Miller v. Herbert

46 U.S. 72, 12 L. Ed. 55, 5 How. 72, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 U.S. 72 (Miller v. Herbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Herbert, 46 U.S. 72, 12 L. Ed. 55, 5 How. 72, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 297 (1847).

Opinion

Mr. Justice. DANIEL,

after having read the statement of the case at the commencement of this report, proceeded to deliver the opinion of the court.

By the statute of Maryland, passed in 1715, cap. 44, § 22, it is enacted, — That all negroes, and other'slaves then imported, and their children, then bom or thereafter to be born, shall be.slaves for life.” Upon examining the legislation of Maryland^ from the period of the law of 1715', a variety of enactments will be seen, showing the policy of this State in the government of her slave population ; and, as entering essentially into that policy, must be considered the several regulations under which she has permitted manumission, either by deed or by will. The enactments here referred to may be found in Kilty’s Laws, vol. 1, session of 1752, cap. 1, where they are collated, by their dates, down to the act of December 31st, 1796, under which last mentioned statute the questions now before this court have immediately arisen. In the interpretation given to these statutes by the tribunals of .the State, one characteristic will impress itself on every mind ; and that is, the strictness with which the laws have been expounded in reference to the power of manumission conferred by them. It seems to have, been thought that very little, or indeed nothing, was permitted by the policy of the State to construction or implication, but that rather the conditions prescribed for the exercise of the power ■ conceded should be fulfilled almost to the letter. Of the propriety of views such as these, on the part of the State, with regard to her own internal policy, no just ground of complaint can be alleged ; but of the reality of those views, a reference to a few of. the adjudications of her. courts will leave no doubt. ,By the Stat. of 1752, cap 1, § 5, manumission was allowed, by writing under bond and seal, “ evidenced by two good witnesses at least.” Under this statute arose the' case of negro James v. Gaither, which was a claim to freedom, upon a •writing signed and sealed, but subscribed by a single witness only. Parol proof being offered to establish the fact,. that the deed was executed in the presence of another witness, who did not attest it by subscription, the Court of Appeals ruled such proof to be incompetent and inadmissible under the statute. See 2 Harris and Johnson, 176.

The case of Wicks v. Chew et al., 4 Har. & Johns. 543, .a case arising under the statute of 1796, is yet more strongly illustrative of the rule abovementioned. By the statute just referred to, chap. 67, § 29 (Kilty’s; Laws), deeds of manumission are required to be recorded within six months from théir date. By another statute of Maryland, passed in 1785 (Kilty’s. Laws, chap. 72), it is *79 provided, in the third section thereof, — “ That in case ’any deed hath been or hereafter shall be executed, to the validity ofrwhich deed recording is necessary, and such deed hath not been or shall not b.e recorded agreeably to Jaw, without any fraudulent intention of the party claiming under the same, the chancellor, upon petition of. the party to whom the said deed was executed, or of his, her, or their legal representative, or of any of them claiming the land or other thing conveyed or intended to be conveyed by such deed, and without the appearance or hearing of the defendant orideferidants, shall. have power to decree the recording of the said deed jn the county or general court- records, within such time from the date- of the decree as it ought originally to have been recorded from the date of the deed giving to the deed, when thus admitted to record, the same effect it would have had if the irregularity thus cured had never occurred. Chew and others, claiming freedom under a; deed from Darnell, against Wicks and others, heirs and devisees of. Darnell, filed their petition with the chancellor, stating that Darnell had died without putting the deed on record within the six months prescribed by law, and praying the chancellor, upon due notice to the heirs and devisees, to decree that the deed be recorded, that thereby validity might he restored to it.- . The chancellor, deeming himself so authorized by the third section of the act of 1785, decreed that the deed be admitted to' record within six months from the date of his decree. The Court of Appeals reversed this decision of the chancellor, and the reasoning of the court conclusively shows the principle on which they place these instruments of manumission,-and on winch they distinguish them from transactions with a-party who is sui juris. They declare that the statute of 1785 embraces only cases of mutual but inchoate rights, but still pf rights founded on some valid consideration, such as courts can take notice of and enforce ; that manumission by the laws of. Maryland is a mere gratuity, and until evidenced by all the ácts or requisites the law prescribes, has no legal existence, and can have created no faculty in the contemplated object of that gratuity. The language of the Court- of Appeals is as follows:.— “The acts of assembly referred to (i. e. by the chancellor .in support, of his decree) are not intended to give relief in cases which were before without remedy, but to give an additional remedy by enabling a party, acquiring equitable rights under a deed not operative in law for want of recording,- to perfect those rights, by applying to', the chancellor to order the original instrument to be recorded,-.and thus to give it the effect which by law it would have had if recorded in due time, instead of going into chancery to compel a conveyance, or enforce a specific performance. They are intended»- o give an accumulative remedy to persons able to contract, and who by deed acquire rights which equity will protect, with the power to-prosecute those rights. But-by the laws of this State, a negro, so long as he is a slave, can have *80 no rights adverse to those of his master f he can neither sue nor be sued, nor can he make any contract' or acquire any rights under a deed which a court of law or equity can enforce. And as It is the recording of a deed of manumission, within the time prescribed by law, which entitles him to his freedom, he continues a slave and can acquire no'rights under such an instrument until it is sore-corded, and consequently cannot go either into a court of law or equity for relief of any kind.” Again) the court say in this case, that— “ A master , may execute and acknowledge a deed of manu.mission, and afterwards destroy it or keep it, and refuse to have it recorded, and the slave remains a slave without redress.” Another striking instance of • the rule of interpretation of their own statutes, adopted by the courts , of Maryland, is found in the case of negro Anna Maria Wright v. Lloyd N. Rogers, reported, in 9 Gill & Johns! 181. In-this .case,- Tilghman, the owner, of the female slave,1" executed and deliv'eréd to her, in 1832, a deed of manumission, which was duly acknowledged but not recorded. Subsequently, Tilghman sold and conveyed the same slave by bill of sale, duly acknowledged and recorded, to a> purchaser who had notice at the time of the previous deed of manumission.

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Bluebook (online)
46 U.S. 72, 12 L. Ed. 55, 5 How. 72, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-herbert-scotus-1847.