Ex parte Garnet

10 F. Cas. 6, 7 Leg. Int. 174, 1850 U.S. App. LEXIS 309
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedOctober 18, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. Cas. 6 (Ex parte Garnet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Garnet, 10 F. Cas. 6, 7 Leg. Int. 174, 1850 U.S. App. LEXIS 309 (circtdmd 1850).

Opinion

GRIER, Circuit Justice.

We will proceed to hear the case of Henry Garnett, an alleged fugitive. The claimant will proceed to show his right to our ■ certificate, under the act of congress of September 18, 1850.

Mr. Tener. — I submit to your honors, two wills. The first will is the will of Margaret Sanders, which was made upon the 29th of December, 1838. The second is that of Benedict Jones.

Mr. Gibbons, — I call your honors’ attention to these two wills. You will find that they are not so certified under the act of congress, as to make them admissible in this case. X believe there is only one mode by which the record of one state can be admitted in evidence in another, and this is provided for by the act of congress of 1790 [1 Stat 122]. Your honors will find, upon examination of these papers, that they contain simply a certificate of the register of wills. (The sixth section of the fugitive slave act was then read by the counsel.)

Judge GRIER. — We are bound to know the seal of every one of the United States. Are these papers under the seal of any court?

Mr. Tener. — Yes, sir — under the seal of the orphans’ court, Cecil county.

Mr. Gibbons. — These are no more than letters testamentary, issued on the 17th of July, 1849, of course not made out in accordance with the recent act, and in fact not authenticated according to the act of 1790. We do not now know whether this person is really the executor of this estate or not, and I think the parties should be allowed no latitude, but should come fully prepared.

Mr. Tener. — I do not offer the will to prove that Mr. Jones is the executor of Benedict Jones, but that he is the residuary legatee.

Judge GRIER. — That renders the objection still stronger. Benedict Jones is dead, and the present claimant must show that he is the owner himself, either as executor or legatee. The party has not pursued the course laid down by the act of congress. It has pointed out a very simple way. He [7]*7might have taken his witnesses beíore a ma- | gistrate and established his claim, and submitted the whole proof of ownership; and then nothing would have been left for us but the proof of identity. If he will not go to the expense of employing- counsel and taking the proof which the act provided for, but puts himself upon other proof not so taken, he must establish his claim according to the ordinary legal principles of evidence. The party has not pursued the proper course; he should have taken his witnesses before some judge or justice of the peace, and have taken his depositions ex parte with regard to these matters of title, ownership and escape; then there would have been nothing for us to do but to prove the identity. Where a person has not attempted to follow the law laid down for his own advantage, we cannot relax the rules of evidence for him. With regard to the first paper, there may have been a seal on it — there is something like a seal with a horse’s head on it. The law has pointed out a plain way, by which, if a person chooses to follow, he can bring all the evidence, both of title and escape, before us, leaving nothing open for us but the question of identity; but here the party has not taken the plain course, and these wills cannot be received.

Mr. Brown. — It is important, this being the first case, that the whole manner of proceeding should be clearly determined.

Judge GRIER. — I will give every man his rights here, with regard to nothing but the law of the land; and I will, if in my power, enforce it against all opposition.

Mr. Tener. — According to this sixth section, the deposition is to be taken by the judge or commissioner before whom the fugitive is brought

Judge GRIER. — You might have brought your witnesses all from Maryland here and • taken the depositions before us, or you might have gone before some officer there, and made all the proof of ownership or escape before him; or you may do the same thing in effect, if you can produce the witnesses before the court here.

Mr. Tener. — We have got these witnesses.

Judge GRIER. — Very well.

Mr. Tener. — I offer the will of Benedict Jones, because the seal of that court is conclusive as to the competency of the proof.

Judge GRIER. — This is a point just decided by the court This has not been done in pursuance of this act. It would have been so easy for you to have gone to a judge or justice in Maryland and produced this before him, and have had it all certified by him and proved under the seal of the court. This would have been good and sufficient.

Mr. Brown. — It is precisely like the requisition of one governor upon another, leaving only the question of identity.

Judge GRIER. — Yes.

Mr. Tener offered a certificate to prove that the magistrate who signed Certain affidavits, was a magistrate of the state of Maryland.

Judge GRIER. — These papers are evidence for all they can prove.

Mr. Tener. — I will offer evidence of parties in court at the present time, who knew this man to be a slave.

Judge GRIER — If you can show that he was there in the possession of this plaintiff, claiming him there, and known notoriously as his slave, as a horse is known as the property of a man here, very well.

Mr. Tener. — We can show that he belonged to Benedict Jones.

Judge GRIER. — Suppose that is true, you must show that some living man owns him now, to whom he can be awarded. If you can show that he was ever in the possession of this plaintiff, you can dispense with' paper title. The title does not necessarily appear upon record, but proof of notorious ownership, will be received.

Mr. Tener. — We will prove that this man was the slave of Benedict Jones, and escaped in 1842; that Benedict Jones has died, and we offer these letters testamentary as prima facie evidence that T. P. Jones is executor of that estate. We have witnesses in court who know the fact of his being the executor.

Judge GRIER. — These papers (certain affidavits before magistrates in Maryland) are received in evidence. (Mr. Tener reads paper.)

Richard Semans sworn. Examination in chief by Mr. Tener. — “I live in Philadelphia; did live in Cecil Co., Md.; I left there last February a year; I knew a negro boy named Henry; it was said he was a slave. He was in the employ of Benedict Jones and Thos. Jones; they claimed him as their slave. I knew him eight years ago, at the time he left I was born in Kent county and removed to Cecil county. I first became acquainted with Henry in 1838; he was then in Mr. Jones’ employ, to the best of my recollection; it was said he belonged to him, and I was under the impression that he did. I can’t say how long he continued in Mr. Jones’ employ. In 1842 he left the employ of Mr. Jones; he belonged to the estate of Benedict Jones; when he escaped he was in the employ of Benedict Jones, and said to be his slave, and to the best of my knowledge was so. I have seen the man who has been arrested, and he is the same Henry; I have no doubt about it. Benedict Jones died since I have been in the city. It was said this man was a slave for a term of years; I can’t say how long. I heard he was to be free in time. Henry was seventeen years old at the time of his escape; he was reputed to be so. At the time .he left Mr. Jones his term of service had not expired. He was not set free by Mr. Jones.”

Cross-examined by Mr. Brown. — I am twenty years old on the 25th of next January.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 6, 7 Leg. Int. 174, 1850 U.S. App. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-garnet-circtdmd-1850.