Perry & Van Houten v. Beardslee

10 Mo. 568
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Mo. 568 (Perry & Van Houten v. Beardslee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry & Van Houten v. Beardslee, 10 Mo. 568 (Mo. 1847).

Opinion

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Beardslee and wife brought an action on the case, against Perry and others, owners and officers of the steamboat “Harry of the West,” to recover damages for the loss of a slave, hired as a fireman on said boat The plaintiffs obtained a verdict and judgment.

[570]*570The evidence on the trial conduced to show, that the slave belonged to. Mrs. Beardslee, then Miss Smith — that he was white, with blue eyes and light sandy hair; that her agent, John Carlyle, hired the boy to Van Houten, captain of the Harry of the West, by the month and for no definite period. The boy made his escape at St.. Louis. A letter was addressed to Carlyle, by Mr. Sparr of the Virginia Hotel, where Carlyle usually boarded when in St. Louis, at the instance of Van Houten, which requested his presence in St. Louis on business,, and when Carlyle arrived there- from Alton, where he was at the receipt of the letter, he found that the negro had escaped, and he settled with Van Houten for the hire.

The defendants offered to-prove, that according to usage and custom, prevailing among steamboat owners and masters, the latter are not considered responsible for slaves hired by them*, in ease of their running away, unless by express agreement. This evidence was rejected.

The court, at the plaintiff’s instance, instructed the jury as follows:

“It is the duty of the hirer of a slave, in case the slave runs away, to use such diligence for retaking the slave, as a diligent owner would use, and in a suit against a hirer for such a loss, unless the hirer prove such diligence on his part to retake the slave, he is liable for the loss. If therefore the jury in this case, on this principle find the defendants guilty, they ought to find for the plaintiffs and assess their damages at "the value of the slave at the time of his loss, with interest.”

At the instance of the defendants, the court gave the following instructions :

“If the jury believe from the evidence, that1 the negro-Bavid was hired to the owners of- the steamboat “Harry of the West;” that while in their service he ranaway, and lias been lost to plaintiffs without fault, carelessiiess or negligence on-the part of said owners,, then the jury will find for defendants.”
“The law of bailments, leasing or hiring property generally,, is not construed as rigorously, in the case of a negro hired to another; and the-jury is authorized to consider the peculiar circumstances of the country, the vicinity of the city of St. Louis, and the State of Missouri to free States, the difficulties of retaining negroes in slavery, the age, character, sagacity, color and general- appearance of the negro David, in connection with the defence.”
“The burden of proof is on plaintiffs, to show that the negro David’s running away was caused by the misconduct, fault, carelessness or negligence of defendants, and without such proof the jury should, find for defendants.”
[571]*571“This being an action on the case for wrongs alledged, the plaintiffs are not entitled to a verdict, unless the jury believe from the evidence, that defendants were guilty of such carelessness or negligence, as caused or allowed of the negro’s running away.”
££If the jury believe, that the negro David was hired to the owners of the steamboat Harry of the West, before plaintiffs can recover in this action, they are bound to establish by evidence, that a demand was made for the negro, before the suit was brought.”

The court refused to give the following instructions, asked by the defendants:

££If the jury believe from the evidence, that the negro David ranaway from the Harry -of the West without fault, carelessness or negligence on the part of said owners, they will find for defendants, although said owners did not use the extreme diligence that the owner might be disposed to use to retake him, and they were not bound to encounter as great expense as the owner of the slave might be willing to encounter, in case the negro escaped to a distant country.”
“This being an action on the case for torts, the plaintiffs cannot recover, if the jury believe from the evidence, that the negro boy David, when he ranaway, escaped to Cincinnati, Ohio, or any other free State, without the permission, connivance, carelessness or negligence of the defendants.”
“If the jury believe from the evidence, that the boy ranaway, and escaped to Cincinnati, Ohio, or any other free State, the defendants were not bound as matter of diligence, to make pursuit, nor to incur heavy expenses in making efforts to retake him.”
“If said negro ranaway to Cincinnati, Ohio, without fault, negligence or carelessness on the part of defendants, and without unreasonable delay, the fact was communicated by defendants to the plaintiffs, or either of them, or their lawful agent, or any of them, who immediately made reasonable efforts to ascertain where said negro was, and to recapture him, without.success, the defendants are entitled to the benefit of such efforts in the mind of the jury, as if made by defendants, as bearing upon the question, whether the plaintiffs have been really damnified, or injured by any omissions of defendants, in the matter of efforts to recapture said negro.”
“If the jury believe from the evidence, that pursuit of said boy David, to recapture him, would have been unavailing and useless, and that he ranaway and reached the State of Ohio, or any other free State, without the connivance, carelessness or negligence of defendants, and that ef[572]*572forts to retake him would have caused extraordinary trouble and expense, the law applicable to this action, does not consider plaintiffs as damnified by defendants, and there should be a verdict for the defendants.”
“The duties of the bailee of a slave, as to care of the slave and diligence, so as to prevent his running away, are to be considered by the jury in connection with the circumstances of the country, the nature and appearance, and sagacity of the slave himself, and the difficulties of holding such property or preventing negroes from running away.”
“The plaintiffs are not entitled to recover of defendants, merely because fresh pursuit was not made after the negro by defendants, or no efforts were made by them to retake him, if they believe from the evidence, that such pursuit and such efforts would have b'een unavailing.”

The points were preserved by bill of exceptions, and the case brought .here by appeal.

This case seems to have been decided under a misunderstanding of some expressions which were used by the Judge, who delivered the opinion of this Court in the cases of Ellett vs. Bobb, 6 Mo. R., 824; and Perkins vs. Reed, adm’r., 8 Mo. R., 33. The language of the court in those cases may not have been sufficiently guarded, and may require explanation. The’first instruction given by the court, in the case now under consideration, declares it “to be the duty of the hirer of a slave, in case the slave runs away, to use such diligence for retaking the slave as a diligent master would use,” and that a failure in this respect would make him responsible for the loss.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Mo. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-van-houten-v-beardslee-mo-1847.