Commonwealth v. Barrett

36 Va. 665
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 15, 1839
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Va. 665 (Commonwealth v. Barrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Barrett, 36 Va. 665 (Va. Super. Ct. 1839).

Opinion

At September term 1839, the attorney prosecuting for the commonwealth in the said court moved for rules against Lysander Barrett and ten other persons, to shew cause why criminal informations should not bo filed against them respectively, for violations of the “ act to suppress the circulation of incendiary publications, and for other purposes,” passed March 23. 1836. (Sess. Acts of 1835-6, ch. 66. p. 44.) In support of the motion, the attorney for the commonwealth produced affidavits of several witnesses, proving that the said Lysander Barrett had caused to bo circulated in the county of Lewis, for the purpose of procuring signatures, and that the ten other persons aforesaid had signed, a memorial to congress, which prayed the abolition of slavery in the district of Columbia, and contained the following expressions: “ In the opinion of your petitioners, slavery and the slave trade, as at present existing in the district of Columbia, where congress has sole jurisdiction, ought not so to be,—as a sin against God, a foul stain upon our national character, and contrary to the spirit of our republican institutions.” Lysander Barrett appeared, and contested the motion for the said ruld against him: whereupon, with his consent, the circuit court adjourned to this court, for novelty and difficulty, the following questions: 1. Is circulating the aforesaid memorial to congress, and procuring sub[666]*666scribers thereto, an offence under the provisions of the # r aforesaid act to suppress the circulation of incendiary publications, and for other purposes, passed March 23. 1836 ? 2. Is the signing of the said memorial an offence by the signers thereof, under the said statute ? 3. Is it necessary, in order to furnish the foundation of a rule for a criminal information against the said Lysatider Barrett for the causes aforesaid, that there should be proof that he was a member or agent of an abolition or antislavery society ?

The response of the general court was as follows:

“ This court is unanimously of opinion and doth decide, in answer to the 3d question adjourned, that to sustain a prosecution for. the offence created by the first section of the act to suppress the circulation of incendiary publications, and for other purposes, passed March 23. 1836, the person accused must be a member or agent of an abolition or antislavery society.
“ This court is also of opinion that the offence created by the 2d section of the aforesaid statute, being a felony, cannot be prosecuted by information ; and that consequently, the 1st and 2d questions adjourned by the circuit court to this court do not properly arise in this case.”

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Bluebook (online)
36 Va. 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-barrett-vagensess-1839.