Redmond v. Murray

Ewing, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit for the specific execution of an alleged contract entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant Osborn, whereby the plaintiff was to be liberated upon the payment by him to Osborn, his then master, of a specified sum of money. The petition sets out the agreement, and avers the payment of the larger part of the stipulated sum and a tender of the balance with interest; that, after the *573payment of this sum, Osborn, in violation of this agreement, sold plaintiff to one Wigginton, who sold liim to the defendant, Murray, as his slave; that in consideration of said agreement his then master, as plaintiff supposed, gave him his freedom for some two years and a half; and during that time he was free to go wherever he desired. He avers his readiness to pay the balance, and asks judgment for his freedom. The case is here on a demurrer to the petition.

There is no principle on which a court of equity could enforce a contract of this nature, which is not in conflict with the policy of our emancipation laws, and repugnant to the relation of master and slave, as it is recognized and protected by our legislature on the subject. The right claimed implies a legal capacity in the slave wholly incompatible with his status under our laws and the acknowledged rights of the master under that relation. The incapacities of his condition, as it respects any right to contract, to acquire and hold property, to be a suitor in our courts, and others of a like nature, suggest, at the threshhold of the inquiry, insuperable obstacles to the specific enforcement of an executory contract between the master and himself looking to his future manumission, even where there might be a complete fulfilment on the part of the slave.

Provision is made whereby a negro may institute proceedings to establish his right to freedom when unlawfully detained in bondage, but it applies only to such as are entitled to freedom; and no action lies to enforce an executory contract by which a mere promise of liberation is given to the slave.

It is unnecessary to consider how far, if at all, the mere a'ct of entering into a contract with a slave recognizes his power or capacity; or whether it would imply any renunciation of the master’s dominion over him; for the power of the master himself is restricted by statute by certain prescribed forms by which such dominion can only be effectually renounced and his slave raised to the status of a freeman. The restrictions thus imposed are emancipation; and the *574conditions on which the master’s privilege in this respect may be exercised when viewed as a part of our legislative policy on the subject, can scarcely be reconciled with the right of the master to emancipate his slave in any other than the statutory mode — namely, by last will, or by an instrument of writing under seal. That any other is impliedly interdicted, we think, is manifest from a consideration of the several provisions of the emancipation act, and is the only view that would seem to be in harmony with the various legislative acts intended, it would appear, to guard more effectually the relation of master and slave, while it exists, and which also concern the condition of the negro himself after he passes from the hand of his master into a state of freedom. Such is the exposition given by their own courts of the laws of other states similar to ours. (Dunlap v. Archer, 7 Dana, 31; 8 B. Monr. 551; 2 Harr. & Jo. 176 ; Weeks v. Cheer, 4 Harr. & Jo. 543.) In the case last cited there was a petition to the chancellor to decree the recording of a deed of emancipation, which, by reason of the death of the master of the petitioner, had not been recorded within the time required for the recording of certain kinds of instruments. The court say the statute was not designed to give relief in cases which were before without remedy, by enabling a party acquiring equitable rights, under a deed not operative in law for want of recording, to perfect these rights by applying to the chancellor to order the original instrument to be recorded; but it was intended to give an accumulative remedy to persons able to contract, and who by deed acquire rights which equity will protect with the power to protect these rights. “ But,” he proceeds, “ by the laws of this state a negro, so long as he is a slave, can have no rights adverse to those of his master; he can neither sue nor be sued, nor can he make any contract or acquire any rights under a deed which a court of law or equity can enforce; and as it is the recording of the deed of manumission within the time prescribed by law which entitles him to his freedom, he continues a slave until it is so recorded, and conse*575quently can not go .either into a court of law or equity for relief of any kind.”

A court of equity can not enforce a promise by a master that he will emancipate his slave after a certain condition is performed,' which condition has been complied with by the slave; as where, upon the purchase of the slave at an executor’s sale, he is promised his freedom on the payment of his purchase money to his master. The jurisdiction of equity only extends to cases where the pauper has a legal right to free- • dom, but there is some impediment to the assertion of that right in a court of law. (Sawney v. Carter, 6 Rand. 174.)

Manumission is a mere gratuity under our laws, and a mere intention or promise by the master, not consummated in the manner pointed out by law, however solemn the form, in which such promise may be made, can confer no power or capacity on the slave to have it enforced ; it endows him with none of the attributes of a freeman; his condition or status is not in the least changed or affected in its legal relations ; and there is nothing, therefore, of which the law can take cognizance, nor any ground on which the plaintiff can base his claim to relief, however strongly it might appeal, under circumstances of apparent hardship, to conscience or the moral sense.

Judgment affirmed ; the other judges concurring.