Wright v. Rogers

9 G. & J. 181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 9 G. & J. 181 (Wright v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Rogers, 9 G. & J. 181 (Md. 1837).

Opinion

By the statement of facts in this case, it appears that Mrs. Anna M. Tilghman executed a deed of manumission to her female slave, Maria Wright, on the 18th of May, 1832; this deed was not recorded within six months after its date as required by the act of 1796, ch. 67, sec. 29. Mrs. Tilghman afterwards, sold Maria to Tench Tilghman, who, by bill of sale dated the 2d of May, 1833, transferred her as a slave for life to Lloyd N. Rogers, the defendant below, who for aught that appears, was wholly ignorant of the deed of manumission aforesaid.

By an act of the legislature, passed 23d of February, 1835, December session, 1834, ch. 95, sec. 1, the clerk of Talbot county was authorized to admit to record, “three several deeds of manumission from Ann Maria Tilghman, of which the above deed was one, and that when recorded, they should be as valid and effectual for every purpose as if the same had been duly recorded within the time prescribed by law.”

Under this act the deed to the appellant was recorded by the clerk of Talbot county 21st March, 1835.

[185]*185As the law before stood, it is as clear as any proposition can be made by the decision of the highest tribunal, that by the deed of manumission from Mrs. Tilghman, the appellant acquired no right to freedom, either of a qualified or absolute character which could be enforced in law or equity. Such an instrument conveyed no right until recorded, and if the time elapsed within which it should be placed on record, a court of chancery had no power to afford redress. The deed itself gave not even an inchoate right to freedom, liable to be divested, by neglecting to have it recorded within the time prescribed by law; but the act of placing the deed upon record, is itself the only, and effective origin of any right to be claimed under it. The deed not having been recorded, the appellant was at the time she was purchased by the defendant below, as much a slave, with as little right in law or equity to escape from that condition as if the deed of manumission from Mrs. Tilghman had never been executed. Hicks vs. Chew, 4 Har. and John. 546, is a conclusive case on this point.

The act of 1834, however, provides that the deed to the appellant may be recorded, and that when so done, it shall be as valid and effectual as if it had been enrolled within the period prescribed by law. Now, as the appellant would have been free if she had placed on record the deed which w'as executed in her behalf within the prescribed period, and as the act gives to the deeds recorded under it the same effect, as if they had been regularly placed on record, it follows, that the appellant, who before the passage of the act was a slave of the defendant below, by a perfect title, has by virtue of a compliance with the terms of that act, if valid, obtained her freedom, and that too, without the consent of her master or any compensation for his loss.

If then she is free, that boon has been conferred upon her by a high legislative act, when independent of that act, and notwithstanding the deed of manumission, her master and those under whom he claims, had done nothing which operated either in law or equity to bestow freedom upon her, or [186]*186in the least to impair their title to her services. The deed of manumission was wholly ineffectual, and without obligation of any kind. It gave her absolutely nothing. She was by the authority of the decision of the court of Appeals before referred to, as much the slave of her mistress, and by as perfect a title in .law or equity after the deed had been executed, but, not recorded, as before. The court will perceive then, that the immediate object and .necessary effect of the law of 1834, is to take from the master his slave, to whose person and services at the time of.its passage, he possessed a clear title, and that too, not indirectly by enacting some provision, creating a new rule of evidence, or regulating the remedy which might have affected his case, but by striking at and directly destroying his vested and absolute right to her person and services. For the direction in the act “that the deed may be recorded is nugatory when standing alonej it is the additional declaration that when recorded, it shall have the same effect as if it had been recorded in time, which gives to the law its obnoxious character, of arbitrarily disturbing the private rights of property; For although it has been contended otherwise, yet I think it cannot be well questioned in this, and all other states where slavery exists, that a human being may be as much the subject of property as any chattel that a man may possess. And that viewed in this respect, any law which affects the rights of the master must have the same consideration, as if pássed in relation to his land or personal estate.

Now if it be true that at the time the act in question was passed, that Maria Wright was the slave of Rogers, by virtue of his title acquired under Mrs. Tilghman, if the previous deed of manumission gave her no title to freedom in any court, and' if the opposing right of her master could without question have been enforced in all, does it not follow, that the act of 1834, which professes to give validity to a void deed upon its being recorded, proves as clearly destructive to a vested right, as if it had said without reference to the deed, Maria Wright shall be free.

[187]*187That it transcends the power of the legislature to disturb vested rights, although in so doing they might not violate the constitution of the United States, is a proposition as it seems to me placed beyond doubt, both upon reason and authority. Such a power is utterly inconsistent with the legitimate objects of government, one of which, and perhaps the most essential, is not to take away the property of its citizens, but to secure them in the peaceable enjoyment of it. It is often in argument assumed as an axiom, that the legislature cannot take the property of A, and bestow it upon B. It has been decided that such a proceeding would be void, even where the property taken was appropriated to public uses without compensation, as against the fundamental principles of all free government, even where there was no positive prohibition in the constitution of the state or of the United States, which forbade it. See Bradshaw vs. Rogers and Mayer, 20 J. R. 105, 106. Catolen and wife vs. Bull and wife, 3 Dallas, 387, 388. See also the protest of D. Dulany, 3 Har. and John. 309. 3d Story's Constitutional Law, 667.

The only question then that can be mooted in this case is whether the act of 1834 does destroy the vested right which Rogers had to the person and services of Maria Wright, under the laws as they existed before the passage of the act.

I assume that Rogers' right was a vested one, and this assumption cannot I think, be denied to me; for if a right which could be immediately and effectually enforced, (if invaded,) both in law and equity, be not a vested one, by what incidents and characteristics shall it be known and described ?

If then Rogers

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 G. & J. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-rogers-md-1837.