44 N.C. 60 | N.C. | 1852
(61) "On motion, in open court, by George Davis, Esq., to emancipate Sam, a Negro man, formerly the property of Thomas Hogg Hooper, Esq., deceased, and a mulatto woman, the property of Elkanah Allen, by the name of Clary; and it being stated to the court that the said slaves have rendered meritorious service to their owners, the said court do therefore order and direct, that the said slaves be emancipated and set free, agreeable to the act of Assembly in such case made and provided; Sam, by the name of Sam Hooper, and Clary, by the name of Clary Beel. And it is further ordered by the court, that upon sufficient security being given agreeable to law, to keep the said persons, Sam and Clary, from becoming an encumbrance upon any county in the State, that the clerk issue a certificate of their emancipation," etc.
The plaintiff also produced on the trial a certified copy of a bond executed by Elkanah Allen and John G. Scull, of record in Brunswick Court, dated 25 April, 1809, and conditioned, "that whereas, the above bounden Elkanah Allen did, on 26 July, present to the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, then sitting, in and for the county of Brunswick aforesaid, a petition praying that Clary, a negro slave therein named — to wit: Clary Beel, should be emancipated and set free, under the name of Clara Beel," etc.; that the said "Elkanah Allen shall well and truly, notwithstanding the emancipation of said slave, Clary, keep her from ever hereafter being chargeable to the county," etc.
It was admitted that Clary, named in the foregoing record, was the property of the said Elkanah Allen named therein, up to the time of her alleged emancipation, and that the plaintiff is a daughter of said Clary. Evidence was offered by the plaintiff showing that the said Clary, from the time of her alleged emancipation to the time of her death, acted as a free person, and was so regarded by the community; and that the plaintiff, the daughter of said Clary, also acted and was reputed to be a free person, until some five or six years prior to the commencement of this suit, when she was seized by the defendant, the grandson of Elkanah Allen, named in the record. The plaintiff then offered to prove that she was born subsequent to the alleged emancipation of her mother, and counter evidence was offered by the defendant as to this fact. His Honor being of opinion that the record exhibited did not show a valid (62) act of emancipation, on this intimation, the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit, and prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was granted. The only question presented in the bill of exceptions is, whether his Honor was correct in expressing the opinion, after the other proof had been given, that the record of the County Court of Brunswick, at its July sessions, 1808, did not show a valid act of emancipation for Clary, the mother of the plaintiff.
It is not denied by the defendant's counsel, that by the law as it then stood, the application to the court, by the owner for license to liberate his slave, might have been made orally as well as by a petition in writing;Sampson v. Burgwyn,
We admit that no person, nor the Legislature even, can set a slave free without the consent of his owner; Allen v. Peden,
The judgment of nonsuit must be set aside, and a venire de novo ordered.
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed, and venire de novo.
Cited: Jarman v. Humphrey,
(64)