Fable v. Brown

11 S.C. Eq. 378
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1835
StatusPublished

This text of 11 S.C. Eq. 378 (Fable v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fable v. Brown, 11 S.C. Eq. 378 (S.C. Ct. App. 1835).

Opinion

Harper, J.

This is a case, both of novelty and importance, and I have considered it carefully, with reference to the authorities within my reach. On the part of the plaintiffs, it is contended that, under our law, slaves being considered personal chattels, “ to all intents, constructions, and purposes, whatsoever,” they are absolutely incapable of taking a legacy, and that the bequest to them is absolutely void ; or that if a trust is created in their favor, it is incapable of being executed, and the estate must be distributed among the next of kin. On the part of the defendants, it is urged — First, that under the civil law, slaves have capacity to take for the benefit of the master, and that this should have much authority with us, as. the state of slavery which existed under that law, was anal°g0l;is to that which exists among us; Secondly,* that if we J adopt the rule of the common law in relation to villeins, the same conseqnence will follow; they had capacity to take, though liable to be [299]*299divested of the property by the lord: or, Thirdly, that if they are considered incapable of taking, this must be considered a beneficial bequest to the executor, for his own use, the testator having intended him to take the property absolutely and dispose of it at his pleasure, relying only on his friendship and good faith to dispose of it according to his wishes.

With respect to the civil law, however enlightened and admirable a system of jurisprudence it may be, it is not our law, nor have our Courts any authority to declare it so. Our Legislature has adopted another system of laws. Where our law is obscure or doubtful, it is frequently of great utility in explaining or determining it, more especially as a great portion of our law was derived from that source. But if the common law be clear, we are not authorized to depart from it because the provisions of another system may be better and more suited to our circumstances ; nor if it be defective, are Courts authorized to supply the deficiency by drawing from a foreign source. Nor do I think the common law, in relation to villenage, can govern in relation to this matter. The status, the entire civil and political condition of the villein, was, in almost every particular, different from that of our slave. He had a perfect, civil and political capacity, and all the rights of a freeman, against every person but his lord; and, with respect to the lord, the relation was very different from that of the slave to his master__Co. Lit. 123 b ; and see the note G. to Thomas’ edition, 1 vol. 421.

Though Coke seems to refer the origin of all servitude to captivity in war, yet we know that it often originated in voluntary contract; and I apprehend that the essential distinction between villenage and slavery, is, that the former was supposed, at least in theory of law, to have thus originated. I have no doubt but that, very anciently among the Saxons, perfect slavery existed, such as now exists among us, but this appears to have been much modified by the feudal system. — Blackstone seems to favor this supposition — 2 Com. 92. “ Under the Saxon government, there were, as Sir. William Temple speaks, a sort of people in a condition of downright servitude, used and employed in the most servile works, and belonging, both they, and their children and effects, to the lord of the soil, like the rest of the cattle or stock upon it. *Theseseem r„,qcn to have been those who held what was called the folk-land, from L which they were removable at the lord’s pleasure. On the arrival of the Normans here, it seems not improbable that they, who were strangers to any other than a feudal state, might give some sparks of enfranchisement to such wretched persons as fell to their share, by admitting them to the oath of fealty, which conferred a right of protection, and raised the tenant to a kind of estate, superior to downright slavery, but inferior to every other condition.” Beeves, in his History of the Common Law, states that the tenure of villenage was established by the Normans — 2 vol. p. 39, c. 2. Mr. Hallam, in his view of the state of Europe during the middle ages, in allusion to the ancient state of slavery, says, that “in England it was very common, even till after the conquest, to export slaves to Ireland, till in the reign of Henry II. the Irish came to a non-importation agreement, which put a stop to the practice.” He has also a curious note on the same subject.

If villenage was supposed to be a species of tenure, originating, as all other tenures did, in voluntary agreement, the villein consenting to serve [300]*300in consideration of support and protection, will explain why he was regarded as a freeman with respect to every other person than his lord, and even with respect to him had reserved some privileges. "Very different was the condition of the captive taken in war. Lord Coke says, Co. Lit. 1, 16 b., “ Fiunt etiam servi liberi homines captiviiate de jure gentium, and.not by the law of nature, as from the time of Noah’s.flood forward, in which time all things were common to all, and free to all men alike, and lived under the law natural, and by multiplication of people, and making proper and private those things that were common, arose battles. And then it was ordained by the constitution of nations, that none should kill another; but that he that was taken in battle, should remain bond to his taker forever, and to do with him and all that should come of him, his will and pleasure, as with his beast or any other chati el, to give, or to sell, or to kill, &c., &c.” We know that in point of fact, African slaves were generally captives taken in war. After the practice of enslaving prisoners of war was abandoned in Europe, the captor was supposed to have a property in his prisoner, for the purpose of enforcing a ransom. At a later period, prisoners of war were at the disposal of the State.

I think that the true state of the slave must be ascertained by *re^erence-'to the disabilities of an alien enemy, in which light the -* heathen were anciently regarded; though certainly modern humanity, the progress of opinion, and positive legislation, have greatly modified their condition. In Calvin’s case, I Co. p. 33, after speaking of the condition of alien friends, it is said, “but if this alien become an enemy, (as all alien friends may,) then he is utterly disabled to maintain any action, or get anything within this realm. And this is to be understood of a temporary alien, that being an enemy may be a friend, or being a friend may be an enemy. But a perpetual enemy (though there be no wars by fire and sword between them) cannot maintain any action, or get anything within this realm. All infidels are in law, perpe^ui inimici,' perpetual enemies, for the law presumes not that they will be converted, that being remota potentia, (a remote possibility,) for between them, as with the devils, whose subjects they be, and the Christian, there can be no peace, for as the Apostle saith, 2 Cor. vi. 15, Quce autem conventio Ghristi,ad Belial, aut quce pars fideli cum infideli, and the law saith, JudcBO Ghristianum nullum serviat mancipium, nefas enim est quern Christus redemit blasphemum Ghristi in servitutis vinculis detinere. Register, 282. Infideles sunt Ghristi et Ghristianorum inimici. And herewith agreeth the book in 12 H. 8, fob 4, where it is holden, the Pagen cannot have or maintain any action at all. [Quaere.]

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11 S.C. Eq. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fable-v-brown-scctapp-1835.