Lusk v. Lewis

32 Miss. 297
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 32 Miss. 297 (Lusk v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lusk v. Lewis, 32 Miss. 297 (Mich. 1856).

Opinion

Hakdy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a petition filed by the appellant in the Probate Court, "for the purpose of setting aside the probate of the last will and testament of Robert Lusk, deceased, made in that court at a previous term.

The ground of the application was that, among other bequests in the will, the testator gave all his slaves “ to John H. B. Latrobe, Rev. William M'Lean, and W. W. Seaton, in trust for the American Colonization Society;” and also the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars, to be paid after the bequest of the slaves should take effect; that the bequest of the slaves was made in secret trust for emancipation, contrary to the laws and policy of this State, and was, therefore, void; and that the pecuniary bequest being dependent thereon, was also ineffectual. And the object of the petition was to have a re-probate of the will, declaring it invalid as to these bequests, and valid in other respects.

The appellees, the administrator with the will annexed, and the trustees in whose behalf the contested bequests were made, appeared and filed a demurrer to the petition, which was sustained and the petition dismissed; from which decree this appeal is taken.

It' is clear that the Probate Court was incompetent to grant the objects of the petition. These were, to have the probate of the will, as a whole, set aside, and to have it re-admitted to probate and established as a valid will only as to part of the bequests made in it — in other words, to declare the legal effect and validity of the bequests of the will. The court was asked, in effect, to determine the rights of the parties claiming under the will, and not merely to determine whether it was an instrument made and published under such circumstances and with such legal forms, as to consti[300]*300tute it tbe last will and testament of the testator, and to entitle it to probate as such.

In the first place, the court had no power to set aside the probate made at a previous term, for anything set forth in this petition. But had such power existed, it obviously had no jurisdiction to declare that a will which was executed with all due legal solemnities, was insufficient to pass title to parties to whom bequests were made in it. That was a question of construction of the contents of the will, and not of the sufficiency of its execution and publication. The latter being established, it was not for that court to say' whether any title passed to the parties claiming under its provisions.

• For this reason, the court acted properly in sustaining the demurrer, and we might stop with a mere affirmance of the decree. But the question of the validity of the bequests to the trustees for the Colonization Society is raised by the petition, and is discussed here by counsel on both sides, and we are requested to consider and determine the question in order to settle the rights of the parties, and to prevent further litigation. And we will, therefore, proceed to examine the reasons for and against the validity of the bequests.

By the Act of 1842, Hutch. Big. 539, § 11, any bequest of slaves for the purpose of emancipation, or in order to be removed from this State for the purpose of emancipation elsewhere, is made unlawful; and it is insisted in behalf of the appellant, that the bequests in this case fall within the prohibitions of this statute. This must be true, if the bequests are to be considered as made for the purpose of emancipation; and this is the first subject of inquiry.

The provision of the seventh article of the will is this : “ I give and bequeath in fee simple, to John H. B. Latrobe, Bev. William M'Lean, and W. W. Seaton, Esq., in trust for the American Colonization Society, all the slaves belonging to my estate,” &c.

It appears by the record, that the American Colonization Society was incorporated by act of the legislature of the State of Maryland in the year 1836, for the purpose of colonizing free people of color residing in the United States, with their own consent, in Africa; [301]*301authority was conferred to acquire lands, tenements, and heredita-ments, by gift, bargain, sale, devise, or otherwise, and “ to receive any sum or sums of money, goods or chattels, that shall be given, sold, or bequeathed to them in any manner whatsoever,” and “to occupy, use, and enjoy, or sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of, according to the by-laws, &c., * * * all such lands, tenements, and hereditaments, money, goods or 'chattels, as they shall determine to be most conducive to the colonizing, with their own consent, in Africa, of the free people of color residing in the United States, and for no other uses or purposes whatsoeverand it is declared that for this object all property of any kind shall be vested in the society.

The question, then, arises, had the Colonization Society the power under this charter, to hold the slaves as absolute property, with the right to dispose of them by sale or otherwise as chattels.

It is true that the charter confers the power to receive any chattels given or bequeathed to them, and to use, sell, and dispose of the same, and that this language would in general embrace slaves. But this power must be viewed with reference to the objects of the society, and such a construction given to the words as will not be incompatible with those objects.

It is not to be doubted that the policy on which the society was established contemplated the removal not only of such free persons of color as were in the United States at the time of its incorporation, but also of such slaves as might in future be emancipated. This policy afforded an opportunity to such persons as owned slaves and desired to emancipate them to do so, without being subject to the evils of an increase of the free colored population in the country ; and hence the establishment of the society had a tendency to encourage emancipation, if indeed that was not an object within the especial contemplation of the institution. Its operation was calculated strongly to promote emancipation, and it may, therefore, be regarded as founded on a principle not consistent with the growth and permanency of the institution of slavery; for it cannot be supposed that an effect so obvious was not intended as a part of the system.

Such being the principle of its foundation and the tendency of [302]*302its operation, it is manifest that the holding of slaves, as chattels, with the power of selling them as such, would be directly repugnant to the policy of the institution and subversive of one of the objects which it was designed to accomplish. Such a power is too inconsistent with the general policy of the institution to be derived from general words in the charter, which under different circumstances would give the right.” The general words must be referred to the purposes of the incorporation, and will only give power to do such things and to acquire such rights as are necessary and usual in the course of its business to enable it to attain the object for which it was created, and none other. It is not shown, nor are we able to perceive how the holding of slaves or chattels by the 'society, with the absolute power of sale or other disposition of them, could be necessary or usual in the business of colonizing free persons of color; and it is most manifest that the testator never intended to give any such right in this case.

We are, therefore, of opinion, that the society had not power under the term

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Bluebook (online)
32 Miss. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lusk-v-lewis-miss-1856.