Foremans v. Tamm
Foremans v. Tamm
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered -by
— The question in this case is -whether a free colored man can acquire a pre-emption right to land, under the law which gives that right to persons who settle on vacant land of the Commonwealth, u with a manifest intention of making it a place of abode and the means of supporting a family.” The court below answered the question in the affirmative.
The question has no relation to the political rights of the colored population. Whenever the white population, who settled this Commonwealth, under a charter and laws derived from a government established by a similar caste of men, and who proclaimed and maintained the independence and sovereignty under which we live, think proper to admit into political partnership either the black population of Africa or the red aborigines of America, they have a -right to do so. ¥ntil this be done, the negro and the Indian must be content with the privileges extended to them, without aspiring to the exercise of the elective franchise, or to the right to become our legislators, judges and governors.
Under the Saxon government, there was a sort of people in a
This sketch of the original tenures existing in the country, from which we have derived the common law, may serve to show that, while that law has recognized the existence of slavery, it was imbued with the spirit of liberty, which enabled the slave, in process of time, to acquire his freedom of the right to purchase and hold lands and goods. It also proves, that even in a state of
very, the right of the slave to hold possession of his own acquisitions was not to be disputed by any one except his lord, and that even the lord could not dispute the title, if he delayed the seizure until after the slave had disposed of the property to anotheri
There is nothing in the principles of the common law, or in the former condition of the colored population, which excludes them from acquiring, in like manner, freedom and the right to purchase property, by the consent, either express or implied, of those who had heretofore held them in bondage. The Act of Test, March, 1780, expressly declares that “all persons, negroes and mulattoes, as others born in the State, after the passing of the act,
There is nothing in the Act of Assembly or usages of the State, in relation to pre-emption rights acquired by settlement, which excludes the colored man from acquiring title to land in this way. On the contrary, the lands owned by the State were abundant in quantity, and so long as they remained uncultivated and undisposed of, were entirely useless and unproductive of revenue to the State. But their settlement by an industrious population increased the wealth and security of the Commonwealth, and made them a source of revenue for the support of government. The policy of the Commonwealth was so manifestly in favor of the settlement of her wild lands, that emigrants from all countries were encouraged to locate themselves upon them. 2 Smith, 176, 181. More than one thousand warrants were granted to the Holland Land Company, who made numerous settlements by emigrants from Europe. Other foreign land companies were also encouraged to make settlements. For the purpose of encouraging emigrants from Wales, the usages of the Land Office were departed from, and forty thousand acres were granted to them in one warrant, in order that they might settle"’ the land in convenient neighborhood to each other. 2 Smith, 144. Without doubt there are many titles to land held by colored people, without dispute. Within sight of the courthouse in which this question was first raised, there is an island in the Susquehanna, the title to which was taken out of the Land Office by a colored man, whose right we have never heard disputed. The right to acquire land by settlement is not confined to nation or color. All persons are entitled to the privilege; and the only condition required is, that the settlement shall be made “with the manifest intention of making it a place of abode and . the means of supporting a family.” There was therefore no error in the instruction given by the. court below on this question.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.