State v. Boon

1 N.C. 246
CourtSuperior Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1801
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.C. 246 (State v. Boon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Boon, 1 N.C. 246 (N.C. Ct. App. 1801).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The prisoner has been found guilty of the offence charged in the indictment : whether any, or what punishment, can be inflicted upon him, in consequence thereof, is now to be decided. I will first consider, whether we have any authority to inflict any punishment upon him, from any Act of Assembly.

The legislature in the year 1774, passed an Act, entitled an Act, to prevent the wilful and mali[247]*247cious killing of slaves ; by which they annexed punishment of one year’s imprisonment to the commission of the first offence ; and have declared that the person upon a second conviction thereof, shall be adjudged guilty of murder, and shall suffer death without benefit of clergy. In the year 1791, another Act was passed, for the purpose of examining this Act. The preamble of which, sec. 3, expresses, " that whereas by another Act of As- " sembly passed in the year 1774, the killing of a “ slave, however wanton &c. is only punishable " in the first instance by imprisonment &c. which " distinction of criminality between the murder of " a white person, and one who is equally a human " creature &c. is disgraceful to humanity &c. be it " enacted &c. that if any person shall hereafter be “ guilty of wilfully and maliciously killing a slave, “ such offender shall upon the first coviction there- " of be adjudged guilty of murder, and shall suf- " fer the same punishment as if he had killed a free “ man.” If we consider that the mildness of the punishment, directed to be inflicted upon the first conviction &c. by the former Act, is what the latter Act in its preamble, sec. 3, complains of, and go no further, our impression at once would be, that we had not only power to inflict a punishment upon the prisoner, but also, a greater one, than was annexed to the offence by the Act of 1774. But the preamble of a statute is no part of it ; 6 Mod. 62. Although it is often proper, to put such construction on a statute, as will agree with the preamble, yet it ought not to be done, when there[248]*248by, the enacting clause would be confined to it ; 8 Mod. 144.

We must then consider the words of the enacting clause, without regard to the preamble, in case they cannot be reconciled. If any person hereafter shall be guilty of killing a slave &c. such offender shall be adjudged guilty of murder &c. and shall suffer the same punishment, as if he had killed a free man. In case the person had killed a free man what punishment would the law have inflicted upon him ? Before this question can be solved, another must be asked ; because upon that, the solution of the first depends. What fort of a killing was it ? or what circumstances of aggravation or mitigation attended it ? did the act bespeak such depravity of heart, as would stamp it with the name of murder ? or were they such as justified it ? If of the former sort, capital punishment should be inflicted upon the author of it ; if of the latter sort, he is guiltless. That to which the legislature referred us for the purpose of ascertaining the punishment, proper to be inflicted is, in itself, so doubtful and uncertain, that I think no punishment whatever can be inflicted : without using a discretion and indulging a latitude, which in criminal cases, ought never to be allowed a Judge.

It may be thought, that the words “ shall suffer " the same punishment as if he had killed a free " man,” from the connexion in which they stand with the words preceding them in the same clause, viz. “ that if any person shall hereafter be guilty [249]*249" of wilfully and maliciously killing a slave ” should be allowed to have this meaning, and “ shall suffer “ the same punishment, as if he had wilfully and ma- " liciously killed a free man.” I cannot agree to this construction ; because if is a rule, that penal statutes should be construed strictly ; 1 Bl. Com. 88. Much latitude of construction ought not to be permitted to operate against life : if it operate at all, it should be in favor of it. Punishments ought to be plainly defined and easy to be understood ; they ought not to depend upon construction or arbitrary discretion.

Perhaps the legislature did intend, that those words should convey that meaning ; but it is not certain that such was their intention : if it was, it might have been easily expressed ; and indeed, if it were so expressed, it would not be altogether free from uncertainty. But suppose that to have been their intention, and that intention plainly expressed and free from uncertainty ; is the benefit of clergy taken away ? It is laid down in 2 Hale 330, that where a statute makes a new felony, clergy is incident thereto, unless it be especially taken away by Act of Parliament. This doctrine is recognized by Sir William Blackstone in the fourth book of his commentaries, page 98 ; but I think it unnecessary to consider this part of the case now ; because, for the reasons given, I do not feel myself authorized by the Act of Assembly, to say that any punishment should be inflicted on the prisoner. I will only add, that our legislature seem to have also recognized the doctrine laid down by Ld. Hale, because [250]*250in the Act of 1774, before spoken of, the benefit of clergy is taken away in express words, upon a second conviction &c ; the same thing is evidenced by many other Acts of Assembly.

II. But it has been also contended, on behalf of the State, that the offence with which the prisoner is charged, is a felony at common law, and that having been found guilty by the jury, he ought to be punished, independently of any Act of Assembly on the subject. This question arises out of the peculiarity of our situation ; slavery not being known to the laws of England, from them we cannot derive our usual information. Sir William Blackstone says, liberty is so deeply implanted in the English Constitution, that the moment a slave lands there, he falls under the protection of the laws, and so far becomes a free man ; though the master’s right to his service may possibly continue ; 1 Bl. Com. 127. From this expression, I understand the author’s meaning to be, that the reason why the laws extend their protection to a slave is, because the moment he lands in England he undergoes a change, his condition is ameliorated, and in contemplation of law, at least, he is no longer a slave, but a free man. If this be the reason, why a slave comes within the protection of the laws of England, it would follow, that if a slave were carried there, and his condition of slavery were not altered, the laws would not extend their protection to him ; because a slave in a pure state of slavery, has no rights. President Montesquieu, in his Spirit of [251]*251Laws, Vol. I. Book 15. cap. I. and Sir William Blackstone in his Commentaries, Vol, I. 423, define pure slavery to be, that whereby an absolute power is given to the master, over the life and fortune of his slave. In some countries where slavery has existed, laws have been made from time to time, ameliorating its condition ; the power of taking away their lives, or cruelly treating them, has sometimes been restrained : these restraints, we find, were the consequence of positive laws : they did not exist before these laws imposed them ; they were unknown in a pure state of slavery. It is said in Co. Litt. 116, b, that he that was taken in battle, remained bond to his taker forever, and he could do with him as with his beast ; he could kill him with impunity, &c.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.C. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-boon-ncsuperct-1801.