Woodard v. . Blue

9 S.E. 492, 103 N.C. 109
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 492 (Woodard v. . Blue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodard v. . Blue, 9 S.E. 492, 103 N.C. 109 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

(after stating the case). At the time when the alleged marriage was contracted, Underzine was a negro' slave, and Mourning the daughter of a white woman, and if not herself white, necessarily of mixed blood, and, whether *113 one or the other, equally disabled, by positive law, to enter into a contract of marriage with a slave.

By an act passed in 1741, it is declared that if any white man or woman, being free, shall intermarry wiih an Indian, negro, mustee or mulatto man or woman, or any person of mixed blood, to the third generation, bond or free, such person shall forfeit and pay, to the use of the county, one hundred dollars, and a penalty is imposed upon any minister or Justice of the Peace who knowingly shall presume to marry such. Rev. Stat., ch. 71, § 56.

The act of 1838 declares all marriages entered into since January 8, 1839, or thereafter entered into, “ between a white person and a free negro, or free person of color, to the third generation, shall be void.” Rev. Code, ch. 68, § 7.

This latter enactment does not extend as far as that which prohibits and annexes a penalty to the act of intermarrying of a white with a person of color, whether bond or free, but confines its operative force to annulling of marriage attempted between a white person and a free negro or free person of color. The restraint thus limbed became inapplicable to the case of a white person marrying a slave, because there was in the latter an incapacity, arising from the status of the slave, to make such contract, and it was,-ipso facto, without any statute making it so, void. In like manner the intermarriage of a free negro and slave was prohibited by the act of 1830 (Rev. Stat., ch. Ill, § 87), an offence for which the free person of color was subjected to indictment, unless the same was with the consent of the owner of the slave, under the amendment of 1844 (Rev. Code, ch. 107, § 61), given to a marriage which took place previous to November 1,1844.

This legislation continued in force during the existence of slavery, no marriage being recognized as binding when had between slaves, and inhibited by positive law when had *114 between white and free persons of color, who are within the specified degrees, and between the latter and slaves, and this in pursuance of a general public policy growing out of the slavery of a part of the population owned by masters. It still prevails, and inhibits the intermarriage of white and free persons of color into which the' slave population had been immerged. The Code, § 1810. This interdict is still in force, and held not to be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, or legislation under it, in State v. Hairston, 63 N. C., 451, though the relation, if legally created elsewhere, is recognized as a valid subsisting relation, when the parties come into this State from that of their former residence. State v. Ross, 76 N. C., 242. But its validity is not recognized when parties, having their domicile'here, to evade our laws, go to a State which allows such marriage, with intent to return and keep up their domicile. State v. Kennedy, ibid, 251.

As no provision was made by law giving sanction to the marriage relation formed between slaves, while there was no absolute restriction put upon free persons of color, and they could intermarry one with another, while they could not with white persons or slaves, it became necessary to provide by law for the legalizing of marriages between slaves who could not enter into any marriage contract, and the General Assembly passed the act of March 10, 1866.

The fifth section, which alone bears upon the present inquiry, legalizes a cohabitation among those who were lately slaves, when still continued, and validates the relation as a marriage from its commencement; and, to give the act full force, directs the parties to go before the Clerk or a Justice in acknowledgment of assent, and to state the time when it began. This enactment has been considered at the present term, in Branch v. Walker, and obviously imparts no sanction to the cohabitation alleged in the present case.

*115 The act of February, 1879, adds to the canons of descent, and is in these words:

“ The children of colored parents, born at any time before the 1st day of January, 1868, of persons living together as husband and wife, are hereby declared legitimate children of such parents, or either one of them, with all the rights of heirs-at law and next of kin, with respect to the estate or estates of such parents, or either one of them.”

The interpretation put upon the broad and comprehensive terms of the statute, as embracing the issue of all colored persons while living as husband and wife, as well when forbidden as permitted by law, determines the ruling of the Judge in support of the claim of the plaintiff Emily as heir-at-law of the intestate Underzine to the lands left by him.

In general words, literally understood, the act does include the children of all colored parents, as well those who were always free as those who were formerly slaves (for they all now belong to one and the same class), and its legal effect would be to bestow an inheriting capacity upon all whose parents were thus cohabiting, irrespective of the lawfulness of the relation, and thus sustain the ruling of the Court in applying its remedial provisions to the case before us. It admits of serious doubt whether the statute, in seeking to remove an anomalous condition of the colored race, growing out of the emancipation of the slave population, intended to ignore the unlawful sexual intercourse,so habitually maintained as to assume the form of marriage, and become a cohabitation among the free colored race, to whose lawful intermarriage no impediment not common to all was interposed, and thus place the offspring of a forbidden upon an equal’footing with the offspring of a lawful union, in-giving the right of succession to an intestate father’s estate. The special purpose of the legislation seems to have been to provide against the evil of the universal illegitimacy of slave children, consequent upon the absence of any authority for *116 their parents, during their servitude, to enter into lawful matrimonial relations; and this is developed in the early enactment of 1866.

But the act of 1879, in unrestricted words, bestows a right to succeed to a deceased parent’s estate, not disposed of by will, upon “the children of colored persons,” born before January, 1868, without exception or qualification, and we do not see how, by construction, any words restricting its operation can be interpolated.

Its efficacy, however, depends upon two essential conditions — a cohabitation subsisting at the birth of the child, and the paternity of the party from whom the property claimed is derived.

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9 S.E. 492, 103 N.C. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodard-v-blue-nc-1889.