Johnson v. Tompkins

13 F. Cas. 840, 1 Baldw. 571
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1833
DocketCase No. 7,416
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 840 (Johnson v. Tompkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Tompkins, 13 F. Cas. 840, 1 Baldw. 571 (circtedpa 1833).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Circuit Justice

(charging jury). The facts of this case are not complicated, nor is there much contest about those which are material to its decision; the questions of law however are of the last importance, involving the rights of property and the 'personal rights of the citizens of this and other states, to an extent which calls for a plain expression of our opinion, in order to have the law finally settled by the supreme court, on the interesting subjects now before us.

On a question of slavery or freedom, the right is to be established by the same rules of evidence as in other contests about the right to property,—[Queen v. Hepburn] 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 295.—quiet and undisturbed possession is evidence of ownership, and cannot be disturbed by any one who has not the right of property, and the bur-then of its proof rests on the one who is not in possession. In this case the proof of Jack being the slave of the plaintiff, is full, clear, and uncontradicted; Jack admitted that he was a slave till thirty years of age, when he alleges he was entitled to his freedom by the will of a former master; this assertion is wholly unsupported by proof, and contradicted by the will in evidence before you. Were this a trial between Jack and the plaintiff on a question, of freedom, there could be no doubt on the evidence before you, a bill of sale is not necessary to show the property to be in the plaintiff, it may be proved by parol evidence, or inferred from long possession. [Pirate v. Dalby] 1 Dall. [1 U. S.] 169. The ownership of Jack being thus clearly made out. he must be deemed to be the. property of Mr. Johnson, over which he has the same control as over his land or his goods. It is not permitted to you or us to indulge our feelings of abstract right on these subjects; the' law of the land recognises the right of one man to hold another in bondage, and that right must be protected from violation, although its existence is abhorrent to all our ideas of natural right and justice.

As a consequence of this right of property’, the owner may keep possession of his slave; if he absconds, he may retake him by pursuit into another state, and may bind or secure him in any other way, to prevent his second escape, he may arrest him by the use of as much force as is necessary to effect his reclamation; he may enter peaceably on the property or into the house of another, taking care to commit no breach of the peace against third persons. But it is no breach of the peace to use as much force or coercion towards the fugitive as suffices for his security, as without such force no slave could be re-taken, without his consent. The master may also use every art, device or strate-gem to decoy the slave into his power; odious as these terms may be in their application to an unlawful act, they ought to be considered as far otherwise when used for a lawful and justifiable purpose. It is every day’s practice to detect counterfeiters, and those who pass counterfeit money, by employing persons to purchase it from them; it is necessary for the purpose of public justice that such and similar means should be resorted to, or criminals would escape detection; they are neither immoral nor illegal. This right of a master to arrest his fugitive slave, is not a solitary case in the law; it may be exercised towards a fugitive apprentice or re-demptioner, to the same extent, and is done daily without producing any excitement; an apprentice is a servant, a slave is no more; though his servitude is for life, the nature of it is the same as apprenticeship or by redemption, which, though terminated by time, is, during its continuance, as severe a servitude as that for life. Of the same nature is the right of a parent to the services of his minor children, which gives the custody of their persons. So where a man enters special bail for the appearance of a defendant in a civil action, he may seize his person at his pleasure, and commit him to prison, or if the principal escapes, the bail may pursue him to another state, arrest and bring him back, by the use of all necessary force and means of preventing an escape. The lawful exercise of this authority in such cases is calculated to excite no sympathy; the law takes its course in peace, and unnoticed, yet it is the same power, and used in the same manner, as by a master over his slave. Had Jack been the apprentice of Mr. Johnson, or had he been the special bail of Jack, he would have the same right to re-take him as he had by being his owner for life; the right in each case is from the same source, the law of the land. If the enforcement of the right excites more feeling in one case than the other, it is not from the manner in which it is done, but the nature of the right which is enforced; property in a human being for life. If this is unjust and oppressive, the sin is on the heads of the makers of laws which tolerate slavery, or in those who have the power, in not repealing them; to visit it on those who have honestly acquired, and lawfully hold property, under the guarantee [844]*844and protection of the laws, is the worst of all oppression, and the rankest injustice towards our fellow-men. It is the indulgence of a spirit of persecution against our neigh-bours, for no offence against society or its laws; for no infringement of the rights of others, but simply for the assertion of their •own in a lawful manner. If this spirit pervades the country; if public opinion is suffered to prostrate the laws which protect ■one species of property, those who lead the crusade against slavery may, at no distant •day, find a new one directed against their lands, their stores and their debts; if a master cannot retain the custody of his slave, apprentice, or redemptioner, a parent must give up the guardianship of his children, bail have no hold on their principal, the creditor cannot arrest his debtor by lawful means, and he who keeps the rightful owner of lands or chattels out of possession, will be protected in his trespasses.

When the law ceases to be the test of right and remedy; when individuals undertake to be its administrators by rules of their own adoption, the bands of society are broken as effectually by the severance of one link from the chain of justice, which binds man to the laws, as if the whole was •dissolved. The more specious and seductive the pretests are under which the law is violated, the greater ought to be the vigilance of courts and juries in their detection; public opinion is a security against acts of open and avowed infringements of acknowledged rights; from such combinations there is no danger; they will fall by their own violence, as the blast expends its force by its own fury. The only permanent danger is in the indulgence of the humane and benevolent feelings of our nature, at what we feel to be acts of oppression towards human beings endowed with the same qualities and attributes as ourselves, and brought into being by the same power which created us all; without reflecting that in suffering these feelings to come into action against rights secured by the laws, we forget the first duty of citizens of a government of laws; obedience to its ordinances. The opinion of Judge Washington, in Hill v. Low [Case No. 6,491], meets our entire concurrence. “That if a man should honestly believe that the person claimed as a fugitive did not in fact owe service to the claimant, he could not in his defence allege ignorance of the law, and that such matters were unfit for the inquiry of the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 840, 1 Baldw. 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-tompkins-circtedpa-1833.