19 Mo. 225 | Mo. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the eourt.
The defendants were indicted at the September term, 1852, of the Circuit Court of Franklin county, for dealing with a slave. The indictment charges that the defendants on, &c., at the county of Franklin, without the consent in writing of the master, owner or overseer, did then and there deal with a slave, to-wit, with Anderson, a negro man, belonging to Samuel Wilkinson, in this, in hiring said slave to maul rails, and did then and there pay said slave one dollar and eighty cents for said mauling of said rails, and without the consent in writing of the master, owner or overseer of said slave first had and obtained, contrary, &c. The indictment was, on the motion of the defendants, quashed, and the State brings the case here.
In the opinion of this court, the indictment was properly quashed by the court below. “ The mauling of rails” charged therein, is not the commodity contemplated by the legislature, nor is it embraced by the statute.
The statute was obviously designed to prevent slaves from
The legislature supposed, by prohibiting the dealing with slaves' for any commodity, it would lessen the inducement to them for running about, leaving their master’s premises, as well as to take away the temptation to pilfer, in order to carry on such traffic.
Nor is the mauling of rails such a dealing as is contemplated. So the indictment is defective. The judgment is therefore affirmed,