United States v. Haun

26 F. Cas. 227, 8 Am. Law Reg. 663, 1860 U.S. App. LEXIS 457

This text of 26 F. Cas. 227 (United States v. Haun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Haun, 26 F. Cas. 227, 8 Am. Law Reg. 663, 1860 U.S. App. LEXIS 457 (circtsdal 1860).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, Circuit Justice.

This indictment contains three counts, and charges that the defendant held, sold and disposed of, in this district, negroes, as slaves, illegally imported into the t'nited States in 1859, from a foreign place, by some person unknown. The district attorney, in moving for process for the arrest of the defendant, suggested that the opinion had been expressed upon a similar indictment in this court, by my colleague, the judge of the district court, that the offence charged did not subject the defendant to a criminal prosecution, and that if that opinion was concurred in by the presiding judge, process ought not to issue. My colleague of the district court was of counsel for this defendant before his appointment to the bench, and does not sit in this case. I have considered the subject with care, and shall proceed to express my opinion at large, in consequence of the importance of the subject and the condition of opinion in this tribunal.

The indictment must be supported under •the sixth section of the act of April 20, 1818, for the suppression of the African slave trade. The section is: “If any person or persons whatsoever shall, from and after the passage of this act, bring within the jurisdiction of the United States, in any manner whatsoever, from any foreign kingdom, place, or country, or from sea, or shall hold, sell, or otherwise dispose of any such negro, mulatto, or person of color so brought in, as a slave, or to be held to service or labor, or be in anywise aiding or abetting therein, every person so offending shall, on conviction thereof by due course of law, forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding ten thousand dollars, nor less than one thousand dollars, one moiety to the use of the United States and the other to the person or persons who shall sue for such forfeiture and prosecute the same to effect; and, moreover, shall suffer imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years, nor less than three years.” The object of this section of the act was to prevent the introduction of persons who, for the purpose of this discussion I will denominate Africans, and their employment, sale, or other disposition as slaves within the United States. This introduction or use is made penal, however, or by whomsoever made. By the language of the section, the act of importation and the acts of holding, selling, or disposing of the African, the subject of importation, are distinct offences. It is, “if any person,” “shall bring,” “in any manner” from abroad, “or shall hold, sell, or dispose of any negro so brought in” as a slave. Neither is it necessary that the, offenders under the one clause shall be in any relation- of accessories or accomplices under the other clauses of the act. “Every person aiding or abetting" in either of the criminal acts, is denounced as criminal in the degree of his principal, by its plain language. The manifest import of this section of the act is, that if any person shall import an African, as a slave, into the United States from abroad, (i. e. foreign kingdom, place, or country, or by sea,) or be in anywise concerned therewith, or shall hold, sell, or otherwise dispose of as a slave, an African, being illegally import[228]*228ed. lie shall suffer the penalties prescribed. Now. upon this construction of this section of the act there is charged against this defendant acts that are criminal, and which subject him properly to a presentment of the grand jury. But it is said that the act must be limited to such as were concerned with the importation, and that a proprietor by purchase ex post facto, is not embraced within the terms of this section of the act. An analysis of the section shows that “if any person or persons whatsoever” “shall bring within the jurisdiction of the United States” any African as a slave, “or be in anywise aiding or abetting therein,” “or shall hold, sell, or dispose of such African as a slave, or be in anywise aiding or abetting therein, every person so offending shall forfeit and pay,” &c. To justify the argument relied on, the word “and” should be substituted for the word “or,” and the act should read. “If any person shall bring within the jurisdiction of the United States, ■and’ shall hold, sell, or dispose of any African as a slave.” But the exigency must be imperious which will justify this court 10 take such a license with an act of congress as to substitute the one word for the other.

This section was reported in the form m which it stands (in so far as this question is concerned) • from a committee of the senate, was considered by both houses of congress, and amended in other particulars, and became the law of the land by the concurrence of congress and the president. The intention of congress must be very clearly contrary to the language of the act to au thorize so important a change in the signification of the words employed. But a change of the word “or” to “and" would leave the importer and his accessories guiltless. unless there was some holding or other act of dominion subsequently. A sale of the cargo, before the importation accompanied by delivery, without more afterward, would be unprovided for in this section of the act. But the whole series of the slave trade acts show that the simple act of importation was regarded by congress as a high misdemeanor. The fifth section declares that neither the importers nor any person claiming from or under them, shall hold any right, interest, or title whatsoever in. or to any negro, mulatto or person of color, nor to the service or labor thereof, who may be imported or brought into the United States in violation of the provisions of this act. The sixth section, previously quoted, provides for the punishment of the importer,—he who brings within the jurisdiction of the United States the African.—and for the punishment of those who hold any right or title under him; that is. those who hold, sell, or otherwise dispose of the African imported. This section is the vindicatory complement of the fifth section. The importer and those who hold. sell, or otherwise dispose of the African, and their accomplices, comprise all who contribute to foster or encourage the prohibited traffic. And this conclusion is corroborated by the eighth section of the act. This is, that “in all prosecutions under this act the defendant shall be holden to prove that the negro, mulatto, or person of color, which he shall be charged with having brought into the United States, or with purchasing, holding, selling, or otherwise disposing of, and which according to the evidence in such ease, the said defendant shall have brought in aforesaid, was brought into the United States at least five years previous to the commencement of this prosecution, or was not brought in, holden, purchased, or otherwise disposed of contrary to the provisions of this act.” Congress, by this section, imposes upon all persons the obligation to make a diligent inquiry into the integrity of every right or interest, asserted or exercised over the person of an* African before acquiring it. They evidently infer that but few, if any, derivative claims to Africans, illegally imported, would be bona fide, and that every holder, vendor, or employer of such persons, would be conscious of the infirmity of their estate, and therefore of their criminality under the laws of the United States. The slave trade at the date of the act of ISIS had been prohibited ten years.

It was a rational hypothesis, that those Africans, who were then in the United States, might be easily discriminated from those who might be imported illegally aft-erwards. The African is a rational being, and may communicate to an interested inquirer the conditions under which he came from his native continent. If this was not an unreasonable hypothesis in ISIS, it is an assured fact now.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 227, 8 Am. Law Reg. 663, 1860 U.S. App. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-haun-circtsdal-1860.