Oates v. Caffin

3 La. Ann. 339
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 La. Ann. 339 (Oates v. Caffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oates v. Caffin, 3 La. Ann. 339 (La. 1848).

Opinion

Rost, J.

This is ,a possessory action; the subject, a fugitive slave. The facts are as follows: In 1833, the slave Isaac ran away from the defendant, who soon after advertized him, and offered a reward for his apprehension. Nothing was heard from him till the summer of 1846, when the jailor of Canton, in the State of Mississippi, advertized him as being confined in the jail of that place. The defendant went to Canton, took the slave out of jail, and brought him to New Orleans, where he resides. The plaintiff alleges, and has proved, that he was in possession of the slave, in the State of Mississippi, for .eight or nine years, and until the 15th October, 1845, when the said slave ran away from him. He prays to be restored to his possession, and has appealed from the judgment rendered .against him, in the first instance.

[341]*341The possession of the plaintiff in the State of Mississippi, cannot be the basis of a possessory action. The law establishing that'action is areal statute, and we cannot presume that our legislsture has given to it an extraterritorial operation, more especially in a case like this, when the effect of that construction would be to give to the inhabitants of the State of Mississippi, rights which the legislature of their own State has no power to give them. The man Isaae, was held to labor under our laws, and the authorities of the State of Mississippi were at all times bound to deliver him to the party to whom the labor is due. The legislature of the State of Mississippi could not release the plaintiff from the obligation to deliyer him, nor could the legislature of Louisiana take from the defendant the right to enforce the delivery. U. S. constitution, art. 4, sect. 2. Prigg v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 16 Peters, 608. Story’s Com. Con. U. S., vol. 3, p. 676.

The possession of which our Code speaks is a possession in Louisiana, which the owner of the property can at all times contest. Should the law be otherwise, no one can possess a fugitive slave as owner.

Our laws regulating the condition of slavery are derived, through those of Spain, from the roman jurisprudence. The rule of that jurisprudence was that, the slave who absconds from his master steals himself, and that he stands as other stolen things, and neither possession nor t.itle can be acquired to him. Servum fugitivum sui furtura facere, et ideo non habere locum nec usucapionem, nec longi temporis prascriptionern, manifestum est; ne servorum fuga dominis suis ex .quacunque causa fiat.damnosa. L. l.Cod.De Serv.Fugit. The fugitive slave had no situs, The possession continued in his master, whose rights remained unimpaired. These rules were incorporated in the Spanish jurisprudence, and are found in law 23, tit. 14, Part. 7. Gregorio Lopez, in his commentary on that law, states ,at length the jurisprudence .of Spain ,on that subject.

If a fugitive slave is to be viewed in law as if he had been stolen, the law of this case does not differ from that of McGrew v. Browder, 2 Mart. N. S. 17.

Our statutes on the subject -of fugitive slaves are derived from the roman and Spanish Jaws, and rest so manifestly on the same principles, that our predecessors have given effect to the statute against persons harboring them, in cases where the want of criminal intent in the party was apparent. Rouquette v. Richardson, 3 La. 452. This decision was made since the adoption of the Code of Practice. How could the defendant in that case have maintained a possessory action, when the court condemned him to pay damages for the possession, though unattended with criminal concealment.

We are told that the Code of Practice recognizes the possessory action for slaves, and that we are bound to give effect to its provjsjons. This is true. But we must also give effect to the other bodies of laws by which we are governed, and I am not aware that the dispositions of the Code of Practice are more imperative, or of greater public concernment, than those of the Black Code. Our different laws on the same subject must be construed together, and in such a manner as to give effect to all. The construction contended for by the appellant would justify a possessory action, even if the slave had been stolen. I cannot give it my assent. I believe, on the contrary, that art. 49 of the Code of Practice, authorizing possessory actions to be brought for slaves, is limited in its application, by the dispositions of the Black Code and of the penal statutes of the State, to such slaves as are not fugitive or have not been stolen.

I am of opinion that the judgment ought to be affirmed.

Eustis, C. J. concurred in the opinion of Rost, J.

[342]*342King, J.

The plaintiff held actual possession, as owner of the slave in contest, in the State of Mississippi, for more than eight years, and commenced this action within twelve months from the date of this disturbance. If the controversy related to any other than a fugitive slave no doubt could be entertained of the plaintiff’s right to recover.

In a possessory action, the question of property can never be enquired into. The plaintiff, who has possessed for more than twelve months previous to the disturbance, is not required to exhibit his title. Possession for that length of time in good or bad faith, even as an usurper, accompanied by a claim of ownership, creates such a presumption that the possession is rightful as to dispense with the production of title. C. P. arts. 49, 53. C. C. 3417, 3418. The proof necessary to sustain the action may be made by parol. All the rules in relation to this action are expressly declared to apply to slaves. C. P. 46. I do not think that fugitive slaves form an exception to the rule. No exception is declared, and I think none results from our legislation in regard to absconding slaves. By our laws, the owner may not only be deprived of possession, but legally divested of title to his fugitive slave, without his knowledge or assent. Bui. and Cur. Dig. p. 791, §14. The principle that the possession of the fugitive slave continues in the master ceases to apply, when-the slave has been arrested and sold under the authority of law. An adverse possession then commences. The slave is no longer to be regard as a fugitive, and could only be reclaimed in a petitory action. In-view of the law which thus permits title to be acquired to an absconding slave, the presumption cannot arise that, the possessor as owner for more than twlve months, is the possessor of stolen property; nor after such adverse possession can it be presumed that the slave is still a fugitive, and that the possession continues in the master. The more legitimate presumption would be that, the adverse possession had been legally acquired.

If the plaintiff were claiming in a possessory action under ordinary circumstances, founded on a possession of more than a year in the State of Mississippi, the courts of this State would respect that possession and give effect to it, and not drive the party to his petitory action. The case,of McGrew v. Browder, 2 Mart. N. S. p. 17, was a possessory action, and the plaintiff relied exclusively on his possession in the State of Alabama, which prevailed.

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3 La. Ann. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oates-v-caffin-la-1848.