Campbell v. . McArthur

4 N.C. 552
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1817
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 N.C. 552 (Campbell v. . McArthur) 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
Campbell v. . McArthur, 4 N.C. 552 (N.C. 1817).

Opinion

In 1772 the same land (by mesne conveyance) vested in Neill McArthur in fee simple.

In 1775 the said Neill McArthur took up arms against this State and joined the public enemies thereof.

In 1776, being in arms, and adhering to the enemies of this State, he was taken prisoner, and carried to Fredericktown, in Maryland, where he was confined as a prisoner of war.

In April, 1777, he solicited permission from the Congress of the United States to come to this State for the purpose (as he professed) of taking the oath of allegiance to this State. Congress granted him permission, on his giving security that he would return to Fredericktown in three months, unless on his coming to this State he (553) *Page 402 took the oath of allegiance to this State. John McKay, the witness who testified to these facts, became security for his return according to his parol.

Under these circumstances the said Neill McArthur came into Cumberland County, where he had formerly resided, and on 4 July, 1777, he conveyed the land in question to his son, Archibald McArthur, an infant, in consideration of natural love and affection and of five shillings.

In July, 1777, the said Neill McArthur returned, according to his parol, to Fredericktown, as a prisoner of war, without having taken the oath of allegiance to this State, and having refused to take the same while here.

In July, Term, 1782, of Cumberland County Court the executors of Robert Hogg, obtaining judgment against the said Neill McArthur under and by virtue of an act of the General Assembly passed in 1782, ch. 6, sec. 19, execution issued thereupon, which was levied on the land in question; and the same being sold by the authority of such judgment and execution, became vested by such mesne conveyances in the aforesaid Farquahar Campbell. Neill McArthur, herein mentioned, is the same person described by that name in the acts of the General Assembly passed in the several sessions of 1779, ch. 2, and in 1782, ch. 6.

The questions submitted to the consideration of the Supreme Court for their decision are:

1. Whether the aforesaid acts of 1779, ch. 2, and of 1782, ch. 6, did absolutely confiscate the real estate of the said Neil McArthur, so that the forfeiture took effect from 4 July, 1776.

2. Whether the said Neill McArthur, having taken up arms and joined the public enemies of this State and of the United States, and being a prisoner of war at the time of the deed of 4 July, 1777, to his son, Archibald McArthur, could make a valid conveyance in law of the lands in question to his said son, by virtue of section 6, ch. 3, of (554) acts of first session of 1777, or by any other authority in law.

Should the opinion of the Supreme Court be in favor of the plaintiffs on both or either of these questions, then judgment to be entered for the plaintiffs. Should the Court be of opinion for the defendant on both questions, then a new trial to be granted. The case finds that Neill McArthur, in 1775, was taken prisoner of war by the American people, then in resistance to British authority, and that in July, 1777, he being then a prisoner, was permitted to return, upon security, from Maryland to this State for the purpose of taking the oath of allegiance, or, in case of refusal, to return back to *Page 403 confinement; that upon his return to this State he declined taking the oath, and on 4 July, 1777, conveyed the lands in question to his son, in consideration of natural love and affection and five shillings, and returned back to captivity according to his engagement; that he is mentioned by name in the acts of confiscation; that after 1782, in Cumberland County, a judgment was rendered against him, upon a petition in conformity to the act of Assembly respecting claims against persons who had forfeited their estates, upon which execution issued, and the land in question sold to plaintiff's ancestor. And the question presented for this Court to determine, in substance, is whether the acts of confiscation, passed in 1777, 1779, and 1782, for they contain the substance of all the acts, have the effect, under the circumstances of this case, to render inefficient the conveyance to the son. And this leads to an examination of the acts of 1777, extending the right of disposition to such as were in the country who should refuse to take the oath of allegiance.

It may, however, not be amiss first to strip this case of a feature which was ascribed to it in the argument, namely, that Neill McArthur, by joining the enemies (as they were called) of the country, committed treason, and that the conviction (as the acts of confiscation have been called) relates back to the time of the offense, and will avoid (555) all intermediate conveyances. Now, the first act upon the subject of treason, passed in April, 1777, previously to defining the offense, expressly exempts prisoners of war from allegiance; so that the right which the sovereignty of the country possessed to confiscate must, if it be admitted to exist, depend upon a broader basis than the peculiar conduct of the party to be affected. This right did exist, and depended upon the great principle of necessity — that the sovereign power of the State may act as it pleases with the effects of its enemies; not on account of traitorous conduct in adhering to their lawful sovereign, and fighting his battles, but upon the principle that each of the contending parties may rightfully do all in his power to weaken his adversary, which is supposed to be effected by stripping his subjects of their property, and rendering them less able to contribute to the support of their sovereign's government. The acts of confiscation are not to be considered as a conviction by the grand inquest of the nation, as an act of attainder might be, but as the exercise of a mighty power by the sovereignty of the country to weaken an opposing adversary.

If we, therefore, attend to this radical distinction, we shall evidently perceive the impossibility of the acts having any retrospective operation that is not confined to the property of the enemy. If an estate has been conveyed from one enemy to another enemy, it would still remain within *Page 404 the control of this power; but whenever it has passed to the hands of those who belong to the sovereign, the property then has the guarantee of the Constitution.

Let it then first be asked, what law, either in the statutes or common law of North Carolina, or in the law of nations, prohibited those who, before 4 July, 1776, had good title and could convey, from conveying afterwards, although they did refuse to become members of the new government? No such statute was passed, nor is it believed to be found in any principle of the common law. But from the cases cited from Vattel it would seem as if this does exist by the great laws of nature, supposed to be understood and adopted by every formation of civil society at (556) its commencement — that whenever a new kind of government shall be adopted, those who acquire property upon the faith of the old one may dispose thereof, and remove their persons. If this condition were not the case of every inhabitant of the State, upon the change of government, from the principles last stated, let us see whether they have not, in effect, been recognized by the acts of Assembly; and this brings us to the examination of the several acts we before proposed.

The act of April, 1777, contains a clause that persons of a particular description, namely, officers of the late king, merchants and factors who had traded with Great Britain or Ireland, within ten years, should becompelled

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Related

Benzein v. . Lenoir
16 N.C. 225 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1828)

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.C. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-mcarthur-nc-1817.