<petition><petition_analysis_number>21684327</petition_analysis_number><petition_url>https://dlas.uncg.edu/petitions/petition/21684327</petition_url><state>Virginia</state><county>Halifax</county><location_type>County</location_type><file_day>9</file_day><file_month>9</file_month><file_year>1843</file_year><filing_court>Circuit Superior</filing_court><end_day>9</end_day><end_month>9</end_month><end_year>1847</end_year><ending_court>Circuit Superior</ending_court><result>granted</result><enslaved_count>1</enslaved_count><fpoc_count>0</fpoc_count><total_people_count>3</total_people_count><repository>Halifax Circuit Court Building, Halifax, Virginia</repository><abstract>Thomas Hundley avers that he and Benjamin W. Walker formed a slave trading company in 1840, with Hundley establishing himself in New Orleans and Walker in Jackson, Mississippi.  Hundley would receive Mississippi slaves and sell them for a profit.  Within a short time they had acquired and sold "a large number of slaves."  The partnership was dissolved after several years; soon after, however, a suit was brought "to try the right of property in a large number of slaves" in which the rights of the petitioner and Walker should have been defended.  However, "Walker either through the grossest negligence on his part-- or, as is more likely through some fraudulent combination with some of the parties interested wholly neglected to employ counsel," thus causing himself and Hundley to lose the execution on the slaves; Walker arranged not to be charged with the paying for the judgment, placing the whole burden on Hundley.  Therefore, Hundley prays for an injunction on the previous suit.  [Petition is incomplete.]</abstract><subjects><subject>Crops (tobacco)</subject><subject>Freedom seekers</subject><subject>Slave trade (domestic)</subject></subjects></petition>