69 Ala. 281 | Ala. | 1881
This was an application by the appellee to the court of probate, for au assignment to her as widow of G-us Washington, deceased, of dower in the'lands of which he died seized and possessed. The contention in the court of probate, was confined to the single fact of marriage between the appellee and the decedent. The cause was submitted to, and heard by the judge of the court of probate without the intervention of a jury. The findings of fact by the judge are specially stated in the judgment rendered as follows: “Edie, the said petitioner, under a certain form, was, while both were in a state of slavery, married to the said Gus Washington, in the year 1817, and thereafter, and during the time they continued in a state of slavery they lived together after the custom of slaves, as man and wife; that they continued to live in the same way and manner up to the 29th day of September, 1865, and for several months thereafter, to-wit: some time in the fall of 1866. That petitioner had by said Gus several children and one born dead after the abolition of slavery. In the fall of the
It is certainly true, that while slavery existed, one of the disabilities to which it necessarily subjected the slave, was an incapacity to form the legal relation of husband and wife. That relation then depended, and now depends upon contract, — -a contract formed by the mutual and concurring assent of the parties to it, involving mutual obligations and duties. The slave was incapable of contracting, of yielding the assent, of incurring -the obligation’s, and performing the duties, because of’ the paramount rights of the master to which his will and ability were subordinated. In Malinda v. Gardner, 24 Ala. 719, this court, speaking of marriage as between slaves, said: “ Persons in that condition are incapable of contracting marriage, because-that relation brings with it certain duties and rights with reference to which it is supposed to be entered into. But the duties and rights which are deemed essential to this contract are-necessarily incompatible with the nature of slavery, as the one-can not be discharged, nor the other recognized without doing violence to the rights of the owner. In other words, the subjects of the contract must cease to be slaves before the incidents-inseparable to the relation of marriage, in its proper sense, can. attach.” All this, it must be observed, refers to the relation of husband and wife, as established by, and the obligations and
When slavery was abolished — when the slave was emancipated from bondage and subordination to the master, the mass of adult freedmen and freedwómen were living as, and their children were born of the relation of, husband and wife, which they had formed while slaves. Whether, if after emancipation they had continued to live together as man and wife, contemplating and' intending a continuance of the relation they had formed, they would not have been deemed married, and all the incidents, rights and duties the law attaches to marriage would not have flowed from their consensual cohabitation; founded upon a union not wanting in any element of paorality, is not a question in this case, and can scarely become here a practical question.
In this State, the constitutional convention of 1865 (R. C. of 1867, p. 53), on the 22d September, adopted an ordinance in recognition of the fact that the events and results of the war had destroyed slavery; and declaring that thereafter-, in this State, there should not be “ slavery nor involuntary servitude, otherwise than as a punishment for crime.” A similar provision was introduced into the constitution then formed, and has been introduced into the subsequent constitutions. From the adoption of that ordinance slavery ceased to have a legal existence in this State. A definition of the legal status of the population emancipated from slavery, living together as husband and wife, was a necessity. On the 29th September, 1865, the convention adopted an ordinance (R. O. 1867, p. 64), providing that “ all marriages between freedmen and freedwomen, whether in a state of slavery or since their emancipation, heretofore solemnized by any one acting or officiating as a minister, or any one claiming to exercise the right to solemnize the rites of matrimony, whether bond or free, are hereby ratified and made
In its practical operation, the ordinance accomplished but little more than an. application of the principle of the common law touching the marriage of persons before reaching the age of consent, and the marriage of lunatics. - The marriage of an infant before reaching the age of consent is inchoate ana imperfect, and when the age of consent is reached, the marriage may be disaffirmed without divorce or judicial sentence. But if, on reaching the age of consent, the marriage is affirmed by a continuance of the relation, it is valid and incapable of dissolution by the voluntary act of the parties. — 1 Black. 436; Beggs v. State, 55 Ala. 108. And if while one of the parties is insane, marriage is entered in.to, and after a lucid interval, after a restoration to reason, Avliile there is capacity to consent, cohabitation is continued, it cures the infirmity of the contract, and the marriage becomes valijl. — 1 Bish. Mar. and Div. § 140. Mr. Bishop is of opinion these principles are applicable, after emancipation, to the marriage/formed by slaves. — 1 Bish. Mar. and Div. §§ 154-163. Ting view prevails in Louisiana (Girod v. Lewis, 6 Mart. La. 559; Pierre v. Fontenette, 25 La. Ann. 617); in Tennessee (McReynolds v. State, 5 Cald. 18); and in Missouri (Johnson v. Johnson, 45 Mo. 595). The reasons supporting it are thus expressed by Matthews, J., in Girod v. Lewis, supra: “ Emancipajtion gives to the slave his civil rights; and a contract of marriage, legal and valid by the consent of the master and morali assent of the slave, from the moment of freedom,
The ordinance of the convention had no reference to, and no effect upon mere illicit intercourse, not intended or recognized by the parties as marriage. It was. not designed to sanctify such intercourse, immoral and vicious in its origin and continu•ance. Under its operation, the relation existing between the decedent and Martha, however notorious or long continued, could not have ripened into marriage. A.s is said by the Supreme Court of Mississippi, it is not the cohabiting lihe mem cmd wife, the ordinance legalizes, but the cohabiting ecs mem cmd wife, and in mutual recognition of the relation. — Rundle v. Pegram, 49 Miss. 751.
We find no error in the decree of the court of probate, and it is affirmed.