delivered the opinion of the Court.
This bill wаs brought for the recovery of a number of slaves. The only question necessary to be considered is in respect to the application of the statute of limitations. The Chancellor decreed for the complainants, and the case is brought to this Cоurt by appeal.
The facts are these: On the Bd of February, 1831, William Gillum, the maternal grandfather of the complainants, executеd the following deed of gift: “ Know all men by these presents, that I, William Gillum, of the county of Hanover,” (State of Virginia,) “hath this day given to my daughter Jane R. Seay’s children one negro
Jane R. Seay, the daughter of Gillum, and mother of the complainants, was at the time of the аbove gift a married woman, wife of William H. Seay. The slave Dinah was delivered into the possession of Seay and wife, together with the deed of gift. Shortly after the gift, Seay and wife removed to Tennessee, and brought with them the girl Dinah, then some thirteen years of age. And on the 2d of June, 1832, Seay and wife, by a joint bill of sale in the usual form, conveyed- the slave Dinah to the defendants’ intestate, William Jackson, for the consideration of four hundred dollars. The deed of gift for the slave, from Gillum to the complainants, had not been provеd or registered, either in Yirginia or Tennessee; but the proof establishes that Jackson had full notice of its existence at the timе of his purchase, and full knowledge of its provisions.
At the date of said deed of gift, Seay and wife had five children living, the eldest of whom was then about twelve, and the youngest two years of age: three’ other children were born afterwards. And all of said children are complainants in the present bill.
This bill was filed on the 9th of Eebruary, 1852, more than twenty-one years after the execution of the deed of gift.
In the intеrval between the gift and the filing of this bill, the slave Dinah gave birth to six children, who, together with Dinah, are sought to be recovered by the bill.
It is conceded that the five children of Jane R. Seay
Upon these facts, it is admitted in the argument that, upon the construction of the statute adopted in Shute vs. Wade,
The argument in support of this position is ingenious: it distinguishes between the condition of the mother and her issue. The child, it is said, is, in law and in fact, a separate, distinct, individual being; that, as such, it is capable оf a separate dominion, property, and possession, and the title and possession may be transferred in any of the various modes provided for the transfer of other personal chattels. That it is a thing, in and of itself, susceptible of an exclusive and аdverse ownership and
This reasoning, however plausible, is contrary to the course of professional and judicial opinion in this State. By our law, the issue of a female slave follows the condition of the mother. The children are part of the mothеr, and, potentially, exist in her before they have a being. The ownership of the mother carries with it the property in the children born of her during the period of such ownership. The mother and her issue are treated, in respect of the title and rights of the owner, as an aggregate property. Whatever affects the rights or remedies of the owner as respects the mother, equally affects his rights and rеmedies in respect to her issue.
It is certainly true, in law as in fact, that this unity
The argument for the defendants rests mainly, as we suppose, upon а mistaken assumption, namely, that a separate right of action accrues to the owner for the recovery of each child at the moment of its birth. If the mother and her issue, as has been already assumed, constitute an aggregate mass, then the cаuse of action is entire; and being so, it cannot, upon principle, be split into several actions. The consequence would рerhaps be, that, if a part were recovered in a separate action, the judgment would be a bar to another action for that part of the property not sued for: in the first action.
Decree affirmed.
