Vaughan v. Williams

28 F. Cas. 1115, 3 McLean 530
CourtDistrict Court, D. Indiana
DecidedMay 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 F. Cas. 1115 (Vaughan v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan v. Williams, 28 F. Cas. 1115, 3 McLean 530 (indianad 1845).

Opinion

McLEAN, Circuit Justice.

The plaintiff, a citizen of Missouri, brought his action against the defendant, for rescuing from his possession certain slaves of the plaintiff, and fugitives-from his service, whom he found and arrested in the state of Indiana. The defendant demurred to the declaration. As the principal ground of the demurrer it was insisted, that the fourth article of the constitution of the United States, in regard to the delivery of fugitives from labor, and the act of congress on the same subject, do not apply where the claim is made by a citizen of a new state, not within the territorial limits of the Union at the adoption of the constitution. And that a citizen of Indiana is not bound by such provisions. That the sixth article of the ordinance of 1787, which remains in full force in Indiana, requires a fugitive from labor to be delivered up only when "claimed in any one of the original states.” And that as the alleged slaves es[1116]*1116caped from the state of Missouri, where the plaintiff still resides, neither the act of congress nor the constitution can apply to the case.

This question, I believe, for the first time is brought directly before the circuit court of the United States. It is admitted that the common law imposes no obligation on a sovereignty or its citizens, to surrender a fugitive slave, who escapes from the jurisdiction where he is held in slavery. The rights of the master cease, on common law principles, when the slave, by whatever means, shall escape beyond the operation of the local laws. And this is also the principle of national law. Unless under a treaty or by reciprocal legislation, a slave is free and cannot be reclaimed, when he enters a country where slavery is not sanctioned. And this would have been the case among the states of this Union, had not the constitution and act of congress provided otherwise. But it is supposed that the sixth article of the compact of the ordinance above referred to places Indiana, and also Missouri, on a different footing, in this respect, from the old states. It is true that this compact, or any pare of it, cannot be annulled, without the common consent of the parties bound by it. And it is assumed that the people of Indiana, never having assented to any change in the compact, are not bound to surrender a fugitive slave, except when claimed in one of the original states. When the people of Indiana came into the Union as a state, they were as much bound by the constitution of the United States, as the people of any other state. And any and every part of the ordinance which conflicts with the constitution of the Union, so far as the state of Indiana is concerned, was consequently annulled. The common consent required to annul such part of the ordinance is found in the formation of a constitution, and consent to come into the Union, by the people of Indiana, and the acceptance of the constitution and recognition of the state by congress. If it be admitted that while Indiana remained a territory, under the ordinance, there was no obligation to deliver up a fugitive from labor, except when claimed by a citizen of “one of the original states,” it by no means follows that her obligation, as a state, is the same. On this subject the constitution acts upon a state and not on a territory. In every instance where the federal constitution imposes a duty on a state or the people of a state, it acts equally upon all the states. The argument that the articles of compact in the ordinance are paramount to the constitution, is unsustainable. The constitution'is the fundamental law of Indiana and Missouri, the same as it is the fundamental law of Massachusetts and Virginia. This no one can doubt, who does not consider the ordinance of higher obligation than the constitution of the United States. Where any repug-nancy exists between these instruments, the ordinance must yield bj the consent expressed by the people of Indiana, and the people of the other states in congress assembled.

In this argument, the question of slavery has been discussed, and the impolicy of the provision in the constitution requiring fugitives from labor to be surrendered. With this subject, in the abstract, this court has nothing to do. It is argued that slavery had its origin in usurpation and injustice, and is continued in violation of the natural rights of man, as declared in our Declaration of Independence; but these are topics which this court will not discuss. We look to the law, and only to the law.

Whatever opinion may now be entertained as to the policy of introducing the above provision into the constitution, at the time of its introduction it was deemed a matter of the highest import. The fruits of the Revolution trembled in the balance, whilst this and kindred subjects were discussed in the convention; and they were settled only by a spirit of compromise and of mutual concession. But if in this and other respects the constitution is less perfect than the parties, on either side, would have it, we are not the less bound by its provisions. If an alteration in the instrument be desirable, let it be made, or attempted to be made, in the mode provided. But while it remains the fundamental law of the Union, no good citizen will disregard its provisions. It was not deemed a perfect instrument, perhaps, in every respect, by a considerable proportion of those who formed it; but it was the best that could be adopted under the circumstances. It has saved us from anarchy and ruin. It has given us a national character, and a proud standing among the great nations of rhe earth. Under its protection, our commerce has flourished among the several states, and been extended to every sea. It laid the foundation of the prosperity and glory of our country. Whatever defects there may be in the instrument, no one can fail to see that its beneficial results exceed the power of human computation. The demurrer is overruled, and the plea of the general issue being filed, the cause was referred to the jury.

Charge. Gentlemen of the Jury—Prom the evidence it appears, that the plaintiff purchased Sam, Mariah, and their child, from one Hendrick, in Missouri, 20th April, 1830, for the sum of eleven hundred dollars, five hundred dollars being oaid down. He took the slaves into possession, and they remained with him until April, 1S37, when they absconded. These persons formerly belonged to Tipton, a citizen of Kentucky, who, with the slaves, in October, 1S35, removed to Illinois. He settled on military land, built a house, cleared ground, and made other improvements. declaring to different persons his intention to become a citizen of the state. Sam and Mariah were both employed in laboring in the fields and in the house, until April, 1836, • when they were removed by Tipton to Missouri. Before this was done, there was much conversation in the neighborhood as to the right of the colored persons to their freedom. Tipton started with them before day-light, in the morning, being under some apprehension that they might, if discovered, be rescued. He sold them, in Missouri, to the person of whom the plain[1117]*1117tiff' purchased. Tipton continued to reside in Illinois two years, and, on several occasions, exercised the right of suffrage. In the spring of 1S44, the plaintiff heard that the slaves were residing in Indiana, Hamilton county. Taking certain persons along with him, to prove his purchase of the servants, and to identify them, he went to Indiana. Under the statute of that state, he procured a warrant to arrest the fugitives, and a constable to execute the process, and some two or three other individuals, to render any assistance that might be necessary.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. Cas. 1115, 3 McLean 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-williams-indianad-1845.