American Colonization Society v. Gartrell

23 Ga. 448
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 Ga. 448 (American Colonization Society v. Gartrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Colonization Society v. Gartrell, 23 Ga. 448 (Ga. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court.

Lumpkin J.

delivering the opinion.

We concur in the clear and conclusive opinion of the able Judge who decided this case, namely: That the Colonization Society is incapable of taking or holding property for any purpose inconsistent with, and forbidden by, its charter.. [451]*451It can receive it upon no other trust. That to attempt, in this or any other case, to claim it for any other purpose, would be a fraud upon the law, a fraud upon the donor, a fraud upon the heirs, and a fraud upon the slaves themselves.

By their constitution, the association's empowered to receive property by bequest or otherwise: and to use it or dispose of it at their discretion, “ for the purpose of colonizing, with their own consent, in Africa, the free people of color residing in the United States, and for no other purpose whatsoever.” Now, the will of Francis Gideon, under which the complainants sue, bequeaths to the Colonization Society, “ for the purpose of sending them to Liberia, in Africa, all his slaves, to-wit: &c.” The negroes, then, are given as slaves, and not as free persons of coior, to be sent, not with, but with or without their consent, to Liberia, in Africa. in~ ■deed, the testator could only give them as slaves. For, had their status been changed by the will, from slavery to freedom, before the gift attached, the will itself would have been void by thestatutes of 1801 and 1818. Cobb, 983, 989.

We repeat, then, that the unconditional right to them as slaves, could not be vested in the Society, under their Act of incorporation; neither could they take and hold them in trust, for a purpose not allowed by their charter; that is, to transport them, as slaves, to the colony in Africa, with or without their consent.

I need not cite cases to show that the powers of a corporation being limited, a trust beyond those powers cannot be executed by the corporation. fortiori, cannot this be done when, by the express terms of the charter, the corporation is “forbidden to take or use property for any other purpose whatsoever, other than that specified in the Act of incorporation.

A person, like a State, may do whatever is not prohibited. A corporation, like the confederation of this Union, can do only what is expressly allowed by its charter. It is a lamentable fact, however, that while this is true in point of theory, [452]*452both as it respects corporations and the Federal Government, in point of fact, the creature bound by strict compact has become more omnipotent than its sovereign author — restrained by no fetters but of its own making. 1 Ves. Sen. 534; 4 Wheaton, 636; 9 Wall’s, 551; 6 Connecticut Reports, 304; Ang and Ames on corp. 60, 86, 139; 2 Kent’s Com. 298, 299; 1 Kyd. on corp. 72; 4 Peters, 152; 2 Crunch, 127; 15 Johns. 358; 3 Barn, and Cress. 1; 3 Pick. 237; 1 Penn. R. 49; 12 Mass. 555; 1 Paige, ch. Rep. 214; 8 Johns. 422; 3 Baule, 170.

It is argued, that conceding that the trust is not strictly within the provisions of the charter, yet, that the Society may carryout the purpose of the testator, without transcending the limits of its powers. That it may take slaves out of the State, manumit, and then colonize them in Africa. That the will, • by its own natural operation, ultimately constitutes these slaves a class that the Society is expressly permitted to colonize. That when these slaves are recovered and carried out of the State, the trust reposed in the Society is ipso facto oxoeuted to the extent of conferring freedom; and thus they become the free people of color contemplated by the charter. That the Court should only have considered the capacity of the trustee to receive property ; whether he would abuse the trust, or would execute it, were questions for the State of Maryland, which granted this charter, and not for the Courts of Georgia. That neither the heir, nor any private person, could contest the right of a corporation to take the property, and execute the trust; but that this right belongs alone to the State, in its sovereign capacity.

These are, in the main, the propositions upon which the plaintiff in error relies for a reversal of the judgment rendered in the Court below.

The disposition in the will is a bequest of all the slaves of the testator to the society, for the purpose of sending them to Africa. How do counsel arrive at the conclusion that so soon as these slaves cross the boundary of the State, they be[453]*453come ipso facto free, and therefore constitute the identical class contemplated by the charter of the Colonization Society? I am aware that it is the doctrine laid down in Wade et al. vs. American Colonization Society, Smedes and Marshall’s Reports 697. It is one, however, to which we cannot yield •our assent.

That these negroes were slaves in this State, cannot be ■questioned, talk as we may about their inchoate right to freedom. They were slaves before the will of Gideon was executed. They cannot be any thing else, here, afterwards. Any attempt made to change their condition here, by deed or will, would be nugatory. Being then, bondsmen here, do they become freemen when they cross the Savannah river ? Do they become so in any State, slave or free, in their transit to Africa ? Surely not. The Society itself, has no power, either by their charter, or by the will, to bestow freedom upon these slaves, in this or any other county, except Africa. It is doubtful whether by removing them toa free State, this trustee could, by operation of law, enable these slaves to acquire their freedom. No such power has been delegated to the Society to do this; and they would be acting in violation of their trust. And I am not prepared to admit that under such circumstances, the slaves would acquire a right to their freedom.

But suppose they could, what security is there that the trustee would do this ? But concede that this might and would be done; what certainty is there that the slaves would ■give their consent to go to Africa ? And being free, it is indisputable that they could not be transported and colonized against their will. At any rate, force could not be employed for this purpose by the American Colonization Society. The basis and apex of this institution, being one of persuasion, not of force. So then, it is plain that if the charter itself does not enable the Society to send these slaves against their wish, to Africa, there is no other way or means by which the intention of the testator can be effectuated, through this [454]*454Society. For the Society to carry them to Africa, the slaves must be free and give their consent, as a condition precedent And no sooner do they become free, than as an attribute of freedom, they may give or withhold that consent as they see fit And thus slaves that were directed to be colonized in Liberia only, and which this Court, neither under the odious dotrine of cy pres

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ga. 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-colonization-society-v-gartrell-ga-1857.