State v. Jones
State v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT — by the
The question in this case arising on motion in arrest of judgment, transferred on doubts from Adams superior court, is, whether in this state, murder can be committed on a slave. Because individuals may have
In some respects, slaves may be considered as chattels, but in others, they are, regarded as men. The law vie\ys them as capable of committing crimes. This can only be upon the principle, that they are men and rational beings. The Roman law has been much relied on by the counsel of the defendant.. That law was confined to the Roman empire, giving the power of life and death over captives in war, as slaves, but it no more extended here, than the similar power given to parents over the lives of their children. Much stress has also been laid by the defendant’s counsel, on the case cited from Taylor’s reports, decided in North Carolina, yet in that case, two judges against one, were of opinion, that killing a slave was murder. Judge Hall, who delivered the dissenting opinion in the above case, based his conclusions, as we conceive, upon erroneous principles, by considering the laws of Rome applicable here. His inference, also, that a person cannot be condemned capitally, because, he may be liable in a civil action, is not sustained'by reason or-authority, but appears to us to be in direct opposition to both. At a very early period in Virginia, the power of life over slaves was given by statute, but Tucker observes^ that as soon as. these statutes were repealed, it was at once considered by their courts,, that the killing a slave might be murder. Commonwealth vs. Dolly Chapman, indictment for maliciously stabbing a slave under a statute. It has been determined in Virginia, that slaves axe persons. In the constitution of the United States, slaves are expressly designated as “persons.” In this state, the Legislature have considered slaves as reasonable and accountable beings and it would be a stigma upon the character of the state,, and a reproach to the administration of justice, if the life of a slave could be taken with impunity, or if he could be murdered in cold blood, without subjecting the offender to the highest penalty known to the criminal jurisprudence of the country. Has the slave no rights, because he is deprived of his freedom? He is still a human being, and possesses all those rights, of which he is not deprived by the positive provisions of the law, but in vain shall we look for any law passed by the enlightened and philanthropic legislature of this state, giving even to the master, much less to a stranger, power over the life of a slave. Such a statute would be
At one period of tho Roman history, a history written in the blood of
When the northern barbarians overran Southern Europe, they had no laws but those of conquerers, and conquered, victors, and captives, yet even by this savage people, no distinction was recognized between the killing in cold blood, a slave or a freeman. And shall this court, in the nineteenth century, establish a principle, too sanguinary for the code even of the Goths and Vandals, and extend to the whole community, the right to murder slaves with impunity?
The motion to arrest the judgment must be overruled.
The defendant was sentenced to to be hung on the 27th July 1821,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI v. ISAAC JONES
- Status
- Published