Lewis v. Commonwealth
Lewis v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion oe tiie oodrt:
Appellant, a freedman, having been adjudged by the Union county court, at its July term, 1867, to be the father of the illegitimate freed child 'of Julia Martin, a freed woman, which was born December 27, 1864, when both the mother and putative father were slaves, and required to pay fifty dollars annually for its support, until it should arrive at ten years of age, appealed to the circuit court, which affirmed the county court judgment, and from which he prosecutes an appeal to this court.
• The amendment of March 1, 1860, to section 20, Civil Code, enacted^ that “ the circuit courts of this Commonwealthshall have appellate jurisdiction of the judgments and final orders of the county courts in cases .of bastardy.”
By section 12 of the act of June 3, 1865 (Myers’ Supplement, p. 65), “to reduce into one the bastardy laws of this Commonwealth,” and which repeals “ all acts or parts of acts inconsistent” with> it, provides, that “if the adjudged father shall appeal or prosecute a writ of error, with a supersedeas to the court of appeals from the decision of the county court, and the decision shall be affirmed, the sureties in the appeal or supersedeas bond shall be liable for all the father had been adjudged to pay, and also the costs and ten per centum damages
This brings us to the radical question in the case, whether a slave father, who shall have a slave child by . a slave mother, without lawful wedlock; can be held responsible, after they are all freed by constitutional amendment, for the support of such child as a bastard.
In slavery, there was no such thing as lawful wedlock, under our laws, nor legal responsibility for the rearing of the children by either parent. The children, like the parents, belonged to the master, who was entitled to
In the case of Frances vs. Commonwealth, this court, December 4, 1867, decided, that this statute, in its general scope and intendment, authorized a freedwoman to sue out a warrant in bastardy against a freedman who she charged with being the father of her illegitimate child, born after both the mother and putative father became free; and that she was a competent witness under our statutes regulating the competency of witnesses.
But, in this case, the rights and responsibilities attached when the adjudged father and the mother were free persons.
It is the birth of an illegitimate child that attaches responsibilities to the putative father for its support. Of course, \if it should not be born alive, no responsibility would attach; and if so born, and should die before any warrant in bastardy should be sued out, no responsibility could then be enforced; for the very objects of the proceeding would not exist, to-wit: the support of the child.
When this child was born, the owner, and not the ¡mutative father, was responsible for its support. Afterwards, it and its parents were fveed; but no sta.tute has provided that the slave putative father shall be responsible for the support of his illegitimate slave child, and it would be going much further than the Legislature has ever manifested any intention to construe these statutes, conferring civil rights and the right to testify on freed persons, to retroact so as to make the putative slave father responsible for his illegitimate children; for, legally speaking, all persons born in slavery were born out of lawful wedlock. Such a thing as legitimate marriage of slaves was unknown to our laws. The Legislature has manifested other remedies — first, by authorizing the county courts to bind out all freed children where their parents are not supporting them; secondly, by assessing a tax upon the free colored male population of a given age, all of which is husbanded to support their indigent poor and school their children, and not a dollar of which is to go towards
The amendment to the United States Constitution abolished all interest of the owner in his slave, and with its abrogation relieved him from all responsibility to support the freed slave; but this in nowise shifted the responsibility of support on to the shoulders of the legally irresponsible putative father, nor has any of our State statutes done so.
Our conclusion, therefore, is, that there is no responsibility on'the part of the putative father for the support of a child born a slave; especially is there no such responsibility on a slave father since freed.
Wherefore, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, with directions to reverse the judgment of the county court, and to direct it to dismiss the proceedings absolutely — Judge Robertson dissenting as to the responsibility of appellant.
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