Carmille v. Administrator of Carmille

27 S.C.L. 454
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 27 S.C.L. 454 (Carmille v. Administrator of Carmille) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carmille v. Administrator of Carmille, 27 S.C.L. 454 (S.C. 1842).

Opinion

Curia, per

O’Neall, J.

The case of Morrice vs. the Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399, and the same case, 10 Ves. 521, was a trust to dispose of the ultimate residue of the testatrix’s estate to such objects of benevolence and liberality as the Bishop of Durham in his own discretion shall most approve of; and the Bishop was appointed sole executor. The master of the rolls and the Lord Chanceller ruled that this bequest was a trust, and conferred no personal benefit on the legatee; but that it was too indefinite in its creation, and could not therefore be executed ; and that as it was an estate’undisposed of, in the hands of the executor, a trust resulted for the next of kin. From this summary of that case, it will be seen it cannot reach this case. For there, that was a disposition by will, and the fund was in the hands of the executor, whose whole estate in equity is regarded as upon trust and confidence. So too the trust was not so declared that the objects of the testatrix’s bounty could be ascertained from the will, and hence it could not be supported. The case before us stands upon deeds executed and taking effect in the life time of the intestate, and the case must be considered as if the intestate was himself the complainant, asking that the deeds should be set aside. Without appealing to foreign adjudications, our own conclusively show that such a bill could not be sustained. For the complainant there would stand upon this footing, that he claimed to be relieved from his own act done in ■ fraud of the law. Such a notion has no countenance any where. That the administrator, and consequently the distributee, seeking to avoid their intestate’s deed for fraud, actual or legal, on his part, must claim in his right, and cannot have any superior equities, have been so often decided, that it is not necessary to cite authorities to prove it. Looking at this case in this point of view, there could be no difficulty in saying the complainant cannot recover. But I think the case deserves to be examined in [468]*468another aspect, and I am satisfied there is nothing in any point of view, in which I am able to regard the case, which ought to defeat the deeds. The Act of 1820 (Acts of ’20 p. 22) merely declares “ that no slave shall hereafter be emancipated but by the Act of the legislature.” Here it will be observed, that the Act does not declare a deed conferring emancipation void. - It cuts off emancipation altogether, except by Act. If emancipation depended upon the execution of the deed alone, then the deed being wholly inoperative, the slave in such case would remain the property of the grantor, and no harm would be done. But the Acts of 1820 and 1800 are regarded in pari materia ; and when so construed, they make this legal provision, that a slave cannot be emancipated in this State, but by Act of the Legislature,” and if emancipated without an Act, that then such slave so emancipated, shall be liable to seizure and conversion to his own use by any person. Frazier vs. Frazier, 2 Hill’s C. R., 304. Johnson vs. Linaur, 2 Bail. 137. To constitute an emancipation, something more than the execution of a deed is necessary: there must be a “ parting with the possession of the slaves by the owner or owners,” and thus permitting them to go at large and act for themselves.” Senior vs. Sylvester: Young vs. the same, 1 Bail. 642. An invalid attempt to emancipate, so long as the possession remains unchanged, or the slave is in the possession of a legal owner, does not subject him to seizure; Cline vs. Caldwell, 1 Hill’s Rep., 423. These principles have the sanction of so many cases decided by our own Court of Appeals, that I suppose they will be regarded as settled law. Having in a greater Or less degree participated in the decision of them all, I will not now attempt to fortify them by any other reasoning than such as is contained in the judgments pronounced in them.

Taking the law to be as I have stated it, how can it be pretended by the distributee of the donor, that slaves which by him have been conveyed to others, upon the trust and confidence that they would suffer them to work out for their own maintenance, upon the said slaves paying an annual hire of one dollar, are to be regarded as emancipated contrary to the Act of 1820 ? They are still to all intents and purposes, slaves. The persons to whom they are conveyed (Pringle and Chartrand) have the right to govern and protect them. The hire which they pay, however inconsiderable, is a constant recognition of servitude. At law, there neyer copld be a pretence that the slaves were not the pro* [469]*469perty of Pringle and Chartrand, for at law the trust would not be noticed, unless it had been executed by emancipating the slaves. The State vs. Rhame and others, Dudley’s Law Rep. Rhame vs. Ferguson and others, Rice’s Rep., 196. But if it could, then it is equally clear that the donor and those claiming under him, could not at law avail themselves of this objection. Cline vs. Caldwell, 1 Hill, 423. Chappell vs. Brown, 1 Bail. 528. It is only in equity that the trust can be looked to, and there the question arises which is now made, is the trust unlawful? and which, as I have already shown, would, (if it were) constitute no ground upon which the deeds could be set aside. The distinction is, where any thing is to be done to enforce an Unlawful trust, equity will not set it up or enforce it, or in any way aid its execution, even against the party creating it. But where the case is reversed, and the donor comes to be relieved against it, his position, as the party perpetrating the unlawful act, closes the court against him, and he is left where he ought to be, to stand on the law ; if that help him, it is well; if not, he is punished, as he deserves to be. Had the Act of 1820 declared all deeds, upon trust, for the benefit of slaves, or intended to secure their freedom, void, then the parties representing the intestate would have had no difficulty; For in that case' they could have rested on the law, and succeeded. But here their misfortune is, that there is no such provision. The utmost which can be contended for is, that the slaves have been emancipated contrary to law. For Prin-gle and Chartrand have the actual possession, and may, I suppose, have suffered the slaves to work out for their maintenance, paying an annual hire of one dollar.

Admit that to be emancipation, what is the consequence ? Not that the slaves go back to the donor, but that they are liable to capture ; and equity has no right to say any thing else, for such is the lex scripta. But the question whether the trust is lawful, is worth examination. I confess I have never been able so to regard it. The objeyt of the Act of 1820, was not to deprive a man of the right to do with his own as he pleases, but to prevent him from conferring freedom “ within the State” upon a class of people, as to whom her policy demands that they should be slaves within her limits. If the deed, construed with its trusts, still makes the slaves of the donor, the slaves of the donees, the fact that he has desired that they should give to them the fruits of their labor, cannot be unlawful. They still are slaves, chattels [470]*470personal, they still are under the dominion of masters, and must so remain. For if Pringle and Chartrand ever relax their hold upon them, and suffer them to go at large and act for themselves xoithout their restraint, actual or constructive, they would be liable to seizure, and would become the slaves of the captors.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.C.L. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmille-v-administrator-of-carmille-sc-1842.