Osborn v. Nicholson

18 F. Cas. 846, 1 Dill. 219

This text of 18 F. Cas. 846 (Osborn v. Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborn v. Nicholson, 18 F. Cas. 846, 1 Dill. 219 (circtedar 1870).

Opinion

CALDWELL, District Judge.

On the part of the plaintiff it is claimed that at the date of this contract, slaves were property; that they were so recognized by the constitution of the United States, and the constitution and laws of this state, where the contract was entered into, and that the subsequent abolition of slavery by the thirteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States and the provisions of section fourteen, article fifteen of the constitution of this state, could [847]*847not affect the rested rights of the plaintiff under the former law.

This is believed to be a full and fair statement of the grounds upon which the right of recovery is rested in this class of cases. It is assumed that there was not when this contract was entered into, and is not now, as to contracts entered into before slavery was abolished, any distinction between a contract the consideration for which was slaves, and a contract made upon any other consideration.

This is the fatal vice in the argument of those who maintain the continued validity of these contracts. The general rules they lay down with reference to vested rights and the effect of a repeal of a statute upon transactions already concluded, may be sound law, and furnish a rule of decision in cases where they apply, but like most general rules of law, they are subject to exceptions and qualifications. And that they have no application to the extent claimed to this case, can be demonstrated by a chain of authorities that no court is at liberty to disregard.

It is obvious that this question cannot be determined without an inquiry into the nature and incidents of slavery, and the relation which the national government sustained, and now sustains to that institution. That slavery is against the law of God and the law of nature, that slaves were regarded as persons and not property by the constitution of the United States, that it was only within the slave states they were regarded as property, that this status was stamped upon them by the local laws of those states and limited to their territorial operation, and that those laws, though expressed in the form of written constitutions and statutes, had in their origin no higher or better sanction than brute force, and were constantly held, even by the courts that enforced them, to be contrary to natural right are propositions established by the judgments of courts and opinions of jurists, whose judgments and opinions must be held to be conclusive upon every court having a decent respect for judicial precedent and authority.

I had supposed that no one denied that these propositions were sound law, but their soundness having been questioned by some judges who maintain that it is still obligatory on the courts to afford a remedy to the slave trader on his slave contracts, a brief reference to the authorities supporting them would seem to be called for.

In 1771, a slave named Somerset was taken by his master from Virginia, then a British colony, to England, and on the refusal of the slave to return with his master to Virginia, he was sent on board of a ship to be carried to Jamaica and sold as a slave. A habeas corpus was granted against the captain of the ship to bring up the body of Somerset, who was in his possession, in irons, and show the cause of his detention. The case was heard before the king’s bench, and in giving the opinion of the court, Lord Maiis-field said: “The state of slavery is of such a nature that it is incapable of being introduced on any reasons, moral or political, but only by positive law. * * * It is so odious that nothing can support it but positive law.” And the court held that the relation of master and slave would not be recognized in any country where slavery did not exist, and that the moment a slave got beyond the operation of the local law which condemned him to slavery, he was free. This decision, pronounced a century ago, has remained the law of England. It was re-affirmed with emphasis in 1824, by the court of queen’s bench.

A British merchant residing in Florida, when it was a Spanish province, and slavery existed there, owned certain slaves, who escaped and went on board a British vessel lying off the coast of Florida. The master of the slaves pursued them and demanded their return from the officer in the immediate command of the vessel. That officer refused to return the slaves, or to compel them to leave the ship, and the owner afterwards brought suit against him in England for the value of the slaves. Holroyd, J., in the course of his opinion, says: ' “Now it appears from the facts of the case, that the plaintiff had no right in these persons except in their character of slaves, for they were not serving him under any contract, and according to the principles of the English law, such a right cannot, be considered as warranted by the general law of nature. I am of opinion that according to the principles of the English law, the right to slaves, even in the country where such rights are recognized by law, must be considered as founded not upon the law of nature, but upon the particular law of that country.” And in the same case, Chief Justice Best says: “The moment they put their feet on board of a British man-of-war, not lying within the waters of East Florida (where undoubtedly the laws of the country would prevail) those persons who before had been slaves, were free.”

It was urged in this case that the plaintiff was a British subject, that the slaves carried off by the defendant were property according to the law prevailing in Florida, and that though slavery might not exist in England, the comity of nations required that the courts of that country should afford him redress for the loss of his property. In answer to this claim, the same learned judge says: “The plaintiff, therefore, must recover here upon what is called the confitas inter com-munitates, but it is a maxim that that cannot. prevail in any case wnere it violates the law of our country, the law of nature, or the law of God.” And the court, holding that slavery was contrary to the law of nature and the law of God, the defendant had judgment. Forbes v. Cockburn, 2 Barn. & C. 448, 9 E. C. L. 199.

In Phillimore’s International Law, a work of undoubted authority, it is said: “There is a kind of property which it is equally unlaw[848]*848ful for states as for individuals to possess— property in men. A being .endowed with will, intellect, passion, and conscience, cannot be acquired and alienated, bought and sold by his fellow beings like an inanimate, or an un-reflecting and irresponsible thing. The Christian world has slowly but irrevocably arrived at the attainment of this great truth, and its sound has at last gone out into all lands, and its voice into the ends of the world. By general practice, by treaties, by the laws and ordinances of enlightened states, as well as by the immutable laws of eternal justice, it is now indelibly branded as a legal as well as a natural crime.” Again he says: “If the movable property of the subjects of a state finds its way within the limits and jurisdiction of a foreign state, it may be claimed, and must be restored to the lawful owners. In parts of the American continent, slaves are unhappily by municipal law, considered as chattels or movable property; a slave escapes, or arrives in this country where slavery is illegal, he is claimed by his master, — must he be restored? Unquestionably not; upon what grounds? Upon the grounds that the status of slavery is contrary both to good morals and to fundamental policy.” 1 Phillim. Int. Law, 242, 31G, et seq.

The doctrine established by the English cases, is also the law of France.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 846, 1 Dill. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-nicholson-circtedar-1870.