Taylor v. Cullins
Taylor v. Cullins
Opinion of the Court
It appears that the negro girl Maria,
Such a bequest, according to the decisions of this court, confers no right of present freedom on the legatee. On the contrary, the well established doctrine is, that where a person by deed or will declares his slave to be free at any particular age, or on the termination of a particular estate, or after a given period of servitude, or on the event of any contingency, the condition or status of the slave remains unaltered until such age is attained, or estate is terminated, or period of servitude has expired, or event has happened: And that any child born during such temporary servitude of the mother, follows the condition of the latter at the time of its birth, and is a slave. Maria v. Surbaugh, 2 Rand. 228; Crawford v. Moses, 10 Leigh 277; Henry v. Bradford, 1 Rob. R. 53; Ellis v. Jenny, 2 Rob. R. 597.
The cases of Elder v. Elder, 4 Leigh 252, Erskine v. Henry, 9 Leigh 188, and Lucy v. Cheminant's adm’r, 2 Gratt. 36, are not at all in conflict with these decisions. In each of these last mentioned cases the children born before their mother’s right to freedom accrued, were adjudged to be free, not because of the prospective gift or bequest of freedom to the mothers, but because of some clause, in the deed or will, construed by the court, as extending the gift or bequest of freedom to the children themselves. In other words, the children derived their title to freedom not by descent but by purchase, as donees or legatees under the same instrument which gave freedom to their mothers.
Martha having been born during the servitude of
Nancy, the mother of Martha, was the only one of the legatees in remainder who (upon the supposition that the bequest was in other respects good) could, under the exception in the statute, have acquired any title to Martha by virtue of said bequest. As she died in the lifetime of Henley Cullins, it is obvious that the other freedwomen have no legal concern about or interest in the title to Martha. None, as legatees in remainder, because of the provisions of the statute, and none by descent as next of kin to Nancy, inasmuch as she died before any right to freedom or property under the will accrued.
It seems to me, therefore, that there is manifest error in so much of the decree of the 12th of July 1853, as decrees Taylor to deliver to Stratton, administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of John Cullins, the slave Martha, and any other of the chil
Ho one but Taylor has appealed; and it is therefore unnecessary to express any opinion as to the other portionl of the decree, with which he has no concern.
The other judges concurred in the opinion of Daniel, J.
The decree was in conformity with the opinion.
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