Hammond v. Candler
Hammond v. Candler
Opinion of the Court
By the Court
delivering the opinion.
The sole point on which this case turns is the status of this negro, Joe. If he is a free man, these negroes who were bought with his money for him are subject to escheat under the statute against the holding of slaves by free persons of color. But if he is himself a slave, the statute does not apply. Whether (he being a slave) these slaves, who are his property, belong to his master, upon the idea that the master owns his slave and all that his slave owns; or whether they yet belong to the persons from whom Joe bought them, upon the idea that his purchase of them is void from want of capacity in him as a slave to make a contract, are questions not before us in this case. Our business is to decide whether or not they are subject to escheat, as being the property of
2. But it was contended that he was free by lapse of time, he having been registered as a free man, and enjoyed the privileges of a free man ever since 1811. It is very clear that no statute of limitation is applicable to the case, and we are at a loss to know what common law principle can bar the owner from his right to a slave. Such a bar, instead of being found in our law, would be at war with the very object of the statute against manumission. Our law does not allow conveyances, nor contrivances, nor time, to convert a slave into a free man in Georgia, to swell the ranks of a population which the Legislature has carefully guarded from increase from any source whatever, save that of procreation. Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.