Love v. . Brindle

52 N.C. 560
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 5, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 52 N.C. 560 (Love v. . Brindle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. . Brindle, 52 N.C. 560 (N.C. 1860).

Opinion

Battle, J.

Ve approve entirely of the instruction given by his Honor to the jury, on the trial, in the Court below. It is against the policy of our law for a master to permit his slave to own a jackass, horse, or other animal of the like kind, and to have control and management of it, as if he were a free person. The obvious and direct tendency of such things is the encouragement, in the slave, of such habits and disposition as is entirely inconsistent with his social position. He will be, himself, tempted to pilfer and steal, either from his master or others, to procure the means of supporting his animal, and the allowance to him, by his master, of the time and opportunit}' necessary to purchase, manage and sell the beast, will have a tendency to make other slaves dissatisfied with their condition, and thereby excite in them a spirit of insubordination. In Batten v. Faulk, 4 Jones’ Rep. 233, we held that a bond given by a slave for seventy-five dollars, with the defendant as surety, was void as to both, for the reason, that it must be assumed that the debt was contracted by the slave as a sort of free trader, the allowance of which was contrary to the policy of our law. So, in Barker v. Swain, 4 Jones’ *562 Eq. 220, this Court said that a sale by the defendant, Swain’ of a jackass, to a slave, was an unlawful dealing, which deprived the vendor of the right to claim the price for which the slave’s agent had sold the animal. The permission given by the master to the slave, in the case now before us, may save the purchaser from an indictment for the unlawful dealing, but it cannot have the effect to change the policy of the law which forbids such transactions, and which, therefore, will not give any remedy upon a contract growing out of them.

The case of White v. Cline, (ante 174,) is not opposed to the principle which we think governs the present, because the money, which White lent to' Cline, was earned in California, and, therefore, could not have been acquired by means of the violation of any law of this State.

PeR Cubiah,

Judgment affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.C. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-brindle-nc-1860.