Brien v. Williamson

8 Miss. 14
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Miss. 14 (Brien v. Williamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brien v. Williamson, 8 Miss. 14 (Mich. 1843).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Sharkey

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error instituted this suit on a promissory note dated 1st November, 1836, made by defendant, who pleaded that the note was given for a negro which had been introduced into this state as merchandise and for sale since the first of May, 1833, and sold by plaintiff to defendant. The plaintiff demurred, but the demurrer was overruled, and leave given to plead over, which the plaintiff refused to do, and thereupon judgment was rendered for defendant, to reverse which this writ of error was taken.

The pleadings bring directly in question the legality of a contract entered into for negroes imported into this state as merchandise since the adoption of the amended constitution. We had regarded this question as entirely settled, first by the decision in [16]*16the case of Green v. Robinson, second by the case of Hite and Fitzpatrick v. Gledwell, and lastly, by a still later case, in which the question was directly presented as a mere question of law, by a demurrer to a plea. Since these cases were decided the same question has been made before the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Groves v. Slaughter, reported in 15 Peters, in which a different interpretation is given to our constitution, the contract being there held to be valid, whilst we had held it to be null and void. A decision emanating from a court'so justly entitled to our highest respect; one whose decisions are received as authoritative throughout this Union, demands of us that we should 'review our own decisions, and reconsider the question with the utmost possible scrutiny. This we have endeavored to do, and the result has been to strengthen, if possible, the conviction in the correctness of our former decisions. We regard with great deference the decisions of that exalted tribunal, on questions peculiarly within its province, and in such cases will be always ready to yield to them as authoritative. .But state tribunals may justly claim to decide for themselves all questions of state policy, and questions involving the interpretation of state constitutions. Our constitution we are sworn to support, and we cannot therefore yield to any interpretation of it unless we are satisfied of its correctness. Still we may well entertain some distrust as to the correctness of our own opinions, when opposed by the decision of the Supreme Court. Our distrust on this occasion is not a little diminished by the reflection that the members of the court were not unanimous in the case of Groves v. Slaughter, and by the additional reflection that amongst the dissenting members there were some who have established for themselves imperishable monuments of judicial fame.

We hold the contract void on either of two g ounds. First,'that the provision in the constitution of 1832, does per se prohibit the introduction of slaves into this state as merchandise or for sale. Second, that even if the provision in the constitution is not of itself a prohibition, still when taken in connexion with the legislation of the state, it so clearly settles the public policy as to avoid this contract as being against that policy.

[17]*17. First, that the provision in the constitution is per se a prohibition. The constitution was adopted in 1832, and that portion of it under which this question arises is in these words: “ The introduction of slaves into this state as merchandise or for sale, shall be prohibited from and after the first day of May, eighteen hundred an d thirty-three: Provided, that the actual settler or settlers shall not be prohibited from purchasing slaves in any state.in this union, and bringing them into this state for their own individual use, until the year eighteen hundred and forty-five.”

In support of our first position it is proper that we should inquire in the outset what-a constitution is, and how it operates. It is a form of government established by the people, designed for their general welfare as a society and as individuals. In the language of a learned jurist, it was made by the people, made for the people, and is responsible to the people.” It is but the frame or skeleton of a government, containing the general outline, leaving the detail to be filled up in subordination and auxiliary to the essential and fundamental principles thereby established. But it is not on that account the less binding. It is from its very nature and object the supreme law of the land, fixed and unalterablé, except by the power that made it. It contains only certain great principles which are to control in all legislation, arid extend through the whole body politic. These principles are 'of themselves laws. Constitutions do not usually profess tp insure obedience by prescribing penalties; they merely declare the rule or establish the principle, which being paramount, makes void whatever is repugnant to it. Its mandates or principles bind by a moral power. Every functionary is required to take an oath to support it, by which is meant that he will regard it as the supreme law, and aid in carrying out its great principles. For example, the constitution declares that “the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.” This then is a fixed principle or feature in the government, and being so, it becomes a paramount law. The constitution has not dealt in detail; it does not say how it shall be preserved ; it does not guard it by providing pains and penalties, but by the mere declaration, it has made it part of the supreme law. So it is with every other provision in the constitution. General principles, thought to be essential to a free government, are declared; and (emanating from the [18]*18sovereign authority) that mere declaration imparts to them..all the force of a supreme-law.

Let us then endeavor to ascertain what was designed by the clause above quoted. 'The power-of the convention to enact or declare a prohibition, in reference to any subject over which power had ■ not already been delegated, to the federal government, I suppose will not be questioned by any one. A state in the form of .an organic laW may prescribe Us. whole system of jurisprudence if it should so desire, but to dp so would be tedious and difficult. We may safely assert without the shadow of a doubt, that the convention did intend that the importation of slaves into this state as merchandise, should be prohibited after the 1st of May, 1833, either by force of the constitutional provision, or- by legislative enactment, and having so intended and declared it through the constitution, it became as much a fundamental and- fixed principle in the government, as any other principle or provision whatever. It became by that mere declaration, propria vigore a law, and whether it may be supposed to be defective in not providing all the means necessary to enforce the prohibition makes no difference, provided it can by any means be carried, into effect.' Even if it was intended only as a mandate to the legislature, its operation was to be on the citizens geherally. It was not designed as one of those provisions which expend their whole force in directing and regulating the action of the legislative body, but its design was evidently to protect the people against a supposed evil. A time was fixed at which the evil should be prohibited ; from that time it was a law in full force. The legislature could not defeat it by removing the prohibition, and this shows that it had an existing operative force. Having that existing operative force, it was not liable to be defeated by omission.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Miss. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brien-v-williamson-miss-1843.