1 Ind. 368 | Ind. | 1849
This was an indictment for a riot against Joseph A. Graves, Elisha W. Coleman, and Hugh P. Long-more. The defendants pleaded not guilty, and upon the trial the issue was found for the state. Motions in arrest
The testimony and the instructions given by the Court to the jury are set out in a bill of exceptions. It appears that the alleged riot was occasioned by the proceedings of the defendants in arresting a negro as a fugitive slave, and who was claimed by Graves as his property. The arrest was made under the authority of a warrant issued by a justice of the peace. The noise and tumult which gave to the affair the characteristics of a riot, appear to have been occasioned by the interference of others with the view of preventing the defendants from forcibly taking the negro before the magistrate. The negro was finally taken before a justice of the peace, who discharged him, on motion, on the ground that the warrant for his arrest was insufficient.
The Court instructed the jury, substantially, that the statute of this state, providing that the person having a claim to the services of a fugitive from labor, due in another state and escaping into this state, may go before the clerk of a Circuit Court, and, upon proper affidavit, such clerk shall issue his warrant authorizing the arrest of such fugitive, and his conveyance before any justice of the peace or judge of the Circuit or Supreme Court, is not in contravention, either of the constitution of the United States or the laws, of congress made pursuant thereto, and is, therefore, constitutional and binding on all persons within the state; that, in this case, the only question for consideration was as to the legality of the arrest; that the warrant under which the defendants acted, being issued by a justice of the peace, was wholly void and afforded them no protection whatever; and that they had no right to proceed without such warrant as is provided for bj the statute of the state, unless they obtained forcible possession of the fugitive.
The third section of the act of congress, approved February 12th, 1793, reads as follows:
There has, no doubt, been much difference of opinion with regard to the constitutionality of the above act and upon questions arising from its conflict with state laws, passed, like that of our own state, with the view of prescribing the mode by which the provision of the constitution of the United States upon this subject shall be carried into effect. The disputed questions applicable to the present case, have, however, been formally decided by the Supremo Court of the United States, a tribunal having undoubted jurisdiction so to decide them in the last resort, and whose decisions we are, therefore, bound to receive as the supreme judicial exposition of the law by which proceedings in cases of this kind are regulated. The case of Prigg v. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 16 Peters’ R. 539, was an indictment against the plaintiff in error, for forcibly carrying away from the county of York, in Pennsylvania, to the state of Maryland, a negro wom'an,
The opinion of the Court was delivered by judge Story, and it was decided, inter alia
That the constitution of the United States secures to the owner of a fugitive slave, the same right to seize him in a state to which he has escaped or fled, that such owner had in the state from which such slave escaped;
That a claim to a fugitive slave is a controversy in a case “ arising under the constitution of the United States,” under the express delegation of judicial power given by that instrument, and that congress may call that power into authority, for the purpose of giving effect to the right, and to prescribe the mode and extent to which it shall be applied, and how, and under what circumstances the proceedings shall afford a complete protection and guaranty of the right;
That the provisions of the act of congress of the 12th of February, 1793, on the subject of fugitive slaves, covers that subject and points out all the modes of attaining the object in view, which congress had, as yet, deemed expedient and proper; and that the legislation of congress, if constitutional, must supercede all state legislation, on the same subject, and, by necessary implication, prohibit it;
• That the power of legislation, in relation to fugitives from labor is exclusively in the national legislature; and
That the act of the 12th of February, 1793, relative to fugitive slaves, is clearly constitutional in all its leading provisions, and, indeed, with the exception of that part which confers authority on state magistrates, is free from reasonable doubt or difficulty; and as to the authority so conferred on state magistrates, while a difference of opinion existed in different states as to whether state magistrates were bound to act under it, no doubt was entertained by the Court that state magistrates might, if they chose, exercise such authority, unless prohibited by state legislation.
In the later case of Jones v. Vanzandt, 5 Howard, 215, which originated in the state of Ohio, it was urgently contended that, as to states formed out of the territory northwest of the Ohio river, the act of congress of February 12th, 1793, was invalidated by the ordinance of 1787; but it was held that the act was not repugnant to the ordinance, and its constitutionality was again affirmed.
As the instructions given by the Circuit Court in the present case are clearly at variance with the doctrines thus established, and which, while remaining unreversed we are bound to recognize as the supreme law of the land, we cannot do otherwise than pronounce the instructions erroneous.
The judgment is reversed. Cause remanded for a new trial.