Mayho v. . Sears

25 N.C. 224
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 25 N.C. 224 (Mayho v. . Sears) 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
Mayho v. . Sears, 25 N.C. 224 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

The deed of emancipation, stated in the case agreed, is in these words : “To all whom it may concern : Know ye, that I, John Moring, of &c. do by these presents emancipate and set at full liberty from myself, my heirs, and all persons claiming under me, a certain parcel of negroes as they come to the age and time hereinafter to be mentioned: Hannah, Patrick, Cherry, Jordan and Charlotte, to be free without day — Isabel to be free from the 1st day of November, 1807; Polly to be free the 1st day of April, 1814; Burwell to be free the 10th day of April, 1822, &c.” Before the 1st of April, 1814, Polly had issue in this State, a female child, who was the mother of the present plaintiff The question in the case is, whether the plaintiff’s mother was upon her birth free, or became so before the birth of the plaintiff; for it is admitted by his counsel, that the plaintiff’s condition is necessarily to be determined by that of his mother at his-birth.

There is a natural inclination in the bosom of every judge to favor the side of freedom, and a strong sympathy with the plaintiff, and the other persons situated as he is, who have been allowed to think themselves free and act for so long a time as if they were ; and, if we were permitted to decide this controversy according to our feelings, we should with promptness and pleasure pronounce our judgment for the plaintiff.' But the court is to be governed by a different rule, the impartial and unyielding rule of the law ; and, after giving to the case an anxious and deliberate consideration, we fincT ourselves obliged to hold, that in law the condition of the plaintiff is that of slavery.

By the statute law of Yirginia, the owners of slaves could *227 emancipate them by will or deed ; and, therefore, our enqui-ry here only is, as to the nature and extent of the pation granted to the plaintiff’s grand-mother, Polly. In our own law, while emancipation was permitted, there could not be an emancipation to take effect in futuro; fox as it was by the license of a court, to be granted only for adjudged meritorious services, it could not relate back beyond that judgment, and moreover was necessarily immediate.— Bryan v Wadsworth, 1 Dev. & Bat. 384. But as there was in Virginia, after the year 1782, no such restriction upon the power of the owner to renounce his dominion over his slave, it would seem, also, necessarily to follow, that the owner might use his pleasure in prescribing the conditions on which, and the time when, the liberation should go into operation. Accordingly there have been, numerous adjudications in that State, that the owner may emancipate in fu-turo ; as if by will he bequeaths a slave to ohe for life and then to be emancipated, or if by deed he emancipates at any certain day to come, or after his own death. Pleasants v Pleasants, 2 Call Rep. 319. Maria v Surbaugh, 2 Rand. 228. Isaac v West, 6 Rand. 652. The principle, indeed, seems to be settled law in all those States, where liberation by the act of the owner simply is tolerated. Admitting then that this deed of emancipation is not void, because it did not grant immediate and unqualified freedom, and that upon the arrival of the period mentioned, the 1st day of April, 1814, Polly would then be absolutely free, a question arises, what in the intermediate period is her state — that of freedom in some form and to some extent, or of continued slavery — and what is the state of her issue born within that period ? As was said by the Supreme Court' of the United States, in McCutchen v Marshall, 8 Peters, 220, “if this were an open question, it might be urged with some force, that the condition of the person” (to be emancipated at a subsequent time,) was not that of absolute slavery, but was converted into a modified servitude, to end at the day or upon the event specified in the will or deed; and that the children of a female in that situation would stand in the same condition and *228 be entitled to freedom as the mother was.” But it is admitted that ease, that the decisions in the States, where slavery exists, go very strongly, if not conclusively, to establish the principle, that persons thus situated are slaves, that the manumission is only conditional, and that, until the contingency happens, upon whieh the freedom is to take effect, they remain to all intents and purposes absolute slaves. And, upon that principie, that court held in the case cited, that the children, born before the day when the mother became free by the limitations of the will, were slaves. The court considered the principle so well settled that it could not be disturbed. Our researches, aided by those of the counsel in this pase, lead us to the same conclusion.

The enquiries, what was the condition of the mother and what of the issue, up to the day when the liberation became absolute, arose in the case of Maria v Surbaugh, which has been already mentioned; and, upon the unanimous opinion of the judges, that of the mother was held to be that of temporary slavery and not of mere servitude, and that of the issu.e to be that of perpetual slavery. The questions were fully considered and elaborately discussed, and particularly by Judge Green, whose able and learned opinion will be generally looked to, as the leading and most authoritative one upon this point of American jurisprudence. He examined the subject thoroughly at common law, as regulated by the civil law, and as modified by the legislation of his own State; and proves very satisfactorily to our apprehension, that the emancipation does not presently enure to the slave, when the instrument made by the owner postpones it. The consequence, thatthe issue, born of a female while in that state of slavery and with the prospect of emancipation before her, must be slaves, results conclusively from the maxim, partus sequitur ventrón; which, we believe, has been universally adopted in this country; But the decision depends upon the law of the State, where the act of emancipation was executed, under which the plaintiff claims.— As that occurred in Yirginia, it would suffice, that by the law of that State; as declared in her statutes and expounded by *229 her courts, the plaintiff’s mother is deemed a slave, because born before her mother became free. But it is the more isfactojy to find, that in deciding the case in conformity to the law of Virginia, we are not proceeding upon a rule peculiar to the law of that State, butjjone which has been declared to be a part of the law of nearly all the States in the Union, in which the question could arise, and which pervaded also that code, which was at one time the law of nearly all the civilized world, the civil law of Rome, in the dominions of which nation the class of slaves was more numerous than it has ever been in almost all other countries. In 1809, it was held in Kentucky, that if a slave be entitled to freedom at a future day, her issue bom before the day are slaves. Frank v Shannon, 1 Bibb 615. The doctrine was laid down a second time in the same State in 1811. Ned v Beale,

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Related

Isaac v. West's
27 Va. 652 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1828)
Frank ads.
4 Ky. 615 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1809)

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.C. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayho-v-sears-nc-1842.