Cross v. Black

9 G. & J. 198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 G. & J. 198 (Cross v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cross v. Black, 9 G. & J. 198 (Md. 1837).

Opinion

Chambers, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first .exception presents the question, whether the declarations of the appellee were properly admitted in evidence. We think they were. One of the acknowledged exceptions to the rule which prohibits a party from producing his own declarations in his favour, is, where such declarations are necessary in explanation of an act, which takes its character from the design and intention of the party who does it. The declarations made at a time, when occasioned by no perceptible motives of interest, like other circumstances surrounding an act, are in such instances- considered''as part of the res gestee. Here the act was the removal of the appellee; the act of breaking up-, and going from his former residence to another, which he designed to occupy. There are no facts disclosed-on the record, nor have any such been suggested, which could possess the mind of the appellee at that time with the belief, that his interest was involved in declaring his removal to be with intention to settle in Missouri.

It is said, these declarations did not tend to affirm or deny any fact involved in the issue ; but by the very language of the petition itself, the freedom of the appellants is claimed, amongst' other reasons, on the ground, that the appellee removed with the petitioners to the state of Ohio, and became a resident, or with the intention of becoming a resident and citizen thereof.

Again, it is said, the declarations were made, or some of [211]*211them, long anterior to the period when the appellee left the state of Maryland; but it is expressly alleged in the exception, that all the declarations offered, were made while the appellee was making his preparations for his removal. It is further urged, that to admit this testimony, would be to contradict the rule of evidence, which denies to a party the right to contradict his declarations, when they have been made the foundation upon which an act is done, or a liability or expenditure incurred by another. We do not think in this case, the facts justify the application of that well established rule of evidence. The petitioners were the slaves of the appellee before his removal by the concession of their counsel ; and if it could be shewn, that they had been influenced to do any act, or consent to its being done, in consequence of the declarations of their owner, (which however does not appear to have been the case,) we should not consider the rule as applicable to parties standing in the relation of master and slave.

The second exception raises the question; what is the true construction of the act of 1831, chapter 323, in reference to negro slaves, under the circumstances which exist in this case ?

We cannot agree with the appellee’s counsel, that there was not evidence in the cause tending to prove the facts assumed by the appellants’ motion. The voluntary return of the appellee into this state with his servants, and his remaining here in the situation and under the circumstances proved at the trial, were quite sufficient to authorize the petitioners to introduce into their statement, the fact of his return to reside, as one, which the jury might find, and of course, would forbid the court the right to reject the prayer, as not being justified by any thing offered in evidence.

We do not deem it necessary to decide, how far the peculiar point to which the instruction was directed, to wit, whether under the facts assumed, the appellee “was not entitled to hold the petitioners in bondage” would have excused the court from gratifying the motion. As a general rule it is certainly true, that the issue in a petition for free[212]*212dom, being freedom Del non, the verdict must be adverse to the petitioner, and consequently in favour of the defendant, unless a case of freedom is made out, and the title of the defendant in the petitioner, need not be sustained by proof, if the evidence shows that the petitioner is not free.

We prefer to meet the true question involved in the case, which is, whether a citizen of Maryland intending to break up his establishment, and leaving this state with the avowed design of becoming a resident of another state, and actually going out of this state, in pursuance of such design, may, before he reaches the point of his intended destination change his purpose, and return into Maryland with his slaves who had accompanied him, without violating the act of 1831, chapter 323. We acquiesce in the opinions expressed by the appellant’s counsel, that the policy which directed the system of laws, of which this is a part, was designed, not only to avoid the introduction of slaves who had not previously been domesticated in the state, but also to forbid the return of those, who having once been domesticated in the state had ceased to be so, and had been removed to some other place. ' . ' -

The difficulty consists, not in ascertaining the general rule of policy, or the "general rule of the law, by which the legislature has announced its purpose to pursue it, but in the application of that rule to a particular state of facts.

The law is expressed in terms the. most universal; in the first paragraph of the sixth section, copying verbatim the language of the act of 1796, chapter 67, it shall not be lawful to import or bring into this state by la'nd or by water, any negro, mulatto, or other slave, for sale, or to reside within this state.

The subsequent provision excepts from this general clause, the case of non resident owners, who employ their slaves on the islands in the.Potomac river, and also the case of persons holding lands both in this state' and in another state within the distance of ten miles, &c.

[213]*213The act is penal in its character, and subjects the party-offending against its provisions to indictment.

A literal interpretation will include this case, as doubtless the petitioners were “ brought ” into this state in one sense of the term; and it therefore becomes necessary to consider, whether with a due regard to the existing mischiefs to be remedied, the means of redress designed, and the actual consequences attending a literal interpretation of this act, it will effect the purposes of the legislature to construe it according to its strict letter.

The evil complained of was not the objectionable exercise of doubtful rights of property by masters, in reference to slaves permanently situated in the state. From our earliest history, masters had been accustomed to take or send their slaves out of the state for purposes obviously temporary. The legislature had secured to citizens of other states, the privilege of having their slaves here while “travelling or sojourning,” and the most liberal judicial construction has been given to these provisions. Baptiste vs. De Volunbrun, 5 Har. and John. 86, and the case of De Fontaine vs. De Fontaine, there cited. It could not then be the design of this statute, or the older statute, from which this portion of it is copied, to deprive a citizen of Maryland of the privilege elsewhere, which every citizen of every other portion of the Union can enjoy in this state.

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Related

Graves v. Spedden
46 Md. 527 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1877)

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Bluebook (online)
9 G. & J. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-black-md-1837.