Branch v. . Walker

8 S.E. 896, 102 N.C. 34
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 S.E. 896 (Branch v. . Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch v. . Walker, 8 S.E. 896, 102 N.C. 34 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

Soon after the late civil war, which conferred freedom upon a large class of our population, who had been slaves without capacity to enter into legal and valid marital relations, it became necessary to provide by legislation, retroactive as well as prospective, for the results of emancipation in regard to this relation, and give it the sanction of law.

To this end was passed the act of March 10, 1866, Acts 1866, ch. 40, the fifth section of which, so far as material to the present inquiry, is in these words:

“ In all cases when a man and woman, both or one of whom were lately slaves and are now emancipated, now cohabit together in the relation of husband and wife, the parties shall he deemed to have been lawfully married as *36 man and wife, at the time of the commencement of such cohabitation, although they may not have been married in due form of law. And all persons whose cohabitation is hereby ratified into a slate of marriage shall go before the Clerk of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of the county in which they reside, at his office, or before some ' Justice of the Peace, and acknowledge the fact of such cohabitation and the time of its commencement, and the Clerk shall enter the same in a book kept for that purpose; and if the acknowledgment be made before a Justice of the Peace, such Justice shall report the same in writing to the Clerk of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, and the Clerk shall enter the same as though the acknowledgment had been made before him, and such entry shall be deemed •prima facie evidence of the. allegations therein contained.”

The next section makes it a misdemeanor for the persons coming within its provisions, and whose continued and past cohabitation may thus secure the sanction of law, to disregard its requirements and fail to go before the Clerk or Justice to have the entries made up to the 1st day of September of the same year.

In the present case, the mother of the plaintiffs who sue for the land in dispute, died in February, 1866, and herself and alleged husband did not “ now,” to use the word in the statute to designate the time when it went into operation, cohabit together in the relation of husband and wife.” The parents of the defendants, who, with their mother, are defending the action, did go before the Clerk and comply with these requirements, in order to legalize the marital relations subsisting between them.

Another statute looking to the same end was passed on February 27, 1879, found in The Code, § 1281, being the last of the rules of descent of real estate. It provides that “ the children of colored parents, bom at any time before the 1st day of January, 1868, of persons living together as man and *37 wife, are hereby declared legitimate children of such parents, or either one of them, with all the rights of heirs-at-law and next of kin, with respect to the estate or estates of any such parents, or either one of them.”

The construction and efficacy of the validating enactment of 1866 have been before this Court several times, and both interpreted and upheld.

In State v. Harris, 63 N. C., 1, Reade, J., speaking for the Court, declares “ that by force of the original consent of the parties while they were slaves, renewed after they became free, and by the performance of what was required by the statute, they became, to all intents and purposes, man and wife.”

The same proposition is reiterated by Boyden, J., in State v. Adams, 65 N. C., 537, and recognized in State v. Whitford, 86 N. C., 636, and in Long v. Barnes, 87 N. C., 329, where it is held that the acknowledgment of record, while not essential to the operation of the act, but directory only, yet a compliance furnishes prima facie evidence of the facts upon which its efficacy depends.

The case on appeal thus states the evidence given to the jury, upon their inquiry as to which of the two women, mothers of the contesting claimants, is, under the statute, the lawful wife of Oscar Walker, a former slave and common father of all:

There was evidence tending to show that before, and at the time of, and after the birth of the femes plaintiff, the said Oscar Walker and Sarah Branch lived and cohabited together as man and wife after the manner of slaves, in Bertie County; that after 1853 and before 1860 the owner of Sarah removed to Enfield, in Halifax County, conveying Sarah with her; that Oscar visited her about twice a year until the close of the war, his last visit being at Christmas, 1865, and continued about a week, which was the usual duration of his semi-annual visits. There was other evidence tending to *38 show cohabitation between them, as husband, and wife, in a state of slavery.

On the other hand, there was evidence tending to show that Walker lived and cohabited with the defendant Sukey, a slave woman, as man and wife; that six children were born to them before the civil war, and one during the war, who is dead, and that Albert a defendant, was at the trial about 34 years of age; that Oscar and Sukey lived together on his master’s plantation, in a house with their children, and that he called her wife and she him husband; that cohabiting began some two years before the birth of their first child and continued up to and during the war; that in 1865 they so lived with their children in a separate house; that in 1866 he built a house of his own on land he had bought, and removed into it with his family; that after the enactment in 1866, and during the year, Oscar and Sukey went before the Clerk of Bertie and made the acknowledgment required, fixing the commencement of their cohabiting at twelve or fifteen years before; that thus they lived as husband and wife, their children with them, until Oscar’s death, in 1869, and that the others remained, claiming possession as his widow and heirs-at-law.

It was admitted that Sukey, as such widow, had sued for and had her dower assigned in the land.

The controversy involved the conflicting claims of the issue of the woman Sarah, and of Sukey and her issue, to the property left by the deceased Oscar, and upon issues the jury find in favor of the former.

The Court charged the jury, that if the cohabiting of Oscar and Sarah, while slaves, was as man and wife, and this continued up to the latter’s death (explaining the removal to Enfield and its attending circumstances), and the plaintiffs were born to them during it, then, under the act of 1879 they would be the heirs of the intestate and entitled to the land. It would be otherwise unless such cohabiting *39 did exist.

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53 S.E. 439 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.E. 896, 102 N.C. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-v-walker-nc-1889.