The District of Columbia being still governed by the laws of
Virginia and Maryland, which were in force anterior to the cession,
it is not lawful for an inhabitant of Washington County to purchase
a slave in Alexandria County and bring him into Washington County
for sale. If he does, the slave will become entitled to his
freedom.
This was a petition for freedom filed by Bell. The facts are set
forth in the special verdict, which is as follows:
"We of the jury find that previous to the year 1837, the
petitioner was the slave of a certain Lawrence Hoff, a resident of
Alexandria County in the District of Columbia; that in the year
1837, the said Hoff, then owning and possessing the petitioner as
his slave, in the County of Alexandria aforesaid, whereof he
continued to be a resident, did sell and deliver the petitioner to
one Little then
Page 43 U. S. 398
being a resident of Washington County, in the district
aforesaid, and that the delivery of the petitioner was made to the
said Little in Alexandria County aforesaid, and the petitioner was
immediately removed by said Little to Washington County aforesaid
to reside, and also for sale, whereof said Little was resident;
that the said Little shortly afterwards, to-wit, about one year or
a little more, sold the petitioner to one Keeting in Washington
County, who sold and delivered him to the defendant; that since
said sale to said Little, the petitioner has always been kept and
held in slavery in the County of Washington aforesaid; that at the
time of the sale and delivery of the petitioner as aforesaid by
Hoff to Little, the petitioner was more than forty-five years of
age, to-wit, he was fifty-four of fifty-five years old, and is now
fifty-nine or sixty years old. And if upon the facts aforesaid the
law is for the petitioner, then we find for the petitioner on the
issue joined; if upon the facts aforesaid the law is for the
defendant, then we find for the defendant on the issue joined."
"Whereupon all and singular the premises being by the court here
seen, heard, and fully understood, and mature deliberation being
thereupon had, the court is of opinion from the statement of facts
aforesaid that the law is for the petitioner."
The writ of error was sued out for the purpose of reviewing this
opinion.
Page 43 U. S. 401
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Moses Bell, the defendant in error, filed a petition in the
circuit court representing that he was held in slavery by one James
Rhodes, of the said county, and prayed that his rights might be
inquired into by the court. The defendant pleaded that the said
Moses was not free &c. The jury returned a special verdict and
found
"That previous to the year 1837, the petitioner was the slave of
a certain Lawrence Hoff, a resident of Alexandria County in the
District of Columbia; that in the year 1837, the said Hoff, then
owning and possessing the petitioner as his slave in the County of
Alexandria aforesaid, whereof he continued to be a resident, did
sell and deliver the petitioner to one Little, then being a
resident of Washington County, in the district aforesaid, and that
the delivery of the petitioner was made to the said Little in
Alexandria County aforesaid, and the petitioner was immediately
removed by said Little to Washington County aforesaid, to reside
and also for sale, whereof said Little was resident; that the said
Little shortly afterwards, to-wit, about one year or a little more,
sold the petitioner to one Keeting, in Washington County, who sold
and delivered him to the defendant; that since said sale to said
Little the petitioner has always been kept and held in slavery in
the County of Washington aforesaid; that at the time of the sale
and delivery of the petitioner as aforesaid by Hoff to Little, the
petitioner was more than forty-five years of age, to-wit,
fifty-four or five years."
Upon the above facts, the circuit court held that the petitioner
was entitled to his liberty. To revise this judgment the writ of
error has been prosecuted.
In the second section of the Act of 19 December, 1791, the State
of Maryland declared
"That all that part of the territory called Columbia which lies
within the limits of this state shall be, and the same is hereby
acknowledged to be forever ceded and relinquished to the Congress
and government of the United States in full and absolute right and
exclusive jurisdiction, as well of soil
Page 43 U. S. 402
as of persons residing, or to reside thereon pursuant to the
tenor and effect of the eighth section of the First Article of the
Constitution of government of the United States, provided that the
jurisdiction of the laws of this state, over the persons and
property of individuals residing within the limits of the cession
aforesaid, shall not cease or determine until Congress shall by law
provide for the government thereof under their jurisdiction in
manner provided by the article in the Constitution before
recited."
Previously to the above cession, in 1789, Virginia ceded to the
United States, "ten miles square or any lesser quantity for the
purposes aforesaid, as Congress might direct," with the
reservation
"that the jurisdiction of the laws of Virginia over the persons
and property of individuals residing within the limits of the
cession aforesaid shall not cease or determine until Congress,
having accepted the said cession, shall by law provide for the
government thereof under their jurisdiction in manner provided by
the article of the Constitution before recited."
This cession was accepted.
By the first section of the Act of 17 February, 1801, Congress
provided
"That the laws of the State of Virginia as they now exist shall
be and continue in force in that part of the District of Columbia
which was ceded by the said state to the United States and by them
accepted, . . . and that the laws of the State of Maryland as they
now exist shall be and continue in force in that part of the said
district which was ceded by it. . . ."
The part of the district ceded by Virginia constitutes
Alexandria County, and the part ceded by Maryland constitutes
Washington County.
As the laws of Maryland and Virginia have been adopted by the
above act of Congress within the counties respectively ceded, it
will be necessary to refer to those laws so far as they have a
bearing in the present case.
By the Maryland statute of November, 1796, 2 Maxcy's Laws 351,
it is declared
"That it shall not be lawful from and after the passing of this
act to import or bring into this state, by land or water, any
negro, mulatto, or other slave for sale, or to reside within this
state, and any person brought into this state as a slave contrary
to this act, if a slave before, shall thereupon immediately cease
to be the property of the person or persons so importing or
bringing such slave within this state, and shall be free."
The exceptions to the above provisions are
1. Any citizen of the United States who removes to Maryland
Page 43 U. S. 403
with a
bona fide intention of becoming a citizen, may
bring his slaves with him, or bring them within one year
afterwards, provided such slaves have been in the United States
three years preceding the time of their removal.
2. By the act of 1797, the above privilege is extended to the
executors of such persons, dying within one year after removal,
&c.
3. Any citizen of Maryland who, being seized and possessed of an
estate of inheritance in land in any one of the adjoining states,
who employed slaves in the cultivation of said land, is at liberty
to bring such slaves into the state for his own benefit, but not
for sale, provided such slaves had been in one of the adjoining
states before 21 April, 1783.
4. Slaves acquired by descent by a citizen of Maryland may be
brought into the state to be employed by the owner, but not for
sale.
5. Travelers or sojourners may bring their slaves into the
state.
By a law of Virginia passed 17 December, 1792, it is
declared
"That no person shall henceforth be slaves within this
commonwealth except such as were so on 17 October, 1785, and the
descendants of the females of them."
And the second section declares that all
"Slaves which shall be brought into this commonwealth and kept
therein one whole year together, or so long at different times as
shall amount to one year, shall be free."
The third section imposes a penalty on any person who shall
import slaves into the commonwealth, and also upon anyone who shall
sell or purchase such slaves. Exception is made of a person who,
with a
bona fide intention of becoming a citizen of
Virginia, removes into the state, and exceptions extend to some
other specified cases.
By the seventh section of the Act of Congress of 3 May, 1802, it
is provided
"That no part of the laws of Virginia or Maryland, declared by
an Act of Congress passed 27 February, 1801, concerning the
District of Columbia, to be in force within said district, shall
ever be construed so as to prohibit the owners of slaves to hire
them within, or remove them to the said district, in the same way
as was practiced prior to the passage of the above-recited
act."
Again, by the ninth section of the Act of 24 June, 1812,
Congress provides,
"That it shall be lawful for any inhabitants in either of the
said counties [of the district] owning and possessing any slave or
slaves therein, to remove the same from one county into the other,
and to exercise freely and fully all the rights of property in and
over the said slave or slaves therein, which would be exercised
Page 43 U. S. 404
over him, her, or them, in the county from whence the removal
was made, anything in any legislative act in force at this time in
either of the said counties to the contrary notwithstanding."
From the foregoing legislative action it will be seen that the
Counties of Washington and Alexandria are governed by the laws of
the states to which the territories composing them were
respectively attached before the cession. This is especially true
in regard to the importation and sale of slaves. Neither the act of
Congress of 1801 adopting the laws of the respective states nor the
act of 1802 above cited made any modification of the Virginia or
Maryland law in regard to slaves. It was undoubtedly the policy of
Congress, until the passage of the act of 1812, to preserve the
same relation between the counties of the district on this subject
that existed between the two states.
A slave imported from Virginia to Maryland not within one of the
exceptions named was free by the Maryland law. And it is not
pretended that Bell can be brought within any one of the
exceptions. The jury found that Little purchased Bell in Alexandria
County and brought him into Washington to reside and for sale, the
purchaser being a resident of Washington County. Now independently
of the act of 1812 no one can doubt that this act of the purchaser
entitled the petitioner to his freedom. Indeed, he is entitled to
it under the express provision of the Maryland law.
The act of 1812 was designed to enable the owner of slaves in
either of the two counties within the district to hire or employ
them in the other. And this is the full purport of its provision on
this subject. It clearly does not authorize a citizen of Washington
to go to the County of Alexandria, purchase a slave, and bring him
to Washington County for any purpose, much less for the purpose of
sale, as found by the jury in this case. If this could be done, it
would subvert the whole policy of the Maryland law, which was to
prevent, except in specified cases, the importation of slaves into
the state. And Congress, by adopting the Maryland law, sanctioned
its policy.
It is true that the two counties of this district are under the
same political organization, and in a certain sense constitute one
sovereignty. But this can have no effect upon the question under
consideration. It depends exclusively upon the laws referred to. No
views of policy or of supposed convenience can enter into the
decision.
Page 43 U. S. 405
The case of
Bank of Alexandria v.
Dyer, 14 Pet. 141, has been relied on by the
plaintiff in error as showing that the Counties of Washington and
Alexandria, being united under the same government, cannot be
considered as foreign to each other.
That was a case where the statute of limitation was pleaded to a
suit in Washington County. The plaintiffs replied that they were
citizens of Alexandria, &c., to which the defendant demurred.
And on this state of the pleading the question was whether the
plaintiffs were beyond seas within the meaning of the Maryland
statute. The Court held that they were not;
"that the Counties of Washington and Alexandria resemble
different counties in the same state, and do not stand towards one
another in the relations of distinct and separate governments."
The words "beyond seas" in the Maryland statute were borrowed
from the statute of James 1, ch. 21, and have generally been
construed in this country not literally, but as meaning "without
the jurisdiction of the state." Now in reference to this
construction, the decision of the Court was correct, but it can
have no direct bearing upon the question under consideration. That
the District of Columbia must be considered as exercising the same
general jurisdiction in both counties is undoubted, but the rights
of its citizens are not governed by the same laws. The Counties of
Washington and Alexandria, excepting the modification made by the
act of 1812, are as foreign to each other, as regards the
importation of slaves, as are the States of Virginia and Maryland.
Such we understand to be the settled doctrine of the circuit court
of this district. And this is no unsatisfactory evidence of what
the law is. An acquiescence of many years in a course of decision
involving private rights should not be changed except upon the
clearest ground of error.
There is a provision in the Maryland law prohibiting the owner
of a slave from manumitting him if he be over forty-five years of
age, and this is urged by counsel as a reason why the petitioner in
this case should not receive his liberty. He is now near sixty
years of age, but how his rights are to be affected by a law which
restrains the master is not perceived. He claims to be wrongfully
held in servitude, and the Court think his claim is founded in law.
Now shall he be kept in servitude because his master, if he were
disposed, could not manumit him? The law makes him free without the
concurrence of his master. Slaves brought into the State of
Maryland in violation of the law are declared to be free without
reference to
Page 43 U. S. 406
their age. And the Court cannot affix a condition to the right
of freedom which the law does not authorize. Upon the whole, we are
unanimously of opinion that the judgment of the circuit court
should be
Affirmed with costs.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Columbia, holden in and for the County of Washington, and was
argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered
and adjudged by this Court that the judgment of the said circuit
court in this cause be and the same is hereby affirmed with
costs.