State v. Fleming
State v. Fleming
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The pleadings in this case are the same as in Gaffney’s, Nice R,. 431 ; and it was intended that the verdict should have been the same, but a misapprehension at to what was the finding of the jury in that case has led to the difficulty presented in this. This was one of the questions discussed in the case of the State v. Raines, 3 McC. 533, and is settled by that case, so far as the opinion of the Judge who delivered the opinion of the Court, could settle it. But as there were other important points involved in the case, on which the concurrence of the other members of the Court may have been given, and as it is a question merely of practice, and more especially as the publication of the Statutes at Large, since the decision of that- case, has shed a flood of light on the subject of the homicide of slaves, we have felt at liberty to re-examine the subject, and to inquire whether the reasons given for that decision are such as to require an adherence to it. The principal, if not the only
I have very carefully read all the early legislation which has been rendered accessible since the publication of the Statutes at Large. I do not find anything in the legislative history, as exhibited by these Acts, or in any history of the times, which sheds any light on the question how the homicide of a slave was regarded before the year 1690, the date of the earliest extant Act on the subject — whether, as among the Romans, they were regarded (as the Roman slaves all were,) as captives in war and subject in every thing to the will of the master ; or whether, like the ancient Yillians in England, they were considered as reason
The earliest Act which is extant on the subject of slaves is the Act (as I have before said) of 1690. By the 12th section of that Act (7 Stat. 346,) it is enacted “that if any slaye, by punishment from the owner, for running away or other offence, shall suffer in life or limb, no person shall be liable to the law for the same. But if any one out of wilfulness, wantonness or bloody-mindedness, shall kill a slave, he or she shall, on conviction thereof, suffer three months imprisonment, without bail or mainprize, and also pay £50 to the owner of such slave“ and if any person shall kill a slave stealing in his house or plantation at night, the said slave refusing to submit himself, such person shall not be liable to any damage or action for the same.” In 1712 another Act was passed, for the better 'ordering and governing of slaves. The preamble of that Act recites that “forasmuch as the said negroes and other slaves brought unto the people of this province are of a barbarous, wild and savage nature, and such as render them wholly unqualified to be governed by the laws, customs and practices of this province, but that it is absolutely necessary that such other constitutions, laws and orders should in this province be made and enacted, for the good regulating and ordering of them, as may restrain the disorders, rapine and inhumanity to which they are naturally prone and inclined” — enacts (see 7 Stat. 363, sec. 30,) that “if any negro or other slave, under punishment by his master, or his order, for running away or other crime or misdemeanor towards his said master, shall suffer in life or limb, (which seldom happens) no person whatever shall be liable to any penalty for the same; but if any person shall, in wantonness or only of bloody-mindedness, or cruel intention, violently kill a negro or other slave of his own, he shall pay into the public treasury fifty pounds current monej- — but if he shall kill the slave of another man, he shall pay to the owner of the negro or other slave the full value of the slave, and
Thus stood the law prior to therAct[of 1740, (7 Stat. 410.) That Act, reciting that cruelty is unbecoming those who profess themselves Christians, enacts “that if any persoff or persons whosoever shall wilfully murder his own slave, or the slave of any other person, such person shall, on con
It will be perceived that by this Act the words, undue correction, are omitted, and hence it is supposed that class of killing still remains to be punished under the Act of 174CL I do not think so. It will be found on examining the sev-' eral Acts on this subject, that every Act is a perfect system of itself, and was a repeal of those which had gone before.. The law in relation to the homicide of a slave was not to be gathered in broken fragments from the several Acts on that subject, but every Act embraced the whole subject and operated a repeal of all prior Acts. Besides this,-1 cannot
If the infliction of punishment be with malice, or the wilful and deliberate purpose to kill, it would be murder, as in Harden’s case ; if under the influence of passion excited by the misconduct of the slave, it would be that description of manslaughter described in the Act. by the words ‘sudden heat and passion,’ as was the fact in this case. I come therefore to the conclusion that the legislature intentionally omitted the words ‘undue correction,’ as useless, and intended to include every punishable homicide of a slave under the two classes enumerated in the Act of 1821.
I have no where seen it intimated that an indictment would lie at common law for the homicide of a slave. It is in this State purely a statutory offence, and we must look to the Statute alone to decide. We cannot suppose that when the early Acts made even murder a misdemeanor punishable by a-small fine, they intended to leave other kinds of homicide to be punished as felony at common law. The recital in the preamble of some Acts, of their unfitness to be governed by the laws and usages of the province, forbid any such supposition. The question then presents itself, whether on a conviction for manslaughter, this Court can award punishment under the Act of 1821. It is said in Raines’ case, that killing in sudden heat and passion is manslaughter. It is in fact the most usual manner in which that crime is committed. But the difficulty in that case seems to have been' that there were other modes in which manslaughter might be perpetrated. That is very true when applied to the killing of a free man. But it is very obvious that when applied to a killing of a slave, it must have a more restricted sense. It can only mean a killing in sudden heat and passion. When thus applied, there is no doubt of its meaning ; it has all the certainty which a verdict should posses ; it is neither doubtful nor uncertain (Co. Lit. 227.)
Before the decision of Raines’ case, such a finding by the jury was quite common ; I had been, for many years before,
Upon the whole, after a Very careful examination, I am of opinion there is nothing which precludes us from supporting the verdict in this case, and the motion is dismissed.
Motion dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.