Overseers v. Kline
Overseers v. Kline
Opinion of the Court
The first point, viz: whether the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the cost and maintenance of the negro, Sylph, from the time that she became a charge to the township until the commencement of this suit, is virtually decided in favour of the plaintiffs, in Overseers of Ferguson v. Overseers of Buffaloe, 6 S. & R. 104. The only difference is, that one was a contest between two townships; the other, between the township and the master, de facto. The principle on which the case turns, applies to this case. A slave, as is there ruled, who has been so defectively registered under the act of the 1st March, 1180, as to be entitled to his freedom, but who nevertheless has continued, until an advanced age, a slave defacto, has a settlement in the township in which his master resides, which is bound to maintain him until the master can be compelled to talce the burden on himself. It is, it is true, not strictly decided, but assumed, that the master is ultimately liable for the maintenance of the slave, on the impregnable ground, that if the slave continued with his master, whether ignorantly or voluntarily, until he became unable to make provision for his old age, it would be inhuman to permit the master to deny the legality of the servitude, and thus get rid of the duties he would else have to fulfil. The master would be estopped from controverting the legality of the servitude.
But while we differ from the court on that point, we agree that the plaintiff has no right to recover, on a quantum meruit, compensation for the services of Sylph, during the time she was held in servitude by the defendant. This point is also ruled in Urie v. Johnston, 3 Penn. Rep. 212, and in Alfred v. Fitz James, 3 Esp. 3. There is no difference between the case of Urie v. John
Taking this view of the case, which makes it necessary to remand the record, it is right to notice the objection to the form of the action. It seems to me suit may be sustained under the 10th section of the act of 9th March, 1771, 1 Smith’s Laws, 338, which declares overseers of the poor, of the respective townships, to' be bodies corporate, and enables them to sue and be sued. This act is not expressly repealed, and may well stand with the act of the 16th June, 1836.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.
Reference
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