Prall v. Patton
Prall v. Patton
Opinion of the Court
of opinion that the record was inadmissible evidence on the issue; and therefore, that the judgment of the Common Pleas be reversed.
In the short time we have had to consider this question, I have not been convinced that the evidence admitted by the Common Pleas of Somerset, was illegal, or that the judgment of that [429] court should be set aside. The general rule, that a judgment between other parties, should not be given in [*] evidence against a stranger to the suit, will not admit of dispute; like all other general rules, it was instituted for the better administration of justice, and should never be made use of in direct violation of its original intention. He then, who cannot show himself within the reason and spirit of the rule, has no right to claim its extension to his particular case. The reason on which that excellent rule was formed, I take clearly to be—
Prall, the defendant below, is followed to his place of residence, in Somerset, by a stranger from a distant State, and prosecuted in the court of his own county for the recovery of a sum of money paid him by the plaintiff, in the suit for two blacks sold him by the defendant, as slaves, and to whom, it is alleged, he had no right, they being both free at the time of the sale. In support of this action, the plaintiff offered in evidence, a copy of the process by which these blacks were soon after taken out of his service, of the records of the court of Maryland, duly certified, permitting them to go at large. It is strongly urged by the counsel for Prall, “ that as he was not a party to the suit in Maryland, for the liberation of these negroes, and had no opportunity of showing his right to their service, and the fairness of the sale, the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset were in error in admitting these proceedings in proof.” I think not. The claim to the servitude of these blacks, which he alleges he had no opportunity of substantiating before the court of Maryland, he was in the [*] present action, under every favorable circumstance of time and place, called on to substantiate at his own home. The question, as to him, was by no means settled. Could he here have proved the sale made in good faith, he was justly entitled to a verdict in his favor, and he had not a shadow of pretense to say, that he was precluded by the decision of the court of Maryland, from giving in Somerset, proof of the slavery of the blacks, and the justness of the whole transaction. This was the gist of the
As the record from Maryland is between other parties, it was res inter alios acta and prima facie inadmissible. It becomes necessary then, to look into the record, and see what relation the facts adjudged, if any there were, had to the issue under trial. The issue below, was freedom of the negroes at the time of the sale. The record, taken in [*] connection with the facts proved in the cause, (and without those facts it cannot be understood) is in substance, this: after the departure of Prall from Baltimore, Hicks interested himself in favor of the negroes, and at his instance they were taken out of the hands of Patten, and were taken to Hicks’ house; and while there, the negroes petition the court, stating that they were free, and that Hicks unlawfully held them in servitude. Hicks in answer, says, that he cannot deny the fact, and the negroes have judgment.
Judgment of the Common Pleas reversed, and a venire de novo awarded
The probability is, that the negroes were slaveB in Jersey. That either the taking them into Maryland, and offering them for sale there, made them free by the laws of Maryland; or what is very probable, that the taking them into Maryland, together with the sale itself, made them free by the law of Maryland. If the first, the laws of Maryland should have been proved, and that, with the evidence in the cause, without the record, would have been sufficient to maintain the action. If the latter, the action was misconceived; it should have been a special action on the case, charging the deceit and fraud in Prall, in representing the negroes as Maryland negroes. If it was intended to try the fact of the negroes being free when taken from Jersey, the record from Maryland was the most dangerous and unsafe that can well be imagined; wholly exparte, and evidently conclusive.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PRALL against PATTON
- Status
- Published