Tennessee. A bond was executed in 1787 by which the obligor
bound himself to pay one hundred pounds for a horse or to make over
to the obligee his interest in a certain entry and warrant of land,
and if the deed or grant for the land should issue to him, to
transfer the land by deed, and to warrant and defend the said deed.
The obligor elected to pay the bond by giving the land for the
same. He made no valid conveyance of the land in his lifetime, but
it was taken possession of by the obligee, and has ever since been
occupied under the title so acquired by the obligee. After the son
and sole heir of the obligor came of age, he commenced an action of
ejectment for the land, and those who claimed title under the
obligee filed a bill for an injunction, and that the defendant, the
plaintiff in the ejectment, be decreed to convey the land according
to the stipulations in the bond. This bill was filed in 1822.
The court said, in considering the question as to the
genuineness of the bond on which this controversy is founded, the
first important fact that occurs to the mind is the remoteness of
the transaction. Nearly half a century has elapsed since this
instrument purports to have been executed. The obligor and the
obligee and both the witnesses are dead. The contract belongs to
the past age. It was executed, if at all, when the country was new
and unsettled, and the parties to it seem to have been illiterate
men and unacquainted with business transactions. These
circumstances are referred to not to show that this bond should be
received without proof, but to show that as strict proof should not
be required of its execution as if it were of recent date. The law
makes some allowance for the frailties of memory, and where a great
length of time has elapsed since the signing of an instrument
attempted to be proved, circumstances are viewed as having an
important bearing upon the question.
The case of
Barr v.
Gratz, 4 Wheat. 231, 4 Cond. 426, cited.
Construction of the statutes of limitations of North Carolina of
1815 and 1819.
Statutes of limitations are applied by courts of equity in all
cases where at law they might be pleaded. At law, to make the
statute a bar, there must be an adverse possession, and by analogy
a court of equity in a similar case will hold the statute to be a
good bar.
But the statute insisted on as a bar in this case does not
depend upon possession. It bars a creditor who does not sue the
heir within seven years. There can be no doubt that the statute
applies where a creditor seeks to make the heir liable for the debt
of his ancestor on the ground that either personal or real property
descended to him. And this appears to be the decision of the
Supreme Court of Tennessee on the statute. There is nothing in
their decisions referred to which shows that they have given effect
to the statute beyond this. By the statute of 1819, which is wholly
different in its language from the
act of 1815, a bar is created indiscriminately to suits in
equity as well as at law. The statutes do not apply to this
case.
The instruments under which a part of the complaints set up an
equity
Page 34 U. S. 63
derived from the heirs of the obligor, are proved, but they
cannot be sanctioned by this Court except where such instruments
were executed by the heirs of full age. It is the duty of the court
to protect the interests of minors, and the decree of the circuit
court in this respect, as well as in every other, is correct.
The case is fully stated in the opinion of the court.
Page 34 U. S. 70
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In their bill the complainants state that on 22 February, 1785,
a certain entry in the land office of North Carolina was made by
Isaac Coulson, assignee of David Welles, for six hundred and forty
acres of land, and that afterwards, on 2 January, 1787, he executed
a bond to one Josiah Payne for the conveyance of said tract of land
agreeably to the terms therein expressed, to-wit:
"Know all men by these presents, that I, Isaac Coulson, of the
State of North Carolina and County of Davidson, do oblige myself,
my heirs and assigns, to pay to Josiah Payne one hundred pounds in
Virginia currency, in payment for a certain bay stud horse I bought
of him within
Page 34 U. S. 71
twelve months from the date hereof, with lawful interest,
otherwise, in lieu thereof, I do oblige myself to make over all my
right and interest of a certain entry and warrant of land of six
hundred and forty acres, lying on the north side of Cumberland
River, on said river, about one or two miles above the mouth of the
Caney Fork, unto the said Josiah Payne of the county and state
aforesaid, or his heirs and assigns. And if a deed or grant should
issue to me before said entry or warrant should be transferred from
me to said Payne, then and in that case I do hereby oblige myself
to make a transfer deed of all my right, title and interest of the
aforesaid land unto the aforesaid Josiah Payne or his assigns,
which deed and right, when made, is to be taken in full payment for
the one hundred pounds and interest, and I do hereby oblige myself
to warrant and defend said deed from me, my heirs and assigns
forever unto the said Payne and his heirs."
Which bond purports to have been signed and sealed by the said
Isaac Coulson and witnessed by James Donelson and William Bush.
The complainants further state that the obligor elected to pay
the said sum of one hundred pounds by giving the land as expressed
in the above recited bond, which mode of payment was assented to by
the said Payne. That said Isaac Coulson died intestate sometime in
the year 1791, leaving the defendant his only heir at law. That a
grant was issued for the land on 15 September, 1787, but no valid
conveyance was made to the said Payne for the land, although in his
lifetime various means were tried to obtain a title. That
possession was taken of the land in 1799 or 1800, and that it has
been occupied ever since under the title of Payne, and that the
taxes have been paid. That since the defendant has arrived at full
age he commenced an action of ejectment and recovered a judgment
for the land, and the complainants pray an injunction and that the
defendant may be decreed to convey all his interest in the premises
to the complainants.
In his answer the defendant denies that the bond set forth in
the complainants' bill, was ever executed by his father, Isaac
Coulson, and states that it is a forgery, and he denies the other
material allegations in the bill.
In considering the question as to the genuineness of the bond on
which this controversy is founded, the first important fact
Page 34 U. S. 72
that occurs to the mind is the remoteness of the transaction.
Nearly half a century has elapsed since this instrument purports to
have been executed. The obligor and the obligee and both the
witnesses are dead. The contract belongs to the past age. It was
executed, if at all, when the country was new and unsettled, and
the parties to it seem to have been illiterate men and unacquainted
with business transactions.
These circumstances are referred to not to show that this bond
should be received without proof, but to show that as strict proof
should not be required of its execution as if it were of recent
date. The law makes some allowance for the frailties of memory, and
where a great length of time has elapsed since the signing of an
instrument attempted to be proved, circumstances are viewed as
having an important bearing upon the question.
In the case of
Barr v.
Gratz, 4 Wheat. 231, this Court decided
"That where a deed is more than thirty years old, and is proved
to have been in the possession of the lessors of the plaintiff in
ejectment, and actually asserted by them as the ground of their
title in a chancery suit, it is, in the language of the books,
sufficiently accounted for, and it is admissible in evidence
without regular proof of its execution by the subscribing
witnesses."
There is no proof of the handwriting of James Donelson, one of
the subscribing witnesses to this bond, but it is proved that he
was supposed to have been killed by the Indians many years ago.
The handwriting of Bush the other subscribing witness is proved
by three of his sons, who were well acquainted with his hand, one
of them having administered on his estate. These witnesses, and
especially two of them, speak with great confidence not only as to
the signature of their father, but they say that the body of the
bond appears to have been written by him. And they state that
although at the time the bond bears date and for some years before
and afterwards until his death, their father lived in Clark County,
Kentucky, yet he was absent the greater part of his time on hunting
expeditions, and they understood that he was several times in the
western part of Tennessee. It appeared that their father understood
surveying,
Page 34 U. S. 73
was a pretty good scribe, and was frequently called on to write
deeds and other instruments.
Three witnesses testify to the original contract and the
circumstances which led to it. Payne sold to Coulson a valuable
horse, for which he agreed to pay one hundred pounds. Sometime
afterwards, Coulson, finding the horse did not suit his purpose,
induced Payne as his agent to sell him, which was done, for the
tract of land now in controversy. It was after this sale, as these
witnesses say, that they understood a bond was executed, by which
Coulson was bound to pay to Payne one hundred pounds or convey the
land to him in lieu of the money. Two witnesses state that in
addition to the land, Coulson agreed to pay Payne $50 dollars, in a
horse.
George Cumming, and the sister of Josiah Payne were acquainted
with William Bush, and the latter was also acquainted with the
other witness, James Donelson.
Sometime after the date of the bond, Coulson, it is proved, went
to Virginia under the expectation of obtaining money to pay off the
bond from the estate of his father, but he found that the estate
had been wasted, and being disappointed in raising the money, he
remained in Virginia, married, and afterwards died in 1791. In the
year 1793, Payne went of Virginia and obtained from the widow of
Coulson a bond, in a penalty, dated 6 November, 1793, with a
condition to convey all her interest in the land in dispute, and
she authorized Payne to take possession of it. This bond was
executed by the widow, on the advice of Jacob Coulson, her
brother-in-law, that it was best to discharge the claim by the
conveyance of the land.
An attempt was made to obtain a conveyance under the sanction of
a county court in Virginia, and Mrs. Coulson attended the court for
that purpose, but the decision was that it had no power to act on
the subject.
At another time, Payne made application to the widow, and said
he ought to have something, as he should have to wait until the
children became of age, and she let him have a horse worth fifteen
pounds.
In 1797 or 1798, it appears a man by the name of Johns was sent
to Virginia for this title, and was informed by Payne that he would
probably find it ready for him. At this time, Mrs.
Page 34 U. S. 74
Coulson, Jacob Coulson, and Benjamin Johns went to the court in
Grayson County, Virginia, and were three days in attendance on it,
endeavoring to procure a title for the land, but failed.
Payne had then sold a part of this land to Johns, but as no deed
could be obtained, Johns was unwilling to take the land, and he
exchanged it with Walton, who in 1799 or 1800 took possession of a
part of the tract, and has ever since held it by himself and his
heirs. At a subsequent period, he made other purchases of the
tract. It was known as Payne's land from the time Johns went to
Virginia for a title.
Payne died in 1805, and his heirs endeavored to obtain a title
by permitting the land to be sold for taxes, in 1806, and they
became the purchasers. Shortly after this sale, George Payne, son
and administrator of Josiah Payne, went to Grayson County,
Virginia, and procured a release of all claim to the land from the
representatives of Coulson, and in which they stipulated not to
redeem the land under the sale for taxes. This instrument has been
lost. George Payne was drowned a few years after the writing was
obtained by him.
These are the material facts and circumstances relied on by the
complainants, to prove the execution of the bond, and to lay the
foundation to the equitable relief prayed for in the bill.
A great number of depositions were read by the defendant's
counsel to rebut the facts proved by the complainants and show that
they are not entitled to relief.
Six witnesses state that they were acquainted with William Bush
and several of them with James Donelson. That they both came from
the Indian nation, and were supposed to be tories and refugees.
That Bush was a dissipated man, was occasionally deranged, and
incapable of business. That he had a brother named Abner, who was a
man of good capacity, and of respectable character; that they were
both hunters, and were well acquainted with the watercourses
falling into the Mississippi River south of the Tennessee.
Donelson and William Bush were reported to have been killed by
the Indians in years 1786 or 1787.
The depositions of three witnesses were read by the defendant
who were well acquainted with William Bush in Clark County,
Kentucky, and who from their intimacy with him and the short
distance they lived from him, about the time the bond
Page 34 U. S. 75
bears date, seem to think he could not have been absent from
home at that time.
And it is proved by Jermiah Coulson, brother of Israel, that
when Payne was in Virginia, a conversation took place between him,
the witness and Jacob Coulson, at which time Payne said he had no
obligation or any instrument of writing from Isaac Coulson
respecting the land in dispute. And that Payne also said he was to
receive from Coulson a negro boy, under twelve years old, in
discharge of the debt, and at the same time he agreed to pay the
taxes on said land and take care of it for the children of said
Coulson, and the witness was called on specially to remember the
agreement. At this time Payne received a horse of Mrs. Coulson
worth $50 in part payment of the claim.
The first inquiry which naturally arises in the mind on reading
the whole evidence is whether it may not be reconciled. Some parts
of it, and especially those parts which relate to the subscribing
witness, William Bush would seem to conflict, but this is
susceptible of a most satisfactory explanation.
There can be no doubt from the facts stated by the witnesses
that there were two persons who bore the name of William Bush and
who were occasionally in the western part of Tennessee about the
same time. One of them, the Kentucky Bush, was a respectable man, a
deacon in the Baptist church, a surveyor, wrote a good hand, and he
died in Clark County, Kentucky, about the year 1816. The other was
believed to have come from the Indians, was an ignorant, dissipated
man, incapable of business, accustomed to hunting in the country
south of the Tennessee River, and was reported to have been killed
by the Indians in 1786 or 1787. He had a brother named Abner, who
is proved to have been in no way connected with the Kentucky
Bush.
The mere statement of these facts is enough to convince everyone
that the different witnesses, in describing the character, capacity
for business, pursuits, residence and death of William Bush, could
not have referred to the same person. Even the witnesses examined
by the defendant, in proving the residence and death of the
Kentucky Bush proved enough to show that he could not have been the
same person who was believed to have been a refugee and tory and
was suspected
Page 34 U. S. 76
of attacking boats on the Mississippi River in connection with
other persons and of committing other depredations upon
society.
The fact that there were two persons of the name of William Bush
may be safely assumed, and the question arises whether the
signature of the Kentucky Bush as a subscribing witness to the bond
is satisfactorily proved.
Some doubt is attempted to be raised as to this fact from the
statements of the witnesses who lived in the immediate neighborhood
of Bush and who have no recollection of his having been absent from
home about the time the bond bears date.
But this evidence, at best, is of a negative character, and
depends upon the memory of witnesses for a great number of years of
a fact not calculated to make any impression on the mind. No
circumstances are related by the witnesses which were calculated to
impress upon their memories the absence of William Bush in January,
1787. What prudent person, in the absence of such circumstances,
would undertake to state, positively that his nearest neighbor was
absent from home any given month some twenty-five or thirty years
before?
But the complainants have proved by the three sons of Bush and
his widow that he was from home hunting the greater part of his
time, and some of them say that from his conversations and several
facts they believe he often visited Western Tennessee. And more
than one witness who lived in the neighborhood of Josiah Payne
became acquainted with Bush in his expeditions to Tennessee.
From these facts it would seem that no presumption against the
due execution of the bond can arise from the statement of the
witnesses who were the neighbors of Bush and who could not
recollect of his having been absent from home about the time the
bond is dated.
But how can the admissions of Payne in the presence of Jeremiah
and Jacob Coulson that he held no instrument of writing on Isaac
Coulson for the land in dispute, and that he had agreed to receive
a negro boy in discharge of the claim, be explained, and also his
agreement to pay the taxes on the land, and take care of it for the
heirs of Coulson? And what
Page 34 U. S. 77
answer can be given to his having received a horse worth $50 in
part payment of the claim?
The payment of the horse seems to have been in pursuance of the
original agreement. Two of the witnesses state that Coulson, in
addition to the land, was to give Payne a horse worth $50. And it
is not improbable, if the remarks were made by Payne as stated by
Jeremiah Coulson, that he held no written contract from Isaac
Coulson, they must have referred to the fact of here being no
writing respecting the payment of this horse.
That he agreed to pay the taxes, and preserve the land for the
heirs of Coulson is disproved by the fact that either then or
sometime before, Payne procured a bond from Mrs. Coulson for the
land. The language of this bond cannot be mistaken, and it goes to
show that instead of abandoning the land and agreeing to pay the
taxes for the heirs of Coulson, he was determined to perfect his
claim to it by the use of such means as he could resort to. By the
statement of Mrs. Coulson, it appears Payne complained that he
should have to wait for a title until her children became of age.
This fact, as well as the deed and the whole course of conduct of
Payne, show that he could not have made the remarks and agreement
as stated by Jeremiah Coulson.
From this view of the evidence, which has a bearing upon the
fact of the contract and the execution of the bond, the proof is as
clear and as satisfactory as could be reasonably expected after the
lapse of so many years.
The handwriting of Bush is proved by the positive testimony of
three witnesses, and the consideration of the bond is clearly
proved by three other witnesses, all of whom stand without any
impeachment of their credit. Conclusive as these facts would seem
to be as to the genuineness of the bond and the consideration on
which it was given, there are others equally conclusive.
If no contract between Coulson and Payne had been made, what
could have induced the latter to visit Virginia in 1793, and how
can the conduct of Mrs. Coulson in executing a bond to convey all
her right in the land, with the advice of her brother-in-law, Jacob
Coulson, be accounted for. This was about five years after the
money was to have been paid, or the
Page 34 U. S. 78
land conveyed. The circumstances were then known to the parties,
and no objection seems to have been made either by Mrs. Coulson or
the connections of her deceased husband to the claim set up by
Payne. So far from any objections' being made, everything was done,
both by Mrs. Coulson and her friends, which they could do to vest
the title for this land in Payne. They applied to the court, and
remained in attendance upon it for three days, at one time, under
the hope of obtaining the necessary authority to execute the
conveyance. And Payne complained of the hardship of being compelled
to wait for a title until the heirs of Coulson became of age.
These are facts established by the evidence, and do they not
show beyond controversy that there was a contract between Coulson
and Payne respecting this land? And this important point being
established independent of the bond, the genuineness of that
instrument must be extremely probable. Its language agrees with the
contract as proved by parol, and several of the witnesses say the
contract was reduced to writing. And in addition to this, the clear
proof of the handwriting of Bush the subscribing witness would seem
to be conclusive. Taking into view all the facts and circumstances
in favor of the due execution of this instrument, it has been as
fully established as could be expected of any writing of so ancient
a date.
But it is objected that this bond has been mutilated, and
therefore it must be rejected. It is true that some alterations
have been made on the face of the bond. The words "North Carolina,"
or some other words, have been erased, and the word "Virginia," in
lieu thereof, has been inserted. This alteration would make the
bond read Isaac Coulson, of the State of "Virginia" and County of
Davidson, instead of the State of "North Carolina,", &c. The
signature of Isaac Coulson to the bond seems to have been scratched
out and again written.
That these alterations have been made since the death of Payne
is satisfactorily proved; it is clear that no one having any
interest under the bond could have had a motive to alter it as
seems to have been done. If, by the alterations, the obligation of
Coulson had been increased, either as to the time of payment, the
sum to be paid, or the number of acres to be conveyed, Payne or his
heirs might have had some
Page 34 U. S. 79
motive of interest to make them, but their interest was directly
opposed to any act which would impair the validity of the bond or
cast suspicion upon it.
It is proved that after the death of Payne, the bond was in the
possession of those who claimed the land adversely to it, so that
its destruction would have advanced their interests. It is fair,
therefore, to presume that if the alterations were made by design,
they could not have been made by anyone claiming under the bond,
but must have been made by someone who had an interest in
destroying it.
By this bond, Coulson agreed to pay to Payne �100 in
twelve months, or in lieu of the money, to convey the land.
It is alleged in the bill that Coulson elected to pay the
�100 by a conveyance of the land, and that Payne agreed to
receive it.
This is a clear case of election by the obligor, and a
conveyance of the land or the payment of the money within the time
specified would have discharged the obligation. The money has not
been paid, and although there is no positive proof that an election
was made during the life of Coulson to pay the land, yet from the
facts and circumstances of the case and the condition of the
obligation, there can be no doubt that those who claim under it
have a right to consider it now as an absolute bond for the
conveyance of the land.
The statute of limitations is set up as a bar to the relief
sought by the bill, and as this is a ground more relied on by the
counsel than any other, it requires a most careful examination.
In the ninth section of "an act concerning proving wills, and
granting letters of administration, and to prevent frauds in the
management of intestates' estates," enacted by North Carolina in
1715 and which is now in force in Tennessee, it is provided "that
creditors of any person deceased shall make their claim within
seven years after the death of such debtor, otherwise such creditor
shall be forever barred."
Under this statute, the question arises whether the
representatives of Payne, in asserting their claim to the land in
controversy, can be considered creditors? Whether, in a case where
the relation of vendor and vendee exists, the consideration having
been paid, and a naked trust only has descended to the
Page 34 U. S. 80
heir, he can protect himself under this statute, after the lapse
of seven years, against a bill for a specific performance.
It is insisted by the defendant's counsel that this is not
considered an open question in Tennessee, and that in pursuance of
the rule of decision in this Court to adopt the construction given
to its statutes by the supreme court of a state, the question must
be considered here also as settled.
The first case,
Smith v. Hickman's Heirs, referred to
is in Cooke 330. In this case, the reporter says
"The bill states that the ancestor of the defendants, sometime
in the spring of 1789, executed an obligation to the complainant,
binding him to convey six hundred acres of land, within a
reasonable time; that the said ancestor died intestate, in the year
1791, leaving the defendants his heirs at law; and that
administration of the personal estate was committed to his wife and
two other persons. That the obligation has not been complied with
and that the defendants refuse to satisfy the same, although there
is a large estate descended to them both real and personal. The
bill prays for a specific performance."
To this bill the statute of limitations was pleaded in bar.
In their opinion, the court said
"It has been insisted that the complainant is not a creditor, on
account of the demand's not being of a pecuniary nature, but as it
is the duty of this court to examine this point, it feels satisfied
that as to that he is within the act. All persons are considered
creditors that have demands originating from contracts or
agreements."
And in answer to the arguments of counsel that the statute could
have had no reference to heirs, but to the personal representatives
and the personal estate, the court remarks "the only inquiry is
whether it were reasonable that the legislature should think of the
situation of heirs, in respect to the debts of their ancestors,"
and again
"If no lapse of time can secure the estate thus descended, the
peace of society would be much disturbed. Recoveries might be made
of one, of many heirs, and suits for contribution must take
place."
And further, "it is admitted in argument that it is reasonable
legatees and distributees should know when they may be at
rest."
From the statement in the bill it does not appear that the
conveyance of any specific tract of land was prayed for, and it
would seem from the fact of the personal representatives' being
Page 34 U. S. 81
named in the bill, and an averment that a large estate, both
real and personal, descended to the defendants, that the object of
the suit could not have been a title, but to subject the property
descended to the heir to the payment of the claim. On no other
supposition can the language of the bill receive a sensible
construction.
If the bill had been filed to obtain a decree for a title to a
specific tract of land, would the administrators have been named in
it, and could it have been thought necessary to aver that a large
estate, both real and personal, descended to the defendants?
Whether the heirs inherited any estate or not beyond the
particular tract was wholly immaterial. If they were naked
trustees, they could be held responsible as such, and the
administrators were neither necessary nor proper parties to the
suit.
It is true the language used by the court in the first quotation
above made is general, and would embrace a case of trust, but such
does not appear to have been the case before them. And this fact
seems to be clear of doubt when the language of the court from
other parts of its opinion as above quoted is considered in
connection with the case made in the bill.
The case of
Lewis v. Hickman's Heirs, 2 Tenn. 317, is
also relied on.
In this case, the bill stated that Hickman, for a valuable
consideration, executed a bond to Hughes for �500, with
condition for the conveyance of a tract of two hundred and
seventy-four acres of land, &c. Hickman died intestate, and his
administrator, under a statute authorizing administrators to make
deeds, executed one to the plaintiff's testator in discharge of the
bond. It was charged that the deed was not in compliance with the
statute, and was therefore void. That a certain Roberts took
possession of the land, and that on account of the defect in the
title, a recovery could not be had against Roberts. The object of
the bill was that the bond might be set up and the plaintiff
relieved. The statute was pleaded in bar, and the defendant stated
also "that he had distributed the estate among those entitled
agreeably to law, and from length of time he was not able to
produce his vouchers," &c.
This was clearly not a case where the plaintiff prayed a
Page 34 U. S. 82
specific performance, and yet it was admitted by the counsel to
be the same in principle as the one above referred to of
Smith
v. Hickman's Heirs.
In
Peck v. Wheaton, Mart. & Yerg. 353, the Supreme
Court of Tennessee said
"We are moreover of opinion that the act of 1715, above quoted,
will operate as a bar, and that that act is in force we consider
one of the best established positions litigated in our courts."
This bill was brought to subject the lands which had descended
to the defendants to the payment of the debts of their ancestor,
and the court very properly held that the statute was a good bar.
The complainants were, substantially and technically, creditors.
This shows too that it was the ordinary course in Tennessee, by
bill in chancery, to make the lands descended to heirs liable to
the debts of the ancestor.
The case of
Armstrong v. Campbell, 3 Yerg. 208, is
cited. In the margin, the reporter says that the only exception to
the operation of the statute of limitations is where the trust is
created by express contract, and where the relation of trustee and
cestui que trust exists in fact, and not by implication.
But in this case, the question did not come directly before the
court.
That the statute of limitations is applied by courts of equity
in all cases where at law it might be pleaded is a well settled
principle. At law, to make the statute a bar, there must be an
adverse possession, and by analogy a court of equity in a similar
case will hold the statute to be a good bar.
But the statute insisted on as a bar in this case does not
depend upon possession. It bars a creditor who does not sue the
heir within seven years. There can be no doubt that the statute
applies where a creditor seeks to make the heir liable for the debt
of his ancestor on the ground that either personal or real property
descended to him. And this appears to be the decision of the
Supreme Court of Tennessee on the statute. There is nothing in
their decisions referred to which shows that they have given effect
to the statute beyond this. By the statute of 1819, which is wholly
different in its language from the act of 1715, a bar is created
indiscriminately to suits in equity as well as at law. But this
statute does not govern the case under consideration.
In the case of
Hagsard v. Mayfield, 5 Hay. 121, the
court
Page 34 U. S. 83
said
"As to the act of limitation of 1715, where is the obligee in
such a case as the present barred as against the heir? He has no
demand against the executor when he elects the land, and cannot,
therefore, be barred as to him. His demand is only against the
heir, and that too in equity, upon a trust to be performed by the
heir, who, until performance, holds the land for the obligee, and
he is only barrable, as in case of equities, by the lapse of twenty
years unaccounted for."
This point was not involved in the case, but the question shows
the views of the court.
From a careful examination of the cases in which the ninth
section of the act of 1715 has undergone a judicial construction by
the Supreme Court of Tennessee, we are satisfied that the question
raised in the present case has not been decided. And this Court can
have no hesitation in saying that the complainants in this suit can
in no correct sense, claiming as they do a specific execution of
the contract, be considered creditors within the meaning of the
statute. They do not seek to subject the lands which descended to
the defendant to the payment of debts contracted by his ancestor,
but to divest the naked legal title in favor of an equity clearly
established. An equity founded upon a contract which acknowledged
the receipt of the consideration in full, in 1787, and, as is
proved, the same consideration which was paid by the defendant's
father for the land in question -- an equity accompanied by a
possession of more than twenty years.
Can lapse of time operate to the prejudice of the complainants?
Have they slept upon their rights?
In about five years after the conveyance should have been
executed, we find Payne in Virginia, endeavoring to procure a
title. And at that time he did prove a recognition of his claim by
the widow of the obligor, who was the only person, according to the
views then entertained, that had an interest in the land and was
capable of entering into a legal obligation. Payne's visit is
repeated to Virginia for the same object, and he sends an agent at
another time. In 1798 he sells a part of this land, and in the
following year or in 1800 possession is taken under this purchase,
and subsequently other purchases are made, and the possession of
the land under Payne and his representatives has been continued to
the present time. In
Page 34 U. S. 84
1805, Payne died and this land descended to his heirs at law,
several of whom were infants, and it is admitted that until the
year 1801, there was no court of chancery in Tennessee through
which the specific execution of a contract could be enforced. And
it is proved that this land has been called Payne's land for
thirty-five years.
These facts being proved, does the case come within any decision
by the courts of this country or of England where the specific
execution of a contract has been refused on the ground of lapse of
time?
When the condition of the parties, their remote residence from
each other, their deaths, the state of the country and its
tribunals are considered, it would seem that instead of being
negligent in the prosecution of the claim for a title to this land,
Payne and those who claim under him have shown more than ordinary
diligence. Even after the death of Payne, we find his son and
administrator in Virginia endeavoring to procure the title. And at
this time, as well as at all times previously, when application was
made, the right of Payne was acknowledged.
Under such circumstances, this Court cannot consider the lapse
of time as operating against the right set up by the
complainants.
The instruments under which a part of the complainants set up an
equity derived from Payne's heirs are proved; but they cannot be
sanctioned by this Court except where such instruments were
executed by the heirs of full age. It is the duty of the court to
protect the interests of minors, and we think the decree of the
circuit court in this respect, as well as in every other, is
correct, and it is therefore
Affirmed with costs.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
West Tennessee and was argued by counsel, on consideration whereof
it is decreed and ordered by this Court that the decree of the said
circuit court in this cause be and the same is hereby affirmed with
costs.