Brown v. Smith

8 La. Ann. 59
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 La. Ann. 59 (Brown v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Smith, 8 La. Ann. 59 (La. 1853).

Opinions

Eustis, 0. J.

This is an appeal taken by the defendants from a judgment of the Third District Court of New Orleans, by which the plaintiff and her two children are decreed to be free.

It appears by the evidence that the plaintiff, who is a negro woman, was bom a slave, and in the year 1823, belonged to Elijah Mix, and lived in the service of her master with his family, in the District of Columbia; that some time in that year, Mr. Mix removed with his family to New York, and fixed his residence there; that early in 1825, he removed back to Georgetown, and in 1829, he removed back to New York, and that the plaintiff lived in his service during this time; that she was afterwards, in 1832, in the service of Gapt. Wells, of the U. S. Army, in this city, as a slave, who sold her to Sewell T. Taylor, from whom General Smith, her present owner, purchased her,.

By the law of New York, in force at the time of the change of residence by Mr. Mix, it is provided, that “ any person not being an inhabitant of that State, [60]*60who shall be traveling to or from, or passing through the State, may bring with him any person lawfully held by him in slavery, and may take such person with him from the State; but the person so held in slavery shall not reside or continue in this State more than nine months, and if such residence be continued beyond that time, such person shall be free.”

An instrument of writing was produced at the trial, on behalf of the plaintiff, and acknowledged before the Mayor of Georgetown, on the 8th day of May, 1823. It purports to bo an indenture of apprenticeship of Lucy Brown, in favor of Elijah, Mix, of Georgetown, as his servant and waiting- maid, until she shall attain the age of twenty-one years. It is signed with the mark of Lucy Broten and her father, Ea/rry Brown, and Elijah, Mix. This instrument is witnessed by Samuel Oooper, an officer in the Army of the United States, who has testified to his signature, though he has no recollection of the instrument.

There was a bill of exceptions taken to the introduction of the deposition of a free negro woman named Oedlia Ma/i'hle, taken under a commission in'Washington city, on the ground of incompetency of the witness to testify in a suit in which a Christian white person is concerned, under a statute of Maryland.

The question raised by this bill of exceptions there is no necessity for deciding, inasmuch as we have come to our conclusions independent of the testimony of this witness. And we think the evidence is too clear in favor of the plaintiff’s right to her freedom, to require any notice of the charge of the Judge to which exceptions have been taken by the counsel for the plaintiff.

We do not think the force and effect of the indenture, as a piece of evidence, is weakened by the circumstance of there being no evidence of the time of its delivery; nor do we deduce any unfavorable impression from its appearance, nor find any ground for not giving to it the effect of an instrument in the possession of a party interested in procuring it.

It also appears in evidence that, in 1849, the plaintiff entrusted to a gentleman of the bar of this city, an act of emancipation of Mr. Mix, in her favor, dated in 1823. This paper has been lost, but we think there is evidence of its existence and purport.

Neither of these instruments, let us admit, had any legal effect, but they point to the conclusion that the plaintiff was to have her liberty so far as the intention of her master could give it to her, and are explained by the fact of his projected removal from Georgetown to New York. She could not remain in servitude for more than nine months after her arrival in New York, and the purpose of the iuenture was to secure her services until she was twenty-one. She was, at the time, fifteen, and hence the wish of her father that she should be under the protection of her master’s family until her majority. It seems to us as though the act of manumission and indenture were made with a view to the change of residence which followed, and most clearly manifest the intention of removing to a State in which the condition of the slave would be changed by it.

The purpose and intention of removing to New York and to reside there, we think, unquestionable. The fact of residence in New York, we think, is equally .so. The evidence is not reconcilable as to the precise time beyond a year. It was not less than that period, and was probably several months longer. It was ■not in the same place. Part of the time, Mr. Mix lived in the city, and part in -the country; but the evidence satisfies us that, at the time, ho had neither residence nor domicil elsewhere than where his family resided.

Her freedom thus established under the laws of the State in which her master [61]*61resided, would have been maintained under the laws of this State, had she been brought here after the establishment of her freedom in 1825. It appears that Mr. Mix having obtained a government contract, removed back to Georgetown with his family, and took the plaintiff with him in the fall of that year.

It is contended by the counsel for the defendant, that there was no real change of domicil in 1823, by the removal to New York, and that under the jurisprudence prevailing- in the District of Columbia, the effect of the law of New York could do no more than suspend the exercise of the master’s rights upon the slave during their sojourn, and that on their return to Georgetown, the original status of slavery reattached. The cases referred to in support of this doctrine, are Adam v. Leverton, 2 Harris & McHenry, 382, and Mahony v. Ashton, 4th id. 305. These cases were determined by the Supreme Court of Maryland, in 1789 and 1799.

In relation to the change of domicil on the part of Mr. Mix, in 1823, we have to observe that there is no circumstance in evidence which weakens the effect of the positive testimony of Ool. Gooper, as to the removal to New York, and that of the son and daughter of Mr. Mix, who though at an early age at the time, must be considered as speaking according to the traditions of the family, as well as on their own recollection of the event. This concurrence of fact and intent is not impaired by the removal back to Georgetown, in 1825, because a new cause is assigned for the change of residence, to wit: the having obtained a contract from the Government. We must also bear' in mind that the continuance of the plaintiff in the service of the family, after their return to Georgetown, though consistent with servitude as a condition, is also consistent with her apprenticeship, and that this service continued in the family after their return to New York, in 1829 and 1830.

The first case cited, that of Adam v. Leverton, does not appear to have any direct bearing in the question; the other is decided on the effect of a statute of Maryland, then in force.

It appears in that case, that Ann Joiee, a negro woman, was carried with her owner, Lord Baltimore, claiming her as a slave, from the Island of Barbadoes to England, and afterwards brought to Maryland by him, claiming her as his slave, between the years 1678 and 1681, and that she, during her life, -was held and treated as a slave, and that her issue had been held as slaves ever since.

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. Ann. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-smith-la-1853.