10 La. Ann. 239 | La. | 1855
The heirs of M. 0. Hardesty seek to reduce Sulcey Wormley to slavery, and to deprive her of all her property, upon the alleged grounds that she was the public concubine of Hardesty, that her enfranchisement and the sale to her of her daughter and grandchildren, were disguised donations in fraud of his heirs, and in violation of the law; and that, being a slave, her acquisitions belonged to his heirs.
The above causes ■ involving these issues, were tried by a jury, who found verdicts in favor of Sukey, and a new trial was refused, the District Judge having declared his opinion that the verdicts were fully sustained bjr the law and the evidence. The heirs have appealed. .
A perusal of the evidence has satisfied us that a non-suit of the judgment would involve a monstrous injustice, and we are glad that no stringent rule of law intervenes to force us to such a conclusion.
The case is pressed on the ground of concubinage. The evidence admitted at the trial does not prove it; and the evidence of public repute, which was rejected, would not, perhaps, have convinced the mind of the existence of that fact, coupled as it was with the declaration of the two witnesses, that they had no knowledge on this subject except from rumor. But suppose there was concubinage, the woman would still be entitled to judgment.
As far back as 1834, Hardesty presented to the Police Jury of St. Tammany petitions in which he prayed leave to enfranchise Sukey and her child Adeline, declaring that when he bought them, Sulcey had advanced about half of the money,
Now, if all this be true, surely, even if concubinage were proved, there is nothing in the fact that the master had degraded himself by debauching the slave Under his dominion, which could discharge him in law from the fulfilment of his promise of emancipation — a lawful promise, which his obligation to the vendor bound him to fulfill, and which legally enured to the benefit of the slave, for whom the former owner, as the reward of her fidelity, had stipulated, and this at his own cost, by a reduction of price. See Gaudet v. Gourdain, 8 Annual, 137.
With regard to the subsequent conveyances to Sulcey, the circumstances justify the conclusion of the jury that they were honestly paid for by her.
This suit is a cruel experiment upon the liberty and hard earnings of an humble and deserving woman, and has been righteously discountenanced by the verdict of a jury of the vicinage with whom her character for industry, honesty and thrift had stood her in good stead'. We are satisfied the judgment below has done justice, and have no hesitation in affirming it.
Judgment affirmed with costs.