The conviction seems to be a hard one, and we (540) own we do not see enough in the evidence to support it. Up to Christmas, 1846, nothing appears to have been done at the defendant's house tending to the corruption of the public morality. At Christmas, 1845, there was a quilting, as it is called, and dancing by negroes in a negro quarter, accompanied by such noise as arises from a negro dance; and it happened that a daughter of the defendant was seen there, and that some of the negroes did not belong to the defendant; but why the daughter went there, or how long she stayed, or what she did, or how many strange negroes there were, or that they were unlawfully there, or that there was any drunkenness or drinking, or anything else improper, did not appear. At another time it is stated that negroes not belonging to the defendant were in his negro quarters, and that a very great noise was made. But it is not stated when that was, nor that those negroes were improperly there, nor that it was at an unseasonable hour, nor what was the nature or occasion of the noise. The case is, then, brought down to the affair of Christmas night, 1846; and the question is whether that constitutes the defendant the keeper of a disorderly house. According to S. v. Mathews, 19 N.C. 424, it does not, as far as the collecting of people and their drinking go; for it was there held that a private person, living half a mile from any other house and at a distance from a highway, was not guilty of keeping a disorderly house, though on two occasions he took in company for pay, who sat up all night, *Page 390 played cards, and got drunk and committed affrays. The criminality here, then, must consist, if in anything, in the assemblage of negroes and their dancing and thereby making a noise — for no other kind of noise or disorder is suggested — and in the mingling of the two colors together in the same house and dance, as stated by the witness Roberts. It would really be a source of regret if, contrary to common custom, it were to be denied (541) to slaves, in the intervals between their toils, to indulge in mirthful pastimes, or if it were unlawful for a master to permit them among his slaves, or to admit to the social enjoyment the slaves of others, by their consent. But it is clearly not so. The statute-law recognizes the usage, and only forbids under a penalty any person from permitting slaves to meet on his plantation to dance or drink, unless they have the written permission of the owner. When the law tolerates such merrymakings among these people, it must be expected, in the nature of things, that they will not enter into them with the quiet and composure which distinguish the gaieties of a refined society, but with somewhat of that hearty and boisterous gladsomeness and loud laughs which are usually displayed in rustic life, even where the peasantry are much in advance of our negroes in the power and habit of restraining the exhibition of a keen sense of such pleasures. One cannot well regard with severity the rude pranks of a laboring race, relaxing itself in frolic, though they may seem to some to be at times somewhat excessive. If slaves would do nothing tending more to the corruption of their morals or to the annoyance of the whites than seeking the exhilaration of their simple music and romping dances, they might be set down as an innocent and happy class. We may let them make the most of their idle hours, and may well make allowances for the noisy outpourings of glad hearts, which Providence bestows as a blessing on corporeal vigor united to a vacant mind. In the assemblage at the defendant's there seems to have been nothing more: no brawls, no profane swearing, nor other vicious disorder. It was but the dancing in a retired situation of the negroes of the plantation, to which the greater hilarity was probably imparted by the participation of a few others, who had been of the same family, and by the leave of their owners came, at the season of Christmas, to receive the (542) affections belonging to the ties of kindred and former association. There was nothing contrary to morals or law in all that — adding, as it did, to human enjoyment, without hurt to any one, unless it be that one feels aggrieved that these poor people should for a short space be happy at finding the authority of the master give place to his benignity, and at *Page 391 being freed from care and filled with gladness. Then, as to the ingredient, that the negroes were allowed to dance in their master's dwelling-house, and that some of the white people also joined in their dance. Taking the testimony for the State altogether, there is much question as to the truth of this last circumstance. But, supposing it to be so, we yet must say, though it be not according to the custom of this part of our country, that there is nothing in it forbidden by law — nothing that, of itself, can constitute a disorderly house. The presence of the family might be a safeguard against riotous conduct in the negroes, rather than authorize the inference that it contributed to create disorder; and it is very possible that the children of the family might in Christmas times, without the least impropriety, countenance the festivities of the old servants of the family by witnessing and even mingling in them. As far as appears, it was but harmless merriment, which, indeed, is the character given to it by the concurring testimony of all those who lived nearest to the defendant, and knew best the nature and periods of these merrymakings.
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo.
(543)