54 Ky. 499 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1854
delivered the opinion of the Court—
These five cases are brought by appeals from the proceedings of the County Court in binding out the appellants, free persons of color, of whom some are the children of Eliza Baker and others the children of Mary Baker, free women of color. It appears that a summons issued against each of the mothers to appear at the October term of the County Court, and show cause why her children should not be bound out, &c. That on their appearance, the county attorney moved the court to bind out the children, ten in number, to five persons whom he named; to which the mothers, by their counsel, objected, claiming the
Each of the ten children prosecutes an appeal for the reversal of these proceedings, all of which appear in the same record, and are in fact precisely similar, except that as to some of them, there was no change of masters. Five of the cases seem not to have been prepared for hearing by service of the summons on the appellees, the appeal having been taken out of court and after the term, and five alone, named at the head of this opinion, have been submitted for our decision.
The radical question presented by the record, is whether the mothers have a right to select the masters to whom their children are to be bound.
The 3d section of the 64th chapter of the Revised Statute, title master and apprentice, page 466, enacts that any orphan minor may be bound, &c., by his guardian, or if no guardian, by his mother, with the consent entered of record, of the County Court of the county where the minor resides. We think this section recognizes and secures a fight in the mother to bind out her child or children under the supervision of the County Court, provided merely to prevent the choice of an incompetent or unsuitable person to whom her children are to be bound. And although it may be inferred that the framers of this section had in contemplation white mothers and their children, the language is broad enough to embrace also free colored persons, and all cases in which there is no father by whom the right to dispose of the services of the children by hiring or by placing them under apprenticeship, may be exercised.
Such may be assumed to have been the fact in the cases now before us, in which, although there is no evidence that these children are orphans, there is no suggestion that their father or fathers are ascertainable in the manner required by the law, or that if living they have or can assert the legal rights belonging to that relation, whep its existence is recognized and sanctioned by the law. The fact that the mothers were summoned as the persons having the children in possession, precludes the supposition that they had husbands entitled to legal rights in that character. And if it be necessary, in order to secure to them the legal as well as the natural rights of mothers, that they should have had lawful husbands, by whose death their children have become orphans, these facts may be and should be presumed in favor of their natural right to the control and the services of their children, when in fact there is no father who can claim or exercise the legal right. But we do not suppose the statute intended to exclude from the right recognized in the 3d section, the mother of an illegitimate child, who, although by the common law he was regarded
As these proceedings were erroneous and illegal, and therefore presumably injurious to the children
As, for the reasons above stated, the orders and indentures in the five cases now before us must be reversed and annulled, it is not necessary to notice in detail all the errors which have been relied on. But we remark that as the number of children to be bound out to particular persons, and the periods for which they are to serve, are circumstances well calculated to excite a desire, as matter of profit, to have the rights secured to a master of an apprentice, the same circumstances should also excite the vigilance and precaution of the court in exercising the power entrusted to it, lest under the specious form of charity or of a public duty, mothers whose condition requires the services of their children who are capable of labor, should be deprived of them without necessity, and lest children who, from their tender age, require the care and nurture of their mothers, and are the objects of their affection and solicitude, should be
For the errors before noticed, the several orders for binding out the appellants are reversed and the proceedings under them annulled, and the cases are remanded for proceedings de novo, in conformity with this opinion, if it be deemed necessary to institute such proceedings.