Overseers of the Poor v. Overseers of the Poor

8 N.J.L. 78
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1824
StatusPublished

This text of 8 N.J.L. 78 (Overseers of the Poor v. Overseers of the Poor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overseers of the Poor v. Overseers of the Poor, 8 N.J.L. 78 (N.J. 1824).

Opinion

The facts in this case appear in the opinion of the court delivered by

Ewing, 0. J.

Two justices of the peace of the county of Middlesex, at the instance of the Overseers of the poor of the township of South Brunswick, removed a negro man named Jack as a pauper from that township to the township of East Windsor, in the same county. East Windsor appealed to the General Quarter Sessions by whom the order of removal was quashed.

Jack, the pauper, is the slave of John Mount, who at, and prior to, the year 1802, resided and had a legal settlement in the township of E. W., from which in that year he removed into the state of New York, where he now resides, and is of sufficient ability to provide for and maintain the said slave.

It is conceded by the counsel of both sides, and is certainly true, that the Overseers of the poor of a township where a person needs relief, must provide for him, unless and until they can find some other person or township legally chargeable, and that the township where such relief is needed and administered cannot change their burthen to another, unless a legal settlement in such other township can be established.

On the part of S. B. it is shewn that the settlement of John Mount, the owner of Jack, was in the year 1802 when [79]*79ho left this state, in the township of East Windsor, and it is contended that the legal settlement of Jack is therefore in that township, for that the settlement of the slave follows the settlement of the owner, the slave acquiring a derivative settlement from the owner. And in support of this position, arguments are drawn'from an alleged analogy to the derivative settlements of a child from a parent and a wife from her husband, and the cases of Winchenden v. Hatfield, 4 Mass. Rep. 123, and Dighton v. Freetown, 4 Mass. 532 are cited.

In the absence of legislation on this subject, as appears to have been the fact in Massachusetts, these arguments and cases would be entitled to respectful consideration, but our legislature have made provision, and to their enactment alone we must therefore resort for our guide.

Bv the 25th section of the act respecting slaves, Rev. Laws, 375, it is enacted that the legal settlement of every slave manumitted agreeably to the directions of that act, who shall be likely to become a public charge, shall be in that township or place in the state where the owner manumitting such slave shall have a legal settlement at the timo of such manumission. By the 26th section of the same act it is enacted, that the owner of any negro or other slave not manumitted according to the directions of that act, liis or her heirs, executors or administrators shall be obliged at all times to support and maintain such slave, Provided, that if any such owner shall become insolvent and so unable to provide for and maintain his or her slave, who shall by sickness or otherwise bo rendered incapable of supporting himself or herself, then such slave shall be deemed a pauper, whose legal settlement shall follow the legal settlement in this state of his or her owner. The first of these sections relates to manumitted slaves, and fixes their place of settlement. The second, to unmanumittod slaves. It imposes on the owners and their representatives the burthen of their maintenance and support, and in one case, and one only, where the owner [80]*80is become insolvent, and so unable to maintain his slave, fixes his settlement, the legal settlement in this state of his owner.

The legislature had the subject before them, and they ,have provided in the whole extent, in such manner as to them seemed proper. They have given-a settlement to the manumitted slave. They have given no settlement to the unmanumitted slave, except when the owner shall become insolvent, and so unable to maintain him. But if the position be sound, .that the slave on general principles derives a settlement from his master, why expressly • provide that the settlement of a manumitted slave shall be that of the owner at the time of manumission ? and that the settlement of an unmanumitted slave whose owner is insolvent, and so unable to support him, shall follow the settlement of his owner ? It is answered that these sections are merely, declaratory and are expressly enacted to dispel doubt and prevent dispute. But this answer, if true, would avail nothing, because they must be taken to comprehend and declare all the law on the subject of the settlement of manumitted and unmanumitted slaves, otherwise the inadmissible absurdity would follow, that the legislature professing to declare the law, have done so in part and have left the rest covered with the very doubts and disputes they sought to dispel.

From this view of the matter it is clear that unless a settlement can be shewn in E. W. in this case under the 26th section the slave not having been manumitted, no settlement exists.

It is admitted by the counsel of South B. that the case is not within the words, but is insisted to be within the equity of that section.

. It is said the owner is not within the state, he has no property here, that a suit cannot be maintained against him in the courts of New York where, he resides and has sufficient property, and therefore he is within the reason and spirit which is the equity of the act. But this argument [81]*81proceeds on an assumption which cannot be conceded—has not been proved—and is unsound. The courts of the state of New York would entertain a suit and enforce a recovery for the maintenance of the slave. Mount became the owner of the slave under the laws of New Jersey; he subjected himself to all liability which those laws thereby imposed upon him; he entered into an implied contract to provide for and maintain such slave; for where the law imposes a duty it raises an implied contract, (3 Blaek. Com. 160;) such liability, such contract, the courts of New York would enforce; and the case is by no means analogous to that of the courts of one state called on to impose or enforce the penal statutes of another.

If however the courts of New York would not entertain a suit for the maintenance of the slave, still such construction of the section as would extend it to the present case, cannot be admitted. This rule of construing a statute by a supposed equity, however well adapted to the curtness and obscurity of ancient legislation, can rarely have place in modern times. The words of the section are plain and specific, they comprehend one case and one only; the insolvency of the owner and a consequent inability. But the owner here is not insolvent, he is of acknowledged ability. To extend the words then to a case in terms directly opposite, would in fact be to enable the court to legislate by means of this powerful engine, equity.

The case of the King v. Tibbenham, 9 East. 388, has no analogy, and hence affords no rule for the present case. The intent of the statute there the subject of construction, was, to declare a woman pregnant of a bastard child, from that fact, actually chargeable and thereby liable to be removed to her own parish, that the child might be born there, and thereby the burthen of its maintenance be imposed on that parish, and therefore, whether the woman wore married or unmarried, if the child were a bastard; precisely the same reason existed. The child and the sup[82]*82port of the child were the primary objects of legislative concern and hence the court of K. B.

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Related

Inhabitants of Winchendon v. Inhabitants of Hatfield
4 Mass. 123 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1808)
Monosiet v. Post
4 Mass. 532 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1808)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.J.L. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overseers-of-the-poor-v-overseers-of-the-poor-nj-1824.