case like the one now occurring, it cannot
acknowledge the objection to go further at present than to examine
the decision formerly rendered on the construction of these
words.
We have reflected and heard arguments on our former decision,
and not a doubt has been entertained except on the question how far
we were bound to surrender an opinion, under the actual state of
difference existing between our construction and that of the state
from which this cause comes.
It is true that the words "beyond seas," considered
abstractedly, must in every state in this Union mean something more
than "without the limits of the Commonwealth," which words the
State of Virginia has very properly added to the statute of James.
But it is also true that if the words "beyond seas" be considered
with reference to the insular situation of the country from which
we adopted the law, they mean exactly the same as the words
superadded in the Virginia law. And it was this consideration, as
well as the obvious absurdity of applying the terms "beyond seas,"
in their literal signification, that induced this Court, and has
induced so many state courts to give it the meaning of beyond the
Commonwealth.
If equity, as applied to the construction of statutes by an
eminent writer, means "the correction of that wherein the law, by
reason of
Page 24 U. S. 369
its universality, is deficient," or, as another defines it,
"interpreting statutes by the reason of them," may be applied to
any case, we think it may to one, which, while it operates in
restraint of common right, would, by a literal construction make no
saving in favor of persons residing in the most distant and
unfrequented parts of this extensive continent.
Nevertheless, as this cause must go back upon other grounds, we
will for the present waive a positive decision on this point as
applied to the State of Tennessee, trusting that the courts of the
state from which this cause comes will in due time furnish such
lights upon the fixed law of that state on this subject, as will
enable the courts of the United States to come to a satisfactory
conclusion upon the question.
The next class of questions in the cause arise under bills of
exception. The object of the defendants in the several prayers for
instructions propounded to the court was to be let into proof of a
title, without will or deed, in the father of T.T.G., from whom
they purchased, and to maintain, that although that title was only
derived to him by implication under the limitation acts of
Virginia, it was sufficient not only to make out a defense by
pleading, but by giving such facts in evidence as would be a good
defense on a plea of the statute of limitations, if the suit were
instituted in the State of Virginia, or to maintain detinue in a
suit to recover in right of a possession under the statute in that
state.
Page 24 U. S. 370
With this view, he proposed to rely on the following
propositions:
1. That the proof that Dickerson, on the marriage of Guy with
his daughter, had sent the slave in question with them, or to them,
upon their going to housekeeping, and permitted her to remain there
ever after as their property, without any specific declaration of
the interest vested in them, other than the will of 1788, with a
variety of corroborating facts, was sufficient to sustain an
inference of a gift or transfer by parol, and of such an adverse
possession as might constitute a bar under the act of limitations
of Virginia of 1705.
This the court refused, on the ground that a parol gift of
slaves in Virginia was, at the date of that transaction, absolutely
void.
In this it is contended the court erred both as to the law and
as to its application to the case.
As to the law, we are of opinion that the question is not now to
be stirred. We do not mean to intimate an opinion on the
construction of the acts of 1757 and 1758 on this subject; but only
to treat it as a decided point upon the construction of those
statutes, that a parol gift of slaves made in Virginia, even where
the possession passed, between the years 1757 and 1787, was void,
or voidable; for, as to all the purposes of this case, it is
immaterial which. The Declaratory Act of December 31, 1787, we
regard as a new enactment, taking effect from its date, as a repeal
of the prior acts in those
Page 24 U. S. 371
cases in which the possession passed with the gift. The
possession here relied on was from 1775 to 1788, at which time the
will was recorded. And here the material question arises whether,
if void or voidable, it does not create such an adverse interest in
the donee as the statute of 1795 may attach upon, so as to vest a
complete interest. And on this point we think the court erred in
rejecting the proof. For although the gift may have been void or
voidable, the fact of delivery of possession attended it, and this
must have put the party to his action to reinstate himself in the
enjoyment of the property. The limitation to the action of detinue
in Virginia, is five years, and here the supposed donee proves a
possession of ten years.
There can, then, be but one doubt raised on the right of the
defendant to the instruction here prayed, and to the admission of
the evidence offered to the fact of a parol gift, and that is
whether he could avail himself of this defense in this mode.
In the case of
Newby v. Blakley, 3 Hen. & Munf. 57,
a case strikingly resembling this in its circumstances, it was
adjudged that a plaintiff in Virginia may recover in detinue upon
five years peaceable possession of a slave, acquired without force
or fraud. And four months after that decision, and obviously
without being apprised of it, this Court, in the case of
Brent v.
Chapman, maintained the same doctrine. 5 Cranch
358.
It follows, we think, that on the same principle,
Page 24 U. S. 372
such a possession must constitute a good defense in Tennessee.
To preclude the defendant from availing himself of the benefit of
that evidence which would have sustained an action for the same
property by the person from whom he purchased it, would be to
convert a good and valid title in Virginia, into a defeasible title
in Tennessee; a sufficient title in a vendor, into a defeasible
title in his vendee; and, by an indirect operation, to make the
seller liable, where a direct action could not have been maintained
against him to recover the property sold.
The second prayer is calculated to obtain of the court an
instruction, that, after an indefinite loan to Guy the father, a
subsequent devise to his children, if intended to save the slaves
from his creditors, was inoperative as to Guy, and purchasers for
valuable consideration claiming under him unless with actual notice
of the will.
On this it is sufficient to remark that as there were no
creditors before the court, the court was under no obligation to
speculate upon the possible effect of their interests upon the
case. And this gets rid of the influence of the decision in
Fitzhugh v. Anderson, on the cause, as will be more
particularly shown in a subsequent part of this opinion. The
defendant here was a purchaser from T.T.G. at the time when the
will of the grandfather was of record. How far purchasers are
affected with record notice is obviously a point of local law. And
we understand that much importance is attached to it in the
jurisprudence of Virginia. Certainly, in ordinary
Page 24 U. S. 373
cases, where such a source of information is open to all, those
who do not avail themselves of it come with an ill grace before a
court to complain of imposition.
The third prayer was intended to maintain that on the
circumstances of the case, the jury might infer both a deed and the
recording of that deed. Broad as this claim was, it is obvious,
that the court was not bound to give the instruction, since it
would have availed the party nothing without the additional fact of
the loss or extinction of the record also.
The fourth prayer had relation to the question whether the right
of action survived to the tenant in common, which has been already
answered. As Thomas Terry Guy died before his son John, the
executory devise to John and the plaintiff became vested
possession. Their right of action then accrued, and that right
survived to this plaintiff, whatever may be the ultimate
distribution of the slaves when recovered. This also was rightfully
refused.
And the same remark answers many of the exceptions taken to the
charge which the court below did give, upon the sufficiency of the
plaintiff's cause of action and the form of laying it.
Other exceptions are taken to the legal doctrines of that
charge, one of which is that under the Virginia statute of frauds
of 1785, the loan, with five years possession, became a vested
title in T.T.G.; another that upon the general doctrines of courts
of law on the subject of frauds imputable where the possession
remains
Page 24 U. S. 374
in one and the right in another, this will should be adjudged a
mere cover and evasion or a new devise for the perpetration of
fraud.
But on these subjects we think it unnecessary to remark at any
length; the dates and facts do not bring the case within the
operation of the statute of frauds of 1785, and, with regard to the
general doctrine, it never has been supposed to extend to a
purchaser with notice, much less to a purchaser whom the local law
affects with notice of the highest order. Had the defendant in this
instance been a creditor of T.T.G., who had trusted him on the
faith of this property, and now sought relief under the principle
in
Twyne's Case, the decision in
Fitzhugh v.
Anderson, 2 Hen. & Munf. 289, might have applied. That
case was expressly decided upon the principle in
Twyne's
Case. The complainants were legatees of their grandfather
under a will that was not recorded until three years after the
creditors (who were defendants) had sold the son's slaves under
execution; slaves which he had held in possession for fifteen years
under a loan which was never avowed until the slaves were set up
for sale, and which there was obviously much cause for bringing
into serious suspicion.
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo
awarded.