Tbe statute law applicable to tbe question presented, being tbe first part of sec. 2083, Revisal of 1905, is as follows: “Who Hay Not Marry. — All marriages between a white person and a negro or Indian or between a white person and a person of negro or Indian descent to tbe third generation inclusive . . . shall be void.” This or some enactment expressed in similar terms, has long been tbe statute law of our State governing questions of this character, and when before tbe Court tbe accepted construction with us, so far as examined, has always been that where all other persons whose race or blood affected tbe question were white, in order to bring a marriage within tbe prohibited degree, one of tbe ancestors of tbe generation stated must have been of pure negro blood. Thus in Hare’s case, 113 N. C., p. 10, on tbe right of an applicant to be admitted into tbe white schools, tbe statute providing separate schools for tbe two races, at that time defined tbe status of a rightful applicant in language exactly similar to this law as to marriage, it was held that tbe ancestor of tbe third generation whose blood should determine tbe issue must have been of pure negro blood. Associate Justice Avery, delivering tbe opinion, after stating that tbe question was controlled by sec. 1810, tbe Code of 1883, now tbe section of tbe Revisal above quoted, said further: “Tbe words used in sec. 1810 as to tbe third generation inclusive must therefore be construed to prohibit intermarriage of whites with persons who are not beyond tbe third generation or in tbe fourth generation from the pure negro ancestor.” Again in State v. Waters, 25 N. C., p. 455, where tbe validity of tbe marriage in question was affected by statutes *177since repealed, -which, established the fourth generation as the determinative period, the ancestor whose blood must decide the issue was referred to by Chief Justice Ruffin as a “full negro.” And so in State v. Chavers, 50 N. C., p. 11, involving the construction of a statute defining free negroes as “all free persons descended from negro ancestors to the fourth generation inclusive.” The Court, Battle, Judge, delivering the opinion, approved a charge, “That every person who had one-sixteenth negro blood in his veins was a full negro,” within the meaning of the statute, and said further, referring to the expression to the fourth generation inclusive, “That no person can cease to be a full negro unless he has reached the fifth generation from his African ancestor. A similar principle of construction has been established by authoritative decisions in other States where this matter is of vital importance. McPherson v. Commonwealth, 69 Va., p. 639; Linton v. State, 88 Ala., p. 217. And we find nothing which tends to the contrary except a very recent decision of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in Isabel Wall by her next friend Stephen Wall v. James Oyster, et al., a case which has not yet appeared in the official reports, and was kindly procured for us by the diligence of plaintiff’s counsel. That case involved the construction of a statute of Congress providing for separate white and colored schools in the district, and arose on application for mandamus to the board of education to enroll petitioner in a white school, the admission having been made that the petitioner had not less than one-sixteenth negro blood. The application was denied on the ground chiefly that as Congress had not undertaken by enactment to define “What race or what percentage or proportion of racial blood shall characterize an individual' as 'colored,’ the term, being without legislative definition, is left to the import ascribed to it in the common parlance of the people,” and applying this rule it was held that according to the principle there adopted the applicant must be considered a colored child within the meaning of the statute.” If this decision was in direct contravention of the principle obtaining here it would not justify the Court in departing from a line of precedents long recog*178nized as authoritative and controlling in this State, but it will be noted that the language of that statute is very general in its terms “white” and “colored” schools, and on that very account the common parlance of the people was allowed to prevail, and the case therefore presents a very different question from the one we consider in construing a statute which defines the status as “a person of negro or Indian blood to the third generation inclusive.”
In this connection an interesting compendium of the laws of the Southern States on this subject was furnished us by defendant’s counsel, showing that the four States of Alabama, Tennessee, Maryland and North Carolina make substantially the same provision with reference to these marriages, and that all of them have regulations on the subject in terms equally specific and definite. In view, then, of these decisions of our own courts, to which reference has been made, and the very definite language of our statute, we may not approve the position earnestly insisted upon by plaintiff’s counsel that the negro ancestor, whose blood must determine the issue, should be considered not a negro of pure African blood, but one who has his status as a negro ascertained and fixed by the recognition and general consensus of the community where his lot is cast. Such a position ignores the ordinary and usual acceptation of the words, “Of negro descent to the third generation inclusive,” is contrary, as stated, to a long line of authoritative precedents here, and is further objectionable in setting up a varying and uncertain standard by which to determine a most important legislative requirement in the civic and social polity of the commonwealth. We are confirmed in this view by the fact that this same enactment as to negroes long embodied in our statute law, and with this repeated and well-known construction by the Court, was afterwards transferred without any change whatever into the Constitution of the State and is now a part of our organic law. In Art. XIV, sec. 8, it is ordained “That all marriages between a white person and a negro or between a white person and a person of negro descent to the third generation inclusive are hereby forever prohibited.” The action of our, Constitutional Convention in thus adopting a public statute of accepted construction and on a subject of *179momentous interest and making tbe same, in its entirety and very words, a part of our organic law, while not necessarily conclusive, affords well-nigh convincing evidence that the words were intended to bear their established meaning, and on this subject should so prevail as the law of the land. Rhyne v. Lipscombe, 122 N. C., pp. 650, 654.
It may be well to note that since the decision of Haire v. Board of Education, supra, the legislation as to separate schools for the two races has been changed, and it is now provided, “That all white children shall be taught in the public schools' provided for the white race and all colored shall be taught in schools provided for the colored race, but no" child with negro blood in its veins, however remote' the strain, shall attend a school for the white race.” Public Laws 1903, ch. 435, sec. 22; Revisal 1905, sec. 4086. The language of our Constitution on this subject, Art. IX, sec. 2, is: “And the children of the white race and the children of the colored race shall be taught in separate public schools, but there shall be no discrimination in favor of or to the prejudice of either race.” It will be observed here that unlike the section controlling the question of marriage, the words used are of more general import and permit of legislative definition in fixing the status of the two races as in the ease of Wall v. Oyster et al., supra. It is well established that a party litigant has a substantial right in a verdict obtained in his favor, and where one has been rendered on issues which are determinative and is set aside as a matter of law, and such ruling is held to be erroneous, the appellate court will direct that judgment be entered on the verdict as rendered. Shives v. Cotton Mills, 151 N. C., pp. 290, 294; Abernethy v. Yount, 138 N. C., p. 337. Being of opinion that the original charge of his Honor correctly stated the law applicable to the case, we hold there was error in setting aside the verdict and this will be certified that judgment be entered thereon for defendant.
Eeversed.