Rennick v. Chloe
Rennick v. Chloe
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
The appellee instituted a suit in the Lafayette circuit court to recover her freedom. The declaration was in the usual form, and two special pleas, and the plea of not guilty wei’e filed by the defendants below. The special pleas were
The testimony is preserved by a bill of exceptions. It appeared that the plaintiff was a|slave of one Nicholas;Wren, of Warren county, Ken., who died sometime in the year 1809, at. an advanced age, having made his last will and testament. The will contained the following clause :
“It is my will, that in case Elizabeth, my wife, should die before the year 1820, Chloe, the negro girl, should be set free at the date of 1820. And it is my will that she serve out her time with one of my executors, (viz. my son Isaac Wren,) in case I should decease before that time. And if the said negro girl, Chloe, should have any increase previous to the said year 1820, it is my will that my said son Isaac Wren, should raise the children until they arrive to the age of twenty-one years, and then set them free also.”
It appeared that Elizabeth Wren died in 1819, and that before the year 1820, the appellee, Chloe, bad three children. John Wren, one of the sons and executors of his father’s will, qualified and acted as executor; but Isaac Wren, who lived in a remote county, did not act. Isaac Wren, however, it was proved, permitted the woman Chloe and her three children to be taken by William Rennick, one of the appellants, to Missouri, and a bill of sale was given by Isaac Wren, conveying his interest in Chloe’s children until they arrived at the age of twenty-one years. It appeared, moreover, from the testimony of Isaac Wren and others, that William Rennick, one of the appellants, was fully apprised that Chloe was a free woman, and that her children were to be free at the age of twenty-one. His acknowledgments to this effect both before he left Kentucky and during his residence in this state, were given in evidence.
The copy of the will given in evidence was proved in accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress of March 27th, 1804. The certificate of probate was as follows :
*200 “Warren County, set. January County Court, 1810. This last will and testament of Nicholas Wren, deceased, was
The depositions of several witnesses were read in this case, conducing to prove the identity of the negro woman, the admissions of the appellants, and the fact that the appel-lee was still held in slavery.
The court instructed the jury that if they were satisfied that Nicholas Wren owned Chloe as his slave, and that he made his last will, as it was given in evidence, and that Chloe is the same woman mentioned in said will, and that Elizabeth Wren, the wife of the said Nicholas died before the year 1820, and that the said Nicholas Wren was over the age of twenty-one years when he made his said will, and that defendants or either of them at or before the commencement of this suit held the woman in slavery, they must find for the plaintiff. The court refused to instruct the
The material points arising on the record are,
1. Was the proof of the will and the probate thereof competent?
2. Were the instructions given by the court correct?
3. The admissibility and sufficiency of the admission of the defendant to establish the freedom of the plaintiff.
First. No objections have been taken to the proof of the will, under the act of Congress of March 27,1804, except so far as it relates to the sufficiency of the certificates of probate. That certificate is supposed to be insufficient, because it does not show the order of the court, and does not contain a proof of the facts requisite to establish a will, under the first section of the act of the General Assembly of Kentucky, heretofore recited. The certificate of the clerk states that the two subscribing witnesses (naming them) proved the will, and that the same was ordered to be recorded. This certificate forms a part of the copy of the record certified by the clerk to be a full and perfect transcript of the record of the original certificate of the probate as it remained in his office. The 36th section of the act of Kentucky provides that all certificates of probate, attested by the clerk, may be produced or given in' evidence in any court within that wState. The form of the certificate, and the facts necessary to be certified, are not pointed out by that statute. But the justice, whose certificate follows that of the clerk, certifies that the attestation of the clerk is in due form and
The certificate of the presiding justice is conclusive evidence that the certificate of the clerk is in due form, and contains all the facts which, by the laws of that State, it should have certified. Nor can this court go behind the certificate of the clerk, and presume that any other or further order appears on the record of the county court of Warren county, than what appears on the transcript certified by the clerk, and which transcript he certifies to be a full and per. fect transcript. All the requisites of the act of Congress seem to have been fully complied with; and the copy of the ....... . * will, and the probate thereof, was competent testimony.
Second. The instructions of the court assume the ground that the act of the General Assembly of Kentucky, author-ising a man to dispose of his chattels by will, authorises him to emancipate his slaves, unless some statute prohibiting the , r o same is shown. •
They are predicated on the hypothesis, that a general power to dispose of chattels by will, includes a power to bequeath liberty to a slave ; that species of property being regarded as personal property in most, if not all, of the slave holding states; and that the courts of this state will not presume any restrictions upon this power, unless they be shown.
Whether slaves are to be regarded as chattels or real estate, is a question which in my opinion is caculated to throw no light upon this subject. They are in truth a species of property sui generis, to be held, disposed of, and regulated according to the laws of each particular state where slavery exists. In all slaveholding states color raises the presumption of slavery, and until the contrary is shown, a man or woman of color is deemed to be a slave. I speak, of course, of the slaveholding states of this Union, and in reference the judicial determinations of the courts of those states, eluding our own.
It is judicially known to the courts of this state, that cer-tainjjtates of this Union recognise in their respective stitutions the existence of slavery within their limits. The
The act of the Kentucky legislature, authorising persons . .. .. , , , , of a certain age to dispose or their chattels, did not therein my opinion, authorise them to emancipate their slaves, and the appeliee having produced on the trial no such ^ie court should have instructed the jury to find for the defendants.
. , . Ihird. In relation to the admissions of the defendants, ^le court; i-s of opinion that such admissions, of themselves, are insufficient to authorise a verdict for the plaintiff. When a suitable foundation is laid for such testimony, the admis-s‘on a Person holding another in slavery that he or she is free, is undoubtedly for many purposes legitimate evidence, They cannot of themselves prove the fact of freedom. If
But if the law of a state allows a master to emancipate his slave, and such emancipation is effected either by will or • r . , ... deed, in conformity with the law, the admission of the master, or others holding the petitioners in bondage, would be evidence proper to go to a jury, to show a compliance on the part of the slave with any condition which the will or deed may have imposed. In the present case, if the plaintiff had shown that by the laws of Kentucky, a master could set his slave free by will, the'admissions of the defendants could have gone to the jury to show a compliance with the will by the executor,"supposing that by the terms of the will of Nicholas Wren, any act was necessary to be done by his executor, or by the plaintiff, before the plaintiffwould have been by the will entitled to her freedom. The admissions of the executor, or of the defendants, would undoubtedly be good evidence to show a performance of such conditions precedent.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
In my opinion the judgment of the circuit court ought to have been affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rennick v. Chloe, (a person of color.)
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