State v. Cooper

3 Del. 571
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 5, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Del. 571 (State v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cooper, 3 Del. 571 (Del. Ct. App. 1842).

Opinion

Indictment, assault and battery on John Oney, negro.

John Oney, n., was called to prove the assault and battery and *Page 572 objected to, on the ground that there were white persons present, competent to give testimony.

The Attorney-general said, that he understood it to have been decided that where the witness called was the person on whom the offence was committed, his testimony was admissible from necessity.

The Court said, that in the case of The State vs.Whitaker, where the white person present was an accomplice, though not indicted, the court thought the party kidnapped admissible from necessity; but they had not known it extended further.

They ruled out the evidence of the negro; but, it afterwards appearing that though there were two white persons present, one of them was drunk, and the other did not see the whole of the fight, though they both knew that a blow was struck; the court now admitted the testimony of the negro.

By the Court. — The decisions on the admissibility of negro evidence appear to have been somewhat conflicting; or, at least, the loose recollections of those decisions are conflicting,a In 1787 a law *Page 573 was passed which recognized in the negro race the right to hold property, and to obtain redress in law or equity for any injury to his or her person or property. Under this act it is said to have been held that a black man was a competent witness against a white man, to prove an offence against his own person. In 1799 the act was passed which, inall criminal prosecutions, allowed of negro testimony, where no white person competent to give testimony was present at the time when the fact charged is alledged to have been committed, *Page 574 or where such persons cannot be produced as witnesses. Since this act the question has often arisen, whether a black person on whom a criminal offence has been committed, was not a competent witness, although white persons were present. And the decisions on this question are understood to have been conflicting. In the case of TheState vs. Whitaker, and The State vs. Griffin, which were indictments *Page 575 for kidnapping, the court admitted the testimony of the negroes kidnapped, although there were other white persons present participating in the crime, though such persons were not indicted.

The law of humanity is in favor of the old decisions, and we now go so far with them as to hold that even though white persons were present at the commission of a crime, if they were not in a situation *Page 576 or position to see the act, and did not in fact observe all that happened at the time when the fact charged is alledged to have been committed, the person upon whom the crime was committed, though a negro, is a competent witness to prove it. Otherwise there will often be a failure of justice, and wrongs may be committed with impunity.

The defendant was convicted.

a The State vs. Valentine Bender. Quarter Sessions, Kent, December term, 1793, before RICHARD BASSETT,Chief Justice, and THOMAS McDONOUGH, and DANIEL RODNEY,Associates.

The defendant, a white man, was indicted for an assault and battery committed on Phillis Miller, a negro woman.

Phillis Miller was offered as a witness for the State, to whomFisher, counsel for the defendant, objected, on the ground of the act of assembly, 3d February, 1787, and the decision of the Supreme Court, in the case of Collins vs. Hall. Ridgely, Attorney-general, for the State, argued that the case of Collins vs. Hall was not like the present, because it was between two white persons. This witness, on the principles of the common law, which does not discriminate as to color or religion, is admissible. The act of assembly gives the same right of redress to negroes as to whites. In cases like the present, there are two modes of redress: — 1st, by civil action; 2d, by indictment. The means of obtaining redress must likewise be given. The necessity of the case will sometimes render evidence competent which otherwise would not be good. In a suit against a common carrier, the plaintiff was admitted as a witness to prove the things put into the box, ex necessitate. (12 Vin. Abr. 24, fob 34, pl. 38.) The assault and battery in this case was committed when no third person was present. In all cases of this kind, if the negro be not admitted, there can be no proof; and, of consequence, the offence will pass with impunity.

Fisher, in reply. — A positive law should not yield to the argument of convenience. If negroes be admitted against whites, there is great danger of subornation of perjury. The cases from Viner do not apply. They are grounded on the principles of common law. The present question arises from the act of assembly, and the decision of the Supreme Court in Collins vs. Hall is in point.

BASSETT, C. J. — The court have found themselves under some embarrassment as to the question before them, and could have wished for more time to consider the subject.

It is the opinion of a majority of the court, that the witness is admissible, her credit to be left to the jury. At common law, she would be competent; the objection arises from the act of assembly. The whole act must be taken together. The first part of the eighth section says, that "no slave manumitted agreeably to the laws of this State, or made free in consequence of this act, or the issue of any such slave, shall be entitled to the privilege of voting at elections, or of being elected or appointed to any office of trust or profit, or to give evidence against any white person, or to enjoy any other rights of a freeman, other than hold property, and to obtain redress in law and equity for any injury to his or her person or property." The latter part of the section gives to them the same rights which belong to white freemen, "to hold property and obtain redress in law and equity, c." and this latter part controls or qualifies the former.

Negroes are allowed the same redress for injuries to their persons as whites. Indictment is one mode or redress for an injury to the person, principally useful where the party injured is the only witness of the fact necessary to be proved.

The act giving to negroes this right of redress must be construed to allow the means absolutely necessary to obtain redress.

We still allow sufficient operation to the first part of the section, for we do not mean to say that a negro is a witness between two white persons; nor, in cases like the present, where other proof can be procured; but only in the case where justice must otherwise fail. Rodney, J., concurring — McDonough, J. dissenting:

Per Curiam. — Witness admitted.

Sarah Collins vs. Joshua Hall. Supreme Court, Sussex, November term, 1793. Before GEORGE READ, ChiefJustice, PETER ROBINSON and JOHN CLAYTON, Associates.

Upon the trial of this cause, after several witnesses had been examined upon the part of the plaintiff, one Levin Thompson, negro, was offered as a witness upon the same side.

Bayard,

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Bluebook (online)
3 Del. 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cooper-delsuperct-1842.