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State v. Samuel

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1836
19 N.C. 177 (N.C. 1836)

Opinion

(December Term, 1836.)

The marriage of slaves in this state, consisting of cohabitation merely, by the permission of their owners, does not constitute the relation of husband and wife, so as to attach to them the privileges and disabilities, incident to that relation by the common law. Hence, it was held, that a slave who was the wife of another slave, might give evidence against him, even in a capital case.

But if the wife of a slave were incompetent to give evidence against him during their cohabitation as man and wife, yet she would undoubtedly be admissible after they had separated, and she had become the wife of another slave.

An indictment for the murder of a slave may conclude at the common law.

THIS was an indictment for MURDER, tried at Caswell on the last Circuit, before his Honor Judge SETTLE.

W. A. Graham, for the prisoner.

The Attorney-General, for the state.


In proving the case for the state, the solicitor called as a witness, a slave named Mima, who was the only person that saw the rencounter in which the murder was alleged to have been committed. The prisoner's counsel objected to the competency of the witness, upon the ground that she was the wife of the prisoner; and to sustain this objection, A. M. Lea, the owner of the witness, was introduced, who testified that the prisoner and witness Mima, had cohabited as man and wife for about ten years successively, and had five children; that in the month of August last, he heard a quarrel between the prisoner and Mima, when the prisoner took a bundle of clothes, which he was about to carry off, saying, he intended to part with his wife. Lea compelled the prisoner to leave the clothes, and told him to bring an order from his master if he wished to take them away. In the course of a fortnight, the prisoner returned with an order from his owner, procured the clothes, and was commanded by Lea not to return. Soon afterwards the deceased applied to Lea for permission to take Mima as his wife, and upon being told that he might do so, he took her as a wife accordingly. His Honor overruled the objection to the competency of the witness Mima, and the prisoner was convicted. A new trial was moved for and refused; upon which a motion in arrest of judgment was submitted, because the indictment concluded at common law; but this being also overruled, and judgment of death pronounced, the prisoner appealed.


— The question of evidence made in this case, is not without difficulty; but, after the best reflection the court could bestow on it, that difficulty seems to arise rather from moral considerations than to be founded on legal principles. As far as our experience extends, or our researches into the adjudications of our sister states enable us to discover, the question is entirely new. The objection to the competency of the witness is, that she is the wife of the prisoner, and cannot be compelled or allowed to give evidence against him. The novelty of the attempt to apply this rule of the law of evidence, to this relation between slaves, is, perhaps, a sufficient reason for not yielding to it. The inclination of the courts now, is, to hear every person, who is not clearly excluded by a positive rule precisely embracing the witness offered; and thus leave the weight and effect to the jury. It might, therefore, be enough for us to say, that, although the occasion must have often been presented to them, it has never been decided by our predecessors, that the marriage of slaves, such as existed in this case, and such as usually exist in this state, consisting of cohabitation merely, by the permission of the owners, constitutes the relation of husband and wife, so as to attach to them the privileges and disabilities incident to that relation by the common law. But the court is furthermore satisfied that, upon principle, it could not be thus decided.

The disqualification of husband and wife, to testify for or against each other, is merely of civil institution, upon reasons of general policy. That policy has regard in the common law of England, chiefly to the peace of families, by avoiding all causes of dissension between those who, according to that law, are indissolubly joined together. No code could justly, by one of its edicts, pronounce that an union between two persons once formed, should by no means be served, and yet, by another of its edicts, coerce them to acts necessarily productive of dissensions, that would deprive their union of all cordiality, separate them in feeling, and make their connexion intolerable. This privilege, accorded by the law, seems manifestly, therefore, to owe its origin to the duration of the legal obligation of the contract of marriage. It cannot be yielded to any persons but such as have entered into that contract, in that rightful and formal method which is recognized in law as binding the parties throughout life, absolutely, and independent of the continuing inclinations of one or both of them, or the continuing license of any third person. Hence a marriage de facto will not, but only a marriage de jure, will exclude one of the parties from giving evidence for or against the other. There have, indeed, been decisions at nisi prius, in which persons not actually married, have not been allowed to give evidence for each other, because in the very transaction under investigation, they had held themselves out as man and wife. But it has never been doubted, that one was a competent witness against the other, unless a legal marriage existed; and it now seems to be finally and properly settled, that in every case, whether the witness be called by the one side or the other, the test, and the only test of competency is this: are they in fact and in law husband and wife? The rule is thus stated in Starkie's Treaties, 2nd part, 403, and may be received as authority, because the passage has the express sanction of Ch. Justice BEST, and the other judges of the Court of Common Pleas in Bathews v. Galindo, 4 Bing. 610; (15 E. C. Law R. 88;) in which after a long cohabitation as man and wife, and the birth of children, the woman was received as a witness for the man. There can be no other rule, with certainty enough to entitle it to the name. For at what period of an illicit cohabitation shall the incompetency begin? Or how long after the cohabitation terminates, before the competency shall be restored?

It being thus the common law of England, that no length of cohabitation, and no recognition by the parties merely, of each other as man and wife, invests them, for this purpose, with that character; it is next to be considered whether a like cohabitation between slaves, constitutes, in this state, a marriage, or rather such a marriage as produces incompetency to give evidence. It has been argued at the bar, that it does; because our laws have not prescribed any ceremony or formality for the celebration of marriages among persons of any colour or degree; and because slaves are human beings, with passions and senses impelling them to this union, and with a natural capacity to contract it, which no municipal regulation can annul, or at least, which no regulation in this state professes to annul. It has been urged that the essence of this, as of other contracts, consists in the consent of the parties; which if expressed before any witnesses, in any words, or by any acts, fully denoting present consent, renders the contract obligatory by the law of nature and of reason; and it was thence inferred, that it is necessarily binding in our law, in the absence of positive provisions to the contrary.

If every position in this chain of reasoning were true, it would not follow that to such a marriage contracted in this state, the effect is to be given of excluding the parties as witnesses. But the court is entirely satisfied, that some of those positions are not correct. We do not agree that persons sui juris are legally married merely in virtue of their own consent, however explicitly expressed, in terms of immediate agreement, unless it be so expressed in presence of those persons who are designated by law to be witnesses thereto. It is unnecessary to state at large the reasons on which our opinion on this point rests; because no person can reflect on the subject without perceiving that such should be the law, nor read our statutes without likewise perceiving that such is intended by the legislature to be the law. The rule of the common, or rather the canon law, respecting marriages de facto, contracted in verbis de presenti, might well be adopted at a time, and in a country, in which an ecclesiastical establishment was a compotent part of the government, with authority, by imposing temporal penalties, and pronouncing spiritual denunciations, to compel the celebration of such a marriage in facie ecclesiae, as a specific and formal execution of a contract, partly performed and binding on conscience, though not complete in law. And if one of the parties should happen to die before this duty to the other, to their issue, and to the community could be exacted, the law might in such a case, properly enough, engraft on the general rule, an exception in favour of the validity of such a contract of marriage, not duly celebrated, but continuing de facto until death parted those who had contracted. When, however, this function of the spiritual judge was abrogated in England, there arose an exigent necessity that some other fixed mode should be established by which marriage should be publicly celebrated, and some solemn memorial thereof preserved. While as to other contracts, security is provided in various ceremonies and solemnities, a well regulated state could not leave that of marriage — the most important of all, in reference to the happiness of the parties and their issue, and to the right of succession to estates — to be established or denied upon the loose testimony of perhaps a single witness, speaking entirely from memory, of the words of the parties. In this state there never was a jurisdiction similar to that of the spiritual courts in England; and it is plain from the earliest period of our legislation, that in consequence thereof, it has been constantly required as an essential requisite of a legal marriage, that it should either be celebrated by some persons in a sacred office, or be entered into before some one in a public station and judicial trust. The very first chapter found in our oldest statute book, 1715, c. 1, contains such provisions on this subject, as one of vital importance to the prosperity of the young colony. From the terms of that act, and of those subsequently passed in 1741 and 1778, and the constant usage ever since, the court considers this to be clearly the law in this state.

If that be the law of marriage between free persons, upon what principle or pretext can a marriage between slaves, not thus contracted, be sustained as a marriage de jure? How can that be deemed to any purpose a legal marriage, which does not, in any respect, conform to the only legal regulations upon the subject of marriage? If it be said, that the statutes relate only to the cases of free persons, and therefore do not require the marriages of slaves to be thus celebrated; the reply is obvious, that the marriage of slaves, then, is wholly pretermitted, and hence a legal marriage cannot be contracted between them. Such, indeed, may unfortunately be the law; and may have been intended by the legislature to be the law, upon the general ground of the incapacity of a slave to enter into this, as into other contracts, upon the presumption of the want of free consent, and upon the further ground of the difficulty of giving legal validity to the marriage, in respect to its most important legal incidents, without essentially curtailing the rights and powers of the masters. If it be so, it may be a fit subject for legislative interposition, to avert this melancholy addition to the misfortunes and legal disabilities of this depressed race. The subject is too full of perplexities, to authorize the court to express an opinion upon that point, without duly considering it in a case in which it shall directly arise. Assuming for the occasion, therefore, that marriage is an exception from the principle on which their contracts generally are deemed null, and that in law they may marry, yet, in the absence of particular regulations for the marriages of slaves, to give validity to a marriage contracted by them, it must be such a marriage, as, by the general law, is valid. It is not the province of a court to pronounce a contract binding, and annex to it all the consequences of another contract, to which those incidents are legally attached, only when it is attended with certain ceremonies, unless the particular contract have also those formalities. The rule, to dispense with them in particular cases, must be laid down by the makers of the law, and cannot be interpolated by its expounders. It cannot be judicially determined, that a wife by cohabitation, shall not give evidence against the man with whom she lives, more than that the other marital rights shall be accorded to them; nor, more than we can pronounce, that a man has incurred the guilt of bigamy, by cohabiting with one woman, under the name of his wife, after abandoning, or being forcibly separated from another, with whom he had once lived on the like terms. Unless the one consequence would follow, the other cannot; and the court is not prepared, without a mandate from a higher authority than our own, to apply to this class of our population a rule, which would in innumerable instances, either subject them to legal criminality of a high grade, or deprive them almost entirely of their greatest solace — that of having families of their own, frail as may be the right, and temporary the enjoyment, dependent, as they are, upon the caprice of the parties themselves, and yet more upon the necessities or caprice of their owners. The opinion of the court therefore is, that the witness was never, in law, the wife of the prisoner.

This conclusion is in no degree shaken by the incidental notices of this connection between slaves, which is found in some of our statutes. In the act of 1729, ( Rev. c. 19,) for instance, which provides against hunting by slaves, their travelling by night, and collecting in quarters among other persons' negroes, the ninth section, by way of proviso to those enactments, declares, that nothing in that act shall be construed to hinder neighbours' negroes intermarrying together, license being first had of their several masters. This does not profess to say what shall constitute their marriage, nor what consequence such a marriage shall draw after it. All those subjects are left to the general law. It is manifest too, from the manner in which the proviso comes in, that the object was merely to exempt from punishment particular slaves that might be found on another plantation, under the circumstances mentioned. Thus viewed, and in reference to the general law of marriage, and also to the known usages and modes of forming this connection between slaves, this proviso can mean only that concubinage, which is voluntary on the part of the slaves, and permissive on that of the master — which, in reality, is the relation, to which these people have ever been practically restricted, and with which alone, perhaps, their condition is compatible.

It may, however, be here observed, that the witness in this case was clearly competent, upon the same course of argument, on which her incompetency was urged; for if the contract of marriage between those persons be valid, upon the ground of their agreement simply, by force of natural law, and independent of municipal regulation, it follows that its obligation and duration may and must be limited by the same means; namely, by the terms of the agreement originally made, and that it may be rescinded by a new agreement. The authority of the Divine law, as to what this agreement ought to be, or the duties which, under its influence, the conscience of the parties may prompt from one to the other, are subjects with which civil tribunals cannot deal, without the aid of municipal law. As an agreement between the parties, its extent depends upon the terms of the agreement itself, and its continued existence. In this case, there is no evidence that the cohabitation commenced upon any agreement — that it was to continue longer than it should be mutually satisfactory to the parties; and if there had been, it is clear that it had been dissolved by a change of inclination on each side, which had ended in an agreement to separate, and in actual separation. Indeed, the witness had become the wife of another man, in the same sense in which she had been that of the prisoner; and is, therefore, either a competent witness, or guilty of bigamy. It is not difficult to determine between those alternatives.

A motion was also made in arrest of judgment, because the indictment concludes at common law. Whatever doubts formerly existed on that point, none have been entertained since the declaratory act of 1817, ( Rev. c. 949,) and Reed's case, 2 Hawks, 454. The very candid and discreet judge who dissented in that case, either altered his opinion, or gave it up to the authority of that adjudication. In the subsequent term, he united in the judgment in The State v. Hale, 2 Hawks, 582, that an assault upon a slave, by a stranger, was an offence at common law; a judgment concurred in several times since by this court, and sanctioned by the whole country.

The Court is therefore of opinion that there is no error in the record, and directs that it be thus certified to the Superior Court of Caswell, that the judgment may be executed according to law.

PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

State v. Samuel

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1836
19 N.C. 177 (N.C. 1836)
Case details for

State v. Samuel

Case Details

Full title:THE STATE v . SAMUEL, a Slave

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1836

Citations

19 N.C. 177 (N.C. 1836)

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