United States v. Henning

4 D.C. 645

This text of 4 D.C. 645 (United States v. Henning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Henning, 4 D.C. 645 (circtddc 1835).

Opinion

CRanch, C. J.

The motion for a new trial is grounded upon the refusal of the Court to give the instruction prayed by the prisoner’s counsel; which instruction the Court ought not to have given, unless the circumstance, that the free boy had been brought into this district in the defendant’s vessel, takes the case out of the statute.

The count, in the indictment upon which the defendant has been convicted, states that the defendant did, by fraud, unlawfully seduce the free mulatto boy from a certain part of this district, (naming it,) to a certain other part of this district, (naming it,) with the design and intention to sell 'and dispose of the boy to a certain person, (named,) as a slave for life.

And'the statute says, that if any free person shall, in the said district, by fraud, unlawfully seduce any free negro or mulatto from any part of the said district, to any other part of the said district, or to any other place, with.design or intention to sell or dispose of such negro or mulatto, as a slave for life ; every such person so offending shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by fine, not exceeding $5,000, and -imprisonment and confinement to hard labor, in the penitentiary, for any time not exceeding twelve years.”

The case stated in the indictment is the exact case stated in the statute; and the Court must refuse the new trial, unless the defendant can show that his case is clearly out of the spirit of the act.

The spirit of the act is to punish the intention to sell a free colored person as a slave, when that intention is manifested by the overt act of removing him by force or fraud from any part of the district, to any other part of the district, or to any other place. The intent was not only to. prevent .the sale of free negroes and mulattoes, resident in the district, by persons resident in the [650]*650district, but to throw an obstacle ih the w;ay of kidnappers who should have seized free negroes in any of the States, and who should be passing through the district with their prey. I say this •was the intent of the statute, because the words of the statute comprehend both cases'; the parties in both are in cecjuali delicio; and both classes of free colored persons are equally entitled to protection. ,

For some time previous to the passing of this act, we know that there were rumors of kidnappers passing through this district from the State of Delaware, and the eastern shore of Maryland, to the southern States, with their booty; and applications had been made, from time to time, to the Court and to the judges, to stop them by writs of habeas corpus, and injunction, which, when granted, only served to hasten their departure.

This statute furnished the ground of issuing a warrant to arrest the parties in the first instance.

Before this statute there was no law to which they were amenable here, or by which their flight could be arrested. The act of kidnapping was not committed here; the mere intent to sell was not punishable anywhere; there might be no attempt to sell here; and if there should be, it was not the offence which Congress intended to punish. The offence intended to be punished by the 17th section of the act, was the having a free negro in possession with an intention to sell him here or elsewhere, provided that intention should be accompanied here by the overt act or acts of coercion or control, mentioned in the statute.

If it had enacted that every person who should bring into this district a free negro or mulatto with intent to sell him as a slave, it would have excluded an intention to sell, formed after he arrived here; and would also have excluded the intention to sell resident free negroes and mulattoes.

If it had enacted that whoever should, in the said district, attempt to sell a free negro as a slave within this district, should be punished,” &c., it would have excluded a class of cases of equal atrocity, and in my opinion equally within the spirit of the act, and which are now within the letter of the act; namely, the cases of kidnappers found, with their prey, in the district, or on their passage through it, having no intent to sell it in the district, and not attempting .to sell it in the district, but intending to spirit it away into some distant slave-holding State, where the claim of freedom would be lost by the difficulty of procuring the evidence to support it. The act does not purport to punish the attempt, eo nomine, but it punishes certain acts done in the district, with intent to sell, either in the district or elsewhere. The words of the statute are very peculiar ; and are exactly adapted to the supposed case, as well as to other cases within [651]*651the same mischief. If the statute had been confined to kidnappers who should bring their booty from a place out of the district, it. would have excluded acts of kidnapping within the district; but the words now include both. If the statute had been confined to the attempt to sell in the district, it would not have reached acts done in the district with intent to sell elsewhere, and it would have left the case open to much litigation upon the question, what acts in the district would amount in law to an attempt to sell. If the statute had merely applied to kidnappers passing through the district with their victims, the offence would not be complete until they .were out of our* jurisdiction; hence, in order to make it complete within the district, it required a removal from one part of the district to another ; and in order to provide for the case of passing through the district, it says, from any part of the district to any other place.

Thus the act punishes the kidnappers who bring the free negro into this district for sale, here or elsewhere; for he cannot well be brought into the district without being removed from one part of the district to another part of the district. If he is brought to the city of Washington by water, he enters the district below Alexandria, and is removed from the district line to Washington. If he passes through the district without stopping, he is removed from one part of the district to another place. If kidnapped out of the district, it is hardly possible that he should be sold in the district without having been removed from one part of the district to another part thereof; it could only happen by the kidnapper’s bringing him up just to the line of the district, and selling him there, without passing over it. If kidnapped within the district, it would rarely happen that he could be sold within the district, without having been removed by the kidnapper from one part of the district to another. If such a case could happen, although it would not be within the words of the statute, yet it would be within its spirit, and it would be more certainly within the rules of construction of statutes, to say that it should be construed to be within the letter, than that the other eases, provided for by the express words of the statute, should not be within its spirit. Neither the act of kidnapping, (that is, the original seizure of the free negro,) nor the actual sale, is expressly within the provisions of the statute; but no argument against the validity of the statute can be drawn from that circumstance; for'it cannot be inferred that Congress meant to do nothing, because they have not done every thing. It appears to me that they only intended to legislate in regard to kidnappers; and principally in regard to foreign kidnappers bringing their spoils here, in transitu, and that their omission to provide for other cases, cannot derogate from what

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Bluebook (online)
4 D.C. 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-henning-circtddc-1835.