Kilham v. Ward

2 Mass. 236
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1806
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 2 Mass. 236 (Kilham v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilham v. Ward, 2 Mass. 236 (Mass. 1806).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The grounds of the motion for a new trial in this case are contained in the exceptions which we have before us. (The judge here stated the substance of them from the papers.) The arguments at the trial, on the part of the defendants, were much the same as those which have been now urged ; and though it is true that a judge at nisi prius is often pressed by circumstances to make a hasty decision, and I have therefore no predilection for such decisions, yet I cannot say that my opinion is altered by the arguments I have now heard. The counsel for the defendants have certainly misapprehended the. direction given to the jury at the trial. It cannot be supposed to have been the judge’s intention to tell the jury that they were not to attend to, and weigh, the evidence themselves. The facts were found; they were the same as stated in the exceptions, and there was no counter-evidence. I am still of opinion that, after the facts were thus ascertained, the main question in the case was a question of law. The jury were directed to declare whether the facts alleged were proved, and that if they were proved, a question of law would then remain. The exceptions [244]*244are, perhaps, not so accurately expressed in this respect as they might have been.

The first question, therefore, which is now submitted to us, I consider to be this, — whether the direction of the judge upon this point, at the trial, was right or not; and to determine this, we must attend to the facts in the case.

It appears that Kilham was born in this county, and that soon after the battle of Lexington he took passage for Newfoundland, in a vessel confessedly belonging to a'n Englishman, in company with a young woman, to whom he was afterwards married. From his station in life, it cannot be presumed that he considered with much attention the consequences of the state of affairs at that | * 263 ] time. He knew, as a simple matter of * fact, that the battle of Lexington, had taken place, and he probably knew other important events of the day ; but he could not have taken into view the consequences which were to result from them. At Newfoundland, it seems, he was employed in working upon vessels, and in some instances upon British armed vessels. While there, he often expressed to Lilly, the person with whom he had contracted to work, his intention and determination to return to the United States. At the time when his contract, which was for six months, had expired, it is a public fact that all communication between the British territories and the United States had ceased, so that he could find no safe direct conveyance to his native country ; but in order to get back again, he was obliged to go to St. Eustatia, and from thence procure a passage for this country ; and we are to presume that he took the earliest opportunity to do this. It appears also that, while on board British vessels, he refused to fight against the Americans, and that the British, in consequence of his partiality for his countrymen, sequestered his property. It appears further that, when he returned to Salem, which was in 1780, he was received by his fellow-townsmen, and no notice was taken of his conduct, as betraying any hostility to his native country. He was made an officer of the militia, and for above twenty years exercised his right of voting, and enjoyed other rights of citizenship. •

On these facts, then, the question being whether he is to oe considered as an alien, I must say that he is not; that he did not lose his rights as a citizen of the United States. His absence from his country was temporary, and was for the purpose of getting a livelihood. These facts being found by the jury, I must still remain of the opinion that the question arising from them was a question of law.

The second exception to the judge’s direction is because he directed the jury that K. did not come within the act of 1779, there [245]*245having been no conviction pursuant to that law. The opinion given was, it is true, a sudden one; but upon greater deliberation, I do not think it was a wrong one. The act of 1779, according to the construction of the defendants’ counsel, * would [ * 264 ] operate to disfranchise the plaintiff, to make him an alien; but such acts, in my opinion, cannot operate ipso facto against any persons except those who are expressly named in them, and whose particular cases may therefore be presumed to have undergone an examination by the legislature. Persons who are .not. so named, who are in the situation of the plaintiff, have a right to claim a trial and hearing, before the act shall affect them. The act itself, indeed, points out no kind of trial in respect to the persons, but only the property, of those who are to be the subjects of its provisions ; and although it does not appear, by the judge’s report, that K. had any property upon which process could have been founded under the act, yet it does not by any means follow that his political rights were extinguished. These were of vastly more importance than his property ; and it cannot be presumed that the legislature intended to deprive him of them without a hearing, they not having expressly declared such intention in the act itself.

But what is the consequence of K.’s having no property ? The only consequence is, not that he could not have been convicted under that law, but that there is nothing in his case upon which this part of the act could operate. I must therefore remain of the opinion that, as the act of 1779 does not. name Kilham, and as his case has therefore not had even the sort of trial, or previous examination by the legislature, which we may presume the cases of those named in the Conspirators’ Act have had, — and as it does not appear that he has had any other trial or hearing, — the act does not of itself make him an alien. I therefore think a new trial ought not to be granted.

Sew all, J.

The direction of the judge is excepted to on two grounds. (His honor here stated them from the papers.)

As to the first point, I think the judge was right in assuming it as matter of law arising upon the facts submitted to the jury: the only question, then, is, whether he gave a correct opinion upon the facts.

It is said by the counsel for the defendants that Kilham is an alien by birth. This point was fully examined in the case of Henry Gardner against the same defendants. The doctrine of * the common law is, that every man born [ * 265 J within its jurisdiction is a subject of the sovereign of the country where he is born; and allegiance is not personal to the sovereign in the extent that has been contended for; it is due tc [246]*246him in his political capacity of sovereign of the territory where the person owing the allegiance was born. The king of Great Britain was the sovereign of this country until the commencement of the revolution; but immediately upon the separation of the two countries, the revolutionary government established over this territory claimed the allegiance of Kilham. The act of 1779, now cited against him, claims as subjects all those who are made liable to the penalties therein provided. They are called members of the state, and are declared to have incurred certain disabilities and forfeitures by actions done contrary to their duties as members of the state.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State of New Jersey v. Trump
First Circuit, 2025
State of Washington v. Trump
Ninth Circuit, 2025
Rabang v. Immigration And Naturalization Service
35 F.3d 1449 (Ninth Circuit, 1994)
Rabang v. Immigration & Naturalization Service
35 F.3d 1449 (Ninth Circuit, 1994)
Santana v. Registrars of Voters of Worcester
425 N.E.2d 745 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1981)
In re the Estate of Ray
150 Misc. 728 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1934)
Jaffarian v. Murphy
183 N.E. 110 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1932)
Ex parte Griffin
237 F. 445 (N.D. New York, 1916)
Stearns v. Allen
67 N.E. 349 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1903)
United States v. Wong Kim Ark
169 U.S. 649 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Kinneen v. Wells
59 Am. Rep. 105 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1887)
Horne v. Green
52 Miss. 452 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1876)
Walker v. Brockway
1 Mich. N.P. 57 (Circuit Court of the 10th Circuit of Michigan, 1869)
Anderson v. Baker
23 Md. 531 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1865)
Lowe v. Dowbarn
26 Tex. 507 (Texas Supreme Court, 1863)
Thompson v. Multnomah County
2 Or. 34 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1861)
Morgan v. Dudley
57 Ky. 693 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1858)
Aven v. Beckom
11 Ga. 1 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1852)
Griffin v. Rising
52 Mass. 339 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1846)
Parker v. Griswold
17 Conn. 288 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1845)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Mass. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilham-v-ward-mass-1806.