State v. Post

20 N.J.L. 368
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 N.J.L. 368 (State v. Post) 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
State v. Post, 20 N.J.L. 368 (N.J. 1845).

Opinion

Nevixjs, J.

This proceeding is designed to present for our adjudication the question, whether slavery can exist within the limits of this state under its present constitution and laws ; and it derives signal and solemn importance from its bearing upon a class of human beings, still claimed to be lawfully held in slavery, and upon the interest of those communities where most of that class are still found. I have listened with great pleasure and deep interest to the arguments and remarks and the pathetic appeals, which have been urged before us, in support of this demurrer, and in behalf of the colored race; and whilst I most sincerely respect the zeal and humane spirit by which they were dictated, and the ingenuity, talents and research of the counsel, I am nevertheless constrained to say, that much of the argument seemed rather addressed to the feelings than to the legal intelligence of the court.

The first inquiry which the subject presents for our consideration is : Has the relation of master and slave, or has the institution of slavery ever existed by law in the State of New Jersey ? And if it has: Has it ever been abolished by constitutional or legislative enactment ? Slavery either in its most absolute or more-[370]*370qualified form, as it existed in ancient times and among other nations, or in modern times in our own, is too well understood to render it necessary to define it; nor does the present case require that I should enter upon a disquisition as to its origin, its history, its abuse, or the principles .upon which it has been attempted to be sustained and justified. Our duty will be to inquire only, whether it has ever legally existed here, and still has such legal existence, for it is the law of the case we are called upon to pronounce. The court has no power to enact a law, nor to set aside a law, even to remedy what we may consider a great private or public wrong or to remove a great political evil; that power belongs to another department of the government. We can only declare what the law is, and whether consistent with the law of God, and the fundamental or constitutional law of society.

The legislative records of the State from the earliest period to which we can refer, prior to the revolution, as well as subsequent to that event, prove not only that slavery existed'and was tolerated, but that it was recognized and treated as a legal institution. The master’s claim of property in his slave, his power and authority over him, to direct and restrain, to sell and transfer him to another, have been, by repeated acts both of the colonial and state governments, again and again recognized, protected, defined and regulated. In proof of this, I refer to the grants and concessions in Lord Carteret’s time, as early as 1 664. To the colonial act of 1682, requiring masters to allow negro slaves sufficient accommodation of victuals and clothing; to the act, of about the same period, imposing penalties on persons trading with negro slaves ; to the act of 1694, prohibiting slaves from carrying fire arms; to the instructions to Lord'Cornbury in 1702; to the act of 1.713, for regulating slaves, wherein among other things it is enacted that no slave shall be manumitted, without security from the master to contribute annually for his support £20 during life ; to the act of 1751 to prevent landlords selling liquor to slaves, and to prohibit them from going out at night, except to attend public worship or funerals ; to the act of 1760, imposing penalties on slavesffior setting traps; to the act of 1768, prescribing the ■mode of trying slaves for certain offences ; and to the act of 1769 [371]*371laying duties on imported slaves. These several acts establish most incontestibly, that whilst we were yet a colony of Great Britain, the relation of master and slave existed here, was tolerated, recognized, sanctioned and regulated by law.

After we became an independent government and in the year 1798, the legislature by statute declared, that every negro who was then a slave, should remain so for life; unless manumitted in the mode prescribed by that statute. This latter act was a general one on the subject of negro slavery, and repealed most if not all the former enactments on that subject. The judicial records too of this state confirm the position, that under the laws already referred to, slavery had a legal existence here, both before and after the revolution. It is not necessary to cite with particularity the adjudications of this court to prove the truth of the remark; nearly every volume of reports, from the organization of the present, government to this time, abounds in cases, recognizing the right of the master over his slave. How far these laws have been wise, politic, or just; or how far they are consistent with principles of humanity and natural and inherent right, it is not our pro'viuce, nor are we now called upon to decide.

In 1804, the legislature adopted a plan for the gradual abolition of slavery, and passed an act declaring, “ That every child born of a slave, after the 4th of July of that year, should be free, but remain the servant of the owner of the mother, his executors, administrators or assigns, until he or she Should arrive at a specified age.” This act did not interfere with or disturb the relation between the master and slave, except so far as regarded the right of the former to the future offspring of the latter. This law was re-enacted in 1820, with many additional provisions, not necessary here to notice; for none of them interfered with the owner’s right to the person and services of such as were then held as slaves, but left that relation with all its rights and correspondent legal obligations. Under the operation of these last mentioned laws and the benign spirit of the age, which inclined men to manumit their slaves, slavery has become nearly extinct in this state and must soon pass entirely away. By the census of 1810, the number of slaves, then in the state, was 10,851; which, ac[372]*372cording to the last census, was reduced to 674; of whom 325 were under, and 349 over the age of fifty-five years. Those who yet survive and have not been manumitted, remain still the slaves of their masters.; but have a legal claim upon the latter for maintenance, in case of their inability to support themselves, unless by the provisions of the new constitution framed and adopted in 1844, slavery is absolutely abolished. If such be the case, it will follow as a legal consequence, that masters too, are absolved from the obligation of maintenance. It will be seen therefore, that the question involved in this case is one of general application to the whole class of persons, who are still claimed as slaves, and of especial interest to those communities, where most of them reside. These consequences, while they can have no legitimate influence upon the decision of the question, nevertheless give it more than ordinary importance, and call for our most serious and anxious consideration.

I think it sufficiently manifest, that when the new constitution came into operation, slavery existed by law in this state.

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543 A.2d 56 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.J.L. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-post-nj-1845.