Graham v. Strader & Gorman

44 Ky. 173, 5 B. Mon. 173, 1844 Ky. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 Ky. 173 (Graham v. Strader & Gorman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Strader & Gorman, 44 Ky. 173, 5 B. Mon. 173, 1844 Ky. LEXIS 103 (Ky. Ct. App. 1844).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Graham filed his bill in the Louisville Chancery Court, attaching the steamboat Pike, and making the owners, Strader &. Gorman parties, under the acts of 1824 and 1828, to recover damages for the unauthorized transportation' of his three slaves, Reuben, Henry, and George, on board said steamboat from Louisville to Cincinnati, whence they escaped to Canada. The slaves are described as three yellow men between nineteen and twenty three years of age, well trained as dining room servants •and as scientific musicians, in which .capacity they had been in the habit, for Some years, of playing together on various instruments, at balls and parties, and during the watering season were retained by the complainant at the house kept by him at the Harrodsburg Springs, to play for the entertainment of'his company.. The bill alledges and several witnesses state, that each of them were worth $1500. The evidence conduces -to prove that they were taken, on board the Pike at Louisville, about the last of January, 1841, when they bad with them, besides their clothes, musical instruments and books of the valúe of about $250;’ that from Cincinnati, to which place they were transported in the boat, they escaped to Canada, and that the complainant • had expended from $700 to $1000 in fruitless efforts to recover them.

The defendants, in their original answer, besides denying the allegations of the bill, “charge that the said slaves [174]*174are musicians, and. have been, (since a long time previous to their alledged escape,) allojved by the complainant to travel about as free negroes, and to play at parties, public and private, and to receive their wages earned by them: and that they have frequently been allowed to go out of the Commonwealth as if they were free.” In an amended or additional answer, subsequently filed, they charge that the-complainant allowed the slaves to go to-Louisville to live with Williams, .a free man of color, to learn music, and afterwards gave them writtenpermissicn to go to the State of Ohio, that they did go and remained there a long time, and were sent there by complainant’s direction, to perform service ssslaves, and that in consequence thereof, they acquired a right to freedom, and are Me, and were so when the bill was filed and long before.

Proof in the cause and decree of the Chancellor.

The defendants seem ta have filed an exhibit, though it is not .referred to as such in any of their pleadings, a paper which is proved to have been signed by Graham, the complainant, and is of the following tenor: “Harrodsburg, August 30, 1837. This is to give liberty to my boys, Henry and Reuben, to go to Louisville with Williams, and to play with him till I may wish to call them home. Should Williams find it his-interest to take them to Cincinnati, New Albany, or to any part of the South, even, so far as New Orleans, he is at liberty to do so. 1 receive no compensation for their services except that he is to board and clothe them — My object is to have them well trained, jn music. They are young, one 17 and the other 19 years of age. They are both of good disposition and strictly honest, and such ferny confidence in them that I have no fear that they will ever act knowingly wrong, or put me to trouble. They are slaves for life, and I paid for them an unusual sum: they have been faithful hardworking servants, and I have no fear but that they will always be true to their duty, no matter in what situation they may be placed. C. Graham, m. d.

“P. S. Should they not attend properly to their music or disobey Williams, he Is not only at liberty, but requested to bring them directlyhome. C. Graham.”

It appears that the boys, Henry and Reuben, while under the care of Williams, were with him once in Cin[175]*175einnati, Ohio, once and perhaps twice in Madison, Indiana, and two or three times in New Albany, Indiana, playing as musicians, at balls or other entertainments at those places. One witness states that 'George was with them in May, 1837, when they were at 'Cincinnati and Madison; but it is denied by the witness, Graham, that George was ever placed with Williams by his master; and there is no proof, unless in the fact stated by the other witness referred to, that his master had ever permitted him to go out of the State, or that he had ever been out of the State prior to the time of his escape with the others. It was proved that none of them had been under the care of Williams, or living with him, for about two years prior to their escape, but that except duringthe watering season, when they were required to be at home, they were stationed at Lexington as their head quarters, with liberty to go to the neighboring towns .to play as musicians, and to give their master what they made beyond their expenses, and that they did thus go about to the neighboring towns. This privilege is variously stated by different witnesses, from the conversations of the complainant, one stating that Dr. Graham, had said he had allowed them to go where they pleased; others that he had restricted -them to the towns immediately around Lexington, and ‘•had prohibited them from going to the towns on the Ohio tiver. And two witnesses, residents one of Lexington •and the other of Frankfort, say they bad been requested -by the complainant, who went to New Orleans in the •winter of 1840-41, to have some supervision over these slaves. It was stated by the witness, Graham, that it \vould cost $500 to supply their placeas musicians at the Harrodsburg Springs, for a single season. Upon the hearing, the Chancellor being of opinion that the writing of the 30th August, 1837, above set out, was a sufficient license and permission, without limit as to time, to authorize any steamboat to take the slaves Henry and Reuben on board, and land them at any place, in or out of the State, dismissed the complainant’s bill and claim of damages for the exportation of Jhose two slaves; and as to the slave George, directed a jury to’be empanneled as required by the 9th section of the act of 1839, (3 Stat. [176]*176Law, 16,) to ascertain such facts as should be submitted them. On this enquiry, the pleadings, depositions and exhibits, were read to the jury,'and numerous instructions having been asked for by the parties, and given or refused by the Chancellor, a verdict was found for the complainant, of $1000 in damages. The motion of each party for a new trial was overruled. And a decree having been rendered in conformity with the verdict, each party seeks its reversal in this Court, Without detailing the various opinions to which the parties respectively objected, we shall proceed to notice the several questions involved in those objections, as relied on in this Court.

Theprovtsionso? the statutes of 1824 an4 1828, malting owners, masters, &c. of steamboats liable for talcing slaves out of the State, without authority front their masters,, &o.

I And first, it is urged on the part of the complainant, that the Chancellor erred in dismissing the bill as to Henry and Reuben on the ground of the writing above referred to.

The acts of 1824 and 1828, (Stat. Laws, 259-60,) by their joint effect, make the owners, master, &e., and the boat liable, for taking out of the limits of this State, any slave, who has not in his possession, a record of some 'Court of the United States, properly exemplified, proving his right to freedom, unless the owner or master, &c.

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Related

Anderson v. Poindexter
6 Ohio St. (N.S.) 622 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1856)

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ky. 173, 5 B. Mon. 173, 1844 Ky. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-strader-gorman-kyctapp-1844.