Adams v. Sneed

41 Fla. 151
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 Fla. 151 (Adams v. Sneed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Sneed, 41 Fla. 151 (Fla. 1899).

Opinions

Carter, J.:

On August 23, 1894, Page Sneed instituted in the Circuit Court of Duval county an action of ejectment against Louis Adams seeking to recover title to and possession of a certain parcel of land one hundred and five feet square in block 11 of Brooklyn, in the city of Jacksonville. J. C. Greeley and Samuel Gauze were subsequently made parties defendant upon their application, and the cause was by consent of parties referred to W. B. Young,' Esq., referee. Subsequently Nancy Ross Allen, Lucien Ross, Margaret Ross Bronson and Violet Ross, a minor, by her next friend, Lucien Ross, were made parties plaintiff. Greeley and Adams pleaded not guilty and a trial before the referee was had, resulting in a finding and judgment for plaintiffs, from which the defendants sued out this writ of error.

[153]*153It seems that Gauze and Adams were tenants of Greeley, and claimed no rights in the property other than as such tenants. The record shows that this property formerly belonged to one Miles Price, who conveyed same to August Buesing September 2, 1867. Buesing conveyed to George W. Mitchell Mlarch 8, 1869, and Mitchell conveyed to Benjamin Jenkins January 24, 1877. There is evidence tending to show that Jenkins went into possession of the property after his purchase; that he died a bachelor and intestate about May, 1892; that his mother and the mother of Page Sneed were sisters; that Nancy Ross Allen, Luden Ross, Margaret Ross Bronson and Violet Ross were the children and heirs at law of one Henry Ross, deceased, a brother of Page Sneed. It was agreed between the parties at the trial that “the mother of Page Sneed, the mother of Ben Jenkins and also the mother of these two women were born and lived and died in slavery, and were not married other than according to the customs of slavery times in middle Florida.” Greeley claimed title to the land through conveyances from grantees of the heirs of Miles Price. The referee found that the mother of Page Sneed and Henry Ross and the <mother of Ben Jenkins were sisters, and slaves and died in slavery, without ever having been married other than according to the customs of slavery in middle Florida; that plaintiffs were the next of kin of Ben Jenkins and were in being at the time of his death; that Jenkins having died without issue or lawful heirs, the title to the lot in question vested in the State, and that by virtue of the act of December 12th, 1866, plaintiffs were entitled to recover it. The referee also found that plaintiffs could not inherit the land in dispute by virtue of the provisions of section 17, act of November 17, 1829, relating to inheritance by and from bastards.

[154]*154The defendants moved for a new trial upon the ground that the findings and judgment of the referee were contrary to the law and the evidence, and the overruling of this motion constitutes one of the assignments of error relied upon in this court.

As the mother of Page Sneed and Henry Ross, and the mother of Benjamin Jenkins, were born, and lived and died in slavery, it follows that Sneed, Ross and Jenkins were born slaves, as their condition or status followed that of their mothers. Section 1, p. 216, Du-val’s Comp.; Section 1, p. 531, Thomp. Dig. And as these two women and their mother were never married other than according to the customs of slavery in middle Florida, it becomes necessary to determine whether the offspring of customary slave marriages not confirmed after emancipation, possess inheritable blood. This question was before the court in Daniel v. Sams. 17 Fla. 487, and it was held that while there was a moral obligation which natural law imposed in the relation of husband and wife among slaves, still its legal consequences were regulated by the municipal law, and that the issue of a slave marriage, under that law in the absence of enabling statutes, possess no inheritable blood. And this statement of the law accords with all the decisions upon this subject with exceptions presently to be mentioned. In addition to authorities cited by the court, see Jackson v. Lervey, 5 Cow. 397; Hall v. United States, 92 U. S. 27; McDowell v. Sapp, 39 Ohio St. 558; Scott v. Raub, 88 Va. 721, 14 S. E. Rep. 178; Butler v. Butler, 161 Ill. 451, 44 N. E. Rep. 203. In Tennessee, contrary to the uniform rulings in other States, customary slave marriages with the master’s consent, though never authorized or regulated by statute, were recognized as valid by the courts and the issue are re[155]*155garded as legitimate. Brown v. Cheatham, 91 Tenn. 97, 17 S. W. Rep. 1033; and in Stikes, Admr. v. Swanson, 44 Ala. 633, it was held that emancipation and elevation to citizenship gave to children of slave marriages inheritable blood; but this decision was overruled in Cantelou v. Doe, 56 Ala. 519, where it is held that the issue of customary slave marriages which terminated prior to emancipation do not possess inheritable blood in the absence of enabling statutes. See, also, Washington v. Washington, 69 Ala. 281. In 1 Bishop’s Marriages, Divorce and Separation, §§670 et seq., the author contends that children of customary slave marriages were not regarded as illegitimates or bastards in slavery, but occupied a status peculiar to that institution; that the abolition of slavery destroyed this peculiar status, and it could never again be occupied by any person white or black; that if the children of slave marriages could not choose a new status, upon the abolition of slavery, the law ought to do so for them, and electing for them it ought to choose that which is most to their advantage, and therefore select the legitimacy of freedom, rather than thrust them back and downward to the degradation of bastardy which was not theirs in slavery. The Tennessee decisions have not been followed by any other court so far as we have been able to find, and are based upon the status of slaves as persons as established by previous decisions in that State, peculiar to the slave in Tennessee, and contrary to his status in any other slave State, and those decisions are not applicable to slave marriages in Florida. Nor has the doctrine contended for by Mr. Bishop been accepted as the law, for while every person will readily accede to his argument that the issue of slave marriages were not illegitimate in the sense of being bastards, that they were the innocent off[156]*156spring of a relation morally and, to a very limited extent, legally regarded as marriage, that with the abolition of slavery all impediments to future legal marriages and to the acquisition of inheritable blood by the issue of such future marriages were swept away, yet in law the children of these marriages did not possess inheritable blood; emancipation was not retroactive, nor could it infuse inheritable blood into those who did not possess it before emancipation, nor render valid slave marriages contracted before but not confirmed after emancipation. It is the province of the legislature to validate void or voidable marriages; to legitimate children, to designate heirs, and to infuse inheritable blood into those who are to inherit the property of decedents, and common law courts have no power to choose the status of legitimacy for or infuse inheritable blood into any person because he may be innocent and deserving, and we find no warrant in the common law which authorizes us to declare that general emancipation requires or authorizes us to place the children of slave marriages which terminated before emancipation upon the plane of the legitimate issue of legal marriages, within the meaning of statutes of descent then in force. Pierre v. Fontenette, 25 La. Ann.

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41 Fla. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-sneed-fla-1899.