23 Ga. 448 | Ga. | 1857
By the Court. —
delivering the opinion.
We concur in the clear and conclusive opinion of the able Judge who decided this case, namely: That the Colonization Society is incapable of taking or holding property for any purpose inconsistent with, and forbidden by, its charter..
By their constitution, the association's empowered to receive property by bequest or otherwise: and to use it or dispose of it at their discretion, “ for the purpose of colonizing, with their own consent, in Africa, the free people of color residing in the United States, and for no other purpose whatsoever.” Now, the will of Francis Gideon, under which the complainants sue, bequeaths to the Colonization Society, “ for the purpose of sending them to Liberia, in Africa, all his slaves, to-wit: &c.” The negroes, then, are given as slaves, and not as free persons of coior, to be sent, not with, but with or without their consent, to Liberia, in Africa. in~ ■deed, the testator could only give them as slaves. For, had their status been changed by the will, from slavery to freedom, before the gift attached, the will itself would have been void by thestatutes of 1801 and 1818. Cobb, 983, 989.
We repeat, then, that the unconditional right to them as slaves, could not be vested in the Society, under their Act of incorporation; neither could they take and hold them in trust, for a purpose not allowed by their charter; that is, to transport them, as slaves, to the colony in Africa, with or without their consent.
I need not cite cases to show that the powers of a corporation being limited, a trust beyond those powers cannot be executed by the corporation. fortiori, cannot this be done when, by the express terms of the charter, the corporation is “forbidden to take or use property for any other purpose whatsoever, other than that specified in the Act of incorporation.
A person, like a State, may do whatever is not prohibited. A corporation, like the confederation of this Union, can do only what is expressly allowed by its charter. It is a lamentable fact, however, that while this is true in point of theory,
It is argued, that conceding that the trust is not strictly within the provisions of the charter, yet, that the Society may carryout the purpose of the testator, without transcending the limits of its powers. That it may take slaves out of the State, manumit, and then colonize them in Africa. That the will, • by its own natural operation, ultimately constitutes these slaves a class that the Society is expressly permitted to colonize. That when these slaves are recovered and carried out of the State, the trust reposed in the Society is ipso facto oxoeuted to the extent of conferring freedom; and thus they become the free people of color contemplated by the charter. That the Court should only have considered the capacity of the trustee to receive property ; whether he would abuse the trust, or would execute it, were questions for the State of Maryland, which granted this charter, and not for the Courts of Georgia. That neither the heir, nor any private person, could contest the right of a corporation to take the property, and execute the trust; but that this right belongs alone to the State, in its sovereign capacity.
These are, in the main, the propositions upon which the plaintiff in error relies for a reversal of the judgment rendered in the Court below.
The disposition in the will is a bequest of all the slaves of the testator to the society, for the purpose of sending them to Africa. How do counsel arrive at the conclusion that so soon as these slaves cross the boundary of the State, they be
That these negroes were slaves in this State, cannot be ■questioned, talk as we may about their inchoate right to freedom. They were slaves before the will of Gideon was executed. They cannot be any thing else, here, afterwards. Any attempt made to change their condition here, by deed or will, would be nugatory. Being then, bondsmen here, do they become freemen when they cross the Savannah river ? Do they become so in any State, slave or free, in their transit to Africa ? Surely not. The Society itself, has no power, either by their charter, or by the will, to bestow freedom upon these slaves, in this or any other county, except Africa. It is doubtful whether by removing them toa free State, this trustee could, by operation of law, enable these slaves to acquire their freedom. No such power has been delegated to the Society to do this; and they would be acting in violation of their trust. And I am not prepared to admit that under such circumstances, the slaves would acquire a right to their freedom.
But suppose they could, what security is there that the trustee would do this ? But concede that this might and would be done; what certainty is there that the slaves would ■give their consent to go to Africa ? And being free, it is indisputable that they could not be transported and colonized against their will. At any rate, force could not be employed for this purpose by the American Colonization Society. The basis and apex of this institution, being one of persuasion, not of force. So then, it is plain that if the charter itself does not enable the Society to send these slaves against their wish, to Africa, there is no other way or means by which the intention of the testator can be effectuated, through this
The charter of the Society, then, only authorizing it to hold property, to colonize free persons of color, residing in the United States, by their own consent, and for no other purpose whatever, and this being a devise not to colonize free persons, but to send off slaves, that they might become free, our opinion is that the right set up' in this bill, is negatived by the express language of the charter. The law of Maryland is the law of this case; and must govern the extent of the Society’s right. We cannot give to it any greater power than by that law is given to it. The law of Maryland prohibits it. 8 Gill and Johns, 319. There is not only no power for the Society to take a bequest of slaves, to colonize them, but it is directly interdicted. The legacy is void, not merely for want of power in the corporation to take for such a purpose, but also because the charter forbids them from, holding for any purpose but that specified in it.
It need not be disputed that where a corporation has capacity to take and hold property for itself, it may hold as trustee, unless restrained, as in this case, to a particular trust, or unless it be restrained from holding as trustee at all. And this is the extent to which the authorities go. And if cases.
But we forbear to pursue this discussion further. The objections to any view of this case which has been presented, are manifold and insuperable. The truth is, the testator having mistaken the law as to the powers of the Colonization Society, to which he intrusted his slaves, the ingenuity and industry of learned counsel, have been taxed in vain to extricate the bequests of the will from the ^consequences of this misapprehension. In seeking to avoid 'Scylla they are engulphed in Charybdis. Incidit in Scyllam ubi vult vitare Charybdem.
But it is said that while it may be true that if the trust be repugnant to the declared purpose for which the corporation was created, that may furnish a good ground why the corporation cannot act, still the trust itself will not fail, if otherwise unexceptionable, on account of the incapacity of the trustee to act; and that it is only necessary for the proper Court to appoint a new trustee, in order to perfect the object of the trust, and Sonley vs. The Clockmaker’s Company, 1 Bro. Ch. Rep. 81, and other precedents in the books sustain this position.
Concede that this is a valid trust, the complainants having, as we have shown, no legal or equitable interest, cannot enforce its execution. And this is sufficient to defeat this bill. The only prayer in the bill is that the defendant, Gartrell, be decreed to deliver to complainants the slaves mentioned in said will, with their increase; and that he account for and
Whether any other party can maintain a bill, is not at present, therefore, the question. No point is made as to the substitution of another trustee by the pleadings. If the ■complainants cannot maintain the bill, and we are clear that they cannot, they must go out of Court, and the same rule applies to all the other bequests in the will, collateral to and dependent upon that which we have been considering.
The bequests to the Colonization Society being void on account of the incompetency of the legatee to take, we are not prepared to admit, that in this case, the trust, if indeed it be one, attempted to be created by Gideon, can be executed by another. The Colonization Society is unlimited as to duration. It is endowed with the attribute of perpetuity. Apart then from its means and facilities to superintend the removal and settlement of these slaves, and providing for them in their new home, no individual could be substituted in its place, and clothed with its functions. The testator may not have been willing to have placed his slaves in the power, custody or control of any other legatee than the very Society to which the trust was confided. We almost have the right to assume that it was the intention of the testator, that this particular trustee, and no other, should execute the trust; and we could be strongly inclined to hold that in as march as the Society is incapable of acting, that the trust must fail altogether.
That many trusts are valid if executed by the trustee that cannot be carried into effect compulsorily I have no doubt. So that the question here, is not merely as to the validity of the trust, so far as its objects and aims are concerned, but whether it is one which the slaves themselves, or any one in their behalf, can compel the administrator of Gideon or his heir at law, to execute? Where there is no trustee appointed or the appointment is void, and there is a valid trust, the heir or executor will be decreed to be a trustee. But does
In Knight, next friend, against Hardeman, et al., ex’rs, etc., 17 Ga. Reps., 253, this Court intimated a pretty strong opinion against the power of a Court of Equity, to grant compulsory relief in this case: they say that the jurisdiction of chancery is “exceedingly questionable under any circumstan
There is another and a highly important view to take of the main question involved in this case, and we approach it with a gravity commensurate with its magnitude. Is not the American Colonization Society outlawed as a suitor from the Courts of this State ?
One of the privileges of a British freeman and an American citizen is, to bring suits in the Courts of their respective countries, upon all lawful contracts under the Constitution of 'the United States, and the citizens of each State are entitled to this privilege in any other State. But a corporation is not a citizen, Bank of the United States vs. Devaux, 5 Cranch, 61, and consequently is not embraced within this provision.
Corporations are not persons, 12 Peters, 99, 100. Personal rights are original and unlimited, except by law ; corporate franchises are derivitive and specific.
The right of the corporations of one State to sue in another, is now too thoroughly incorporated into our system of jurisprudence, to be called in question. This right depends upon the comity of States or nations, which means generally the right to do all things which belong to the citizens proper, of each country, and which they are not precluded from do
Chief Justice Taney, in delivering the opinion of the Court, in the Bank of Augusta vs. Earle, 13 Peters Reports, 519, adopts with approbation the principle stated as above by Judge Stoiy, and proceeds to inquire whether by the Courts of nations, foreign corporations are permitted to make contracts, and to enforce them abroad, and he says “we can perceive no sufficient reason for excluding them, when they are not contrary to the known policy of the State or injurious to its interests.”
The only inquiry then, in the present instance is, is it repugnant to our State policy, and prejudicial to its interests, to allow the American Colonization Society, to sue in our Courts ? And let it be remembered, that it is not the comity of the Courts, but the comity of the State which is administered ; and ascertained in the same way, and guided by the same reasoning, by which all other principles of municipal laws are ascertained. See Story’s Conflict of Laws, Supra. Guided by this rule, it only remains to inquire, whether any, and if so, what has been the action of Georgians it respects this Societ]!".
' This society was organized with the approbation and under the patronage in part, of the wisest and best men in the South from Maryland to Louisiana, including the most distinguished and patriotic citizens that Georgia has ever called her sons. Hence in 1817, by an Act of the Legislature, the Governor of the State was directed to deliver to the Colonization Society, Africans illegally imported into the- State, and “ to aid in promoting the benevolent views of said society, in such manner as he may deem expedient.” (Cobb 989.)
I shall be pardoned a moment’s digression here. It has been suggested, that not only is the language of the Act of 1818, sufficiently broad to extend to extra territorial as well as domestic manumission; but that so applying it, and thus cutting off foreign emancipation, is the most effectual method of preventing the increase of free persons of color within this State, the great end for which the Act of 1818, was passed. For, say the advocates of this construction: send them out of the State, and give them their freedom and they may return; whereas, by refusing to free them altogether here, or anywhere else, and the mischief is extirpated entirely.
In the first place, I say it respectfully, but with confidence, that the words of the statute themselves, carefully examined,, negative the idea, that they do or can apply to manumission abroad. But suppose they would admit of this interpretation, would the Courts be justifiable in the face of the known meaning and intention of the Legislature, so to construe them ? And does not the action of the Legislature to which I have referred, which took place immediately before and after the Act of 1818, to say nothing of the history of the times and of cotemporaneous interpretation, show conclusively, that such a construction is doing manifest wrong and violence to the will and purpose of the Legislature ?
Mr. Devarris in his treatise upon statutes, (chapters ix. and x.) lays down as a lex legum, a universal maxim, that in all cases, the design and intent of the law-maker, when it can be indisputably ascertained, shall prevail. Referring to the state of public opinion in Georgia, in 1818, respecting foreign manumission as reflected in the light of the legislation which I have cited, will any one venture the assertion, that the Act of 1818, was intended to prohibit colonization in Africa ? That in so holding, he is giving a true exposition of the statute ? That such was its object ? That he is execur
The General Assembly speaking in behalf of the people of Georgia, say “they know and strongly feel the advantages of the Federal Union; as members of the Union, they are proud of its greatness; as children born under the Union, they will ever defend it from foes, internal as well as external ; but they cannot and will not, even in the preservation of that Union, permit their rights to be assailed ; they will not permit their property to be rendered worthless; they will not permit their Avives and their children to be driven as wanderers into strange lands; they Avill not permit their country to be made Avaste and desolate, by those who come among us under the cloak of a time-serving and hypocritical benevolence.”
At the first establishment of the colonization society, Avhatever may have been intended or avowed as its object, your committee believe that they can say with truth, that the general impression in the Southern States, as to that object, was, that it Avas limited to the removal beyond the United States, of the then free people of color and their descendants, and
Again, in 1828, the Legislature having under consideration a resolution from the State of Ohio, say: “These States must view with jealousy and distrust, all associations having for their object the abolition of slavery. The principles propagated by the enthusiastic devotees of this project are calculated to have the most pernicious effects; exciting false hopes of liberty; producing discontent and dissatisfaction in the mind of the otherwise happy and contented slave; and a restlessness for emancipation, when the actual state of things forbids the possibility of it at present. The Colonization Society is considered by your committee as one of a dangerous character in this respect. Its schemes of colonization are vain and visionary. Its professed objects never can be accomplished. They are wholly impracticable. This institution, therefore, should not, in the opinion of your committee, receive the support, countenance or patronage of Congress. And not being a matter of national interest, the goverment has no right to take it under its protection, or make appropriations for its support” Dawson’s Compilation, p. 116, qf the Resolutions.
Can there be a doubt but that the State of Georgia views the aims and objects of the American Colonization Society, in the language of Mr. Justice Story and Chief Justice Taney, as “contrary to the known policy and prejudicial to her interests?” If so, the comity of the State does not extend to such a corporation. Otherwise, where will you stop? Would a suit at the instance of the Emigrant Aid Society of Massachusetts or the numerous abolition societies in that and other northern States, be tolerated in our Courts ? Most assuredly not And yet our people have spoken out, through their Representatives, with equal clearness and emphatic disapprobation against the American Colonization Society, as against any other association.
Grant that their fears are groundless, and that no evils are
I was once, in common with the great body of my fellow citizens of the South, the friend and patron of this enterprise. I now regard it as a failure, if not something worse ; as I do every effort that has been made, for the abolition of negro slavery, at home or abroad. Liberia was formed of emancipated slaves, many of jthem partially trained and prepared for the change, and sent thousands of miles from all contact with the superior race; and given a home in a country where their ancestors were natives, and supposed to be suited to their physical condition. Arrived, there, they have been for a number of years in a state of pupilage to the Colonization Society, in order that they might learn “ to walk alone and by themselves.” And at the end of a half a century what do we see ? A few thousand thriftless, lazy semi-savages, dying of famine, because they will not work! To inculcate care and industry upon the descendants of Ham, is to preach to the idle winds. To be the “servant of servants” is the judicial curse pronounced upon their race. And this Divine decree is unreversible. It will run on parallel with time itself. And heaven and earth shall sooner pass away, than one jot or tittle of it shall abata Under the superior, race and no where else, do they attain to the highest degree of civilization; and any experiment, whether made in the British West India Islands, the coast of Africa, or elsewhere, will demons!ate that it is a vain thing for fanaticism, a false philanthropy, or anything else, to fight against the Almighty. His ways are higher than ours; and humble submission is
Judgment affirmed.