On a petition for freedom, the petitioner proved that one Kirby
had emancipated all his slaves by will, some immediately and some
at a future day.
The petitioner, in order to bring herself within this category
and show that
Page 65 U. S. 209
she had been the slave of Kirby, offered to prove that her
mother and brother and sister had recovered their freedom by suits
brought against George Naylor, whose administrator, Henry Naylor,
the defendant in the present suit was, and that it was very unusual
to separate from the mother a child so young as the petitioner was
at the time of Kirby's death.
Proofs of these circumstances were not allowed by the court
below to go to the jury. In this the court was in error.
The recoveries of the mother and sister against George Naylor
ought to have been allowed to go to the jury. They were not
res
inter alios acta. This case distinguished from that of
Davis v. Wood,
1 Wheat. 6.
This was a petition for freedom filed by Susan Vigel under the
circumstances which are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Susan Vigel sued Henry Naylor, administrator of George Naylor,
by a petition for freedom in the circuit court of this district. He
pleaded that she was his slave. On the trial of this issue, she
offered in evidence the will of John B. Kirby, by which all his
slaves over thirty-five years of age were emancipated and all those
under that age were to be emancipated -- the males at thirty-five,
and the females at thirty years of age. This was allowed by an Act
of the Legislature of Maryland of 1796, ch. 67, sec. 13.
A witness testified on the petitioner's behalf
"that a few days after the death of Kirby, which took place in
1828, George Naylor brought to his house, where witness was then at
work, the petitioner, her mother, and her sister, and said George
Naylor stated to the witnesses at the time that he had brought said
negroes from the residence of said Kirby, and that the petitioner
was then between six and eight years of age."
The petitioner then offered to prove that her brother Richard
and her mother Sarah and her sister Eliza had obtained
Page 65 U. S. 210
their freedom under the will of Kirby; that Sarah, the mother,
and Eliza, had recovered their freedom by suits brought against
George Naylor, which were defended by him. In the one instituted by
Sarah, judgment was rendered in 1838, and that brought by Eliza was
decided in her favor in 1842. The petitioner also offered to prove
that it is very unusual for children of the age of the petitioner
at the time of Kirby's death to be separated from their parents,
but the court excluded the testimony offered from the jury, to
which exception was taken.
The defendant then proved by two witnesses that they had known
the petitioner from her birth and that she was born the property of
George Naylor, and that she never was out of his possession or that
of his successor and administrator. It is objected that no records
of the verdicts and judgments were offered to prove the recoveries.
The bill of exceptions states generally that she offered to prove
the facts, but the court refused to hear the evidence.
Transcripts of the records being the best evidence, and their
production necessary, it is manifest that the offer to prove the
recoveries was not refused for the reason that the record evidence
was absent, but because the recoveries were deemed irrelevant or
that they were
inter alios acta, and therefore incompetent
as proof in the cause for any purpose. And the first question is
was the evidence offered relevant when taken in connection with the
parol evidence.
The girl was six or eight years old when George Naylor brought
her home in 1828 with her mother and sister from the late residence
of Kirby, the testator. It was offered to be proved, and we must
take it to be true, that it could have been proved that it was
unusual to separate the mother from a slave child as young as the
petitioner was at the time Kirby's will took effect.
If Sarah, the mother, Richard, the brother, and Eliza, the
sister, were the slaves of Kirby at his death, and acquired their
freedom under his will, does this circumstance furnish evidence
from which a jury might infer, in connection with other evidence,
that the petitioner was also the slave of Kirby when
Page 65 U. S. 211
he died, and entitled to her freedom on arriving at thirty years
of age? It is immaterial whether the evidence offered and rejected
was weak or strong to prove the fact. The question is was it
competent to go to the jury?
Castle v.
Bullard, 23 How. 187. If so, it was for them to
judge of its force and effect. If this child had been only one year
old or under when Naylor got possession of her and of her mother,
and other children in company with her, the presumption would be
stronger, that her condition and that of her mother was the same,
and both the slaves of Kirby, and were manumitted by his will.
By the rejection of the evidence, the case was stripped of all
proof that Susan, the petitioner, ever belonged to Kirby, the
testator, whereas, had it been admitted, it would have proved that
Susan's mother and her other children belonged to the estate of
Kirby after his death, and were emancipated by his will, and having
emancipated
all his slaves, a presumption could have been
founded on this proof by the jury that an infant child of the same
family was the slave of Kirby also, especially as Naylor brought
the slaves as a family from Kirby's late residence.
2. Was the record of the judgment
inter alios acta, and
therefore incompetent?
In the case of
Davis v. Wood, 1
Wheat. 6, it was held by this Court that a judgment in favor of the
mother establishing her freedom against Swan, a third person, could
not be given in evidence in a suit by the child of that mother as
tending to prove his freedom. On the trial below, the petitioner
offered to prove by witnesses that they had heard old persons, now
dead, declare that a certain Mary Davis, now also dead, was a white
woman, born in England, and such was the general report in the
neighborhood where she lived, and further offered to prove by the
same kind of testimony that Susan Davis, the mother of the
petitioner, was lineally descended in the female line from the said
Mary, which evidence by hearsay and general reputation the court
refused to admit except so far as it was applicable to the fact of
the petitioner's pedigree. And the ruling below this Court
affirmed.
Page 65 U. S. 212
There is no question arising in the cause before us involving
the consideration to what extent hearsay evidence to prove the
status of freedom is admissible, and therefore we refrain from
discussing the first point decided in
Davis v. Wood. In
that case, Susan, the mother of John, was sold by Wood, the
defendant, to Caleb Swan, and she and her daughter, Ary, who had
likewise been sold, sued Swan for their freedom, and recovered it.
This record of recovery was offered in evidence on behalf of John,
but was rejected on the trial.
This Court held that
"As to the second exception, the record was not between the same
parties. The rule is that verdicts are evidence between parties and
privies. The Court does not feel inclined to enlarge the exceptions
to this general rule, and therefore the judgment of the court below
is affirmed."
This is the judgment with which we have to deal. The difference
in the case under consideration and the one found in 1 Wheat. is
that here, Susan's mother and sister recovered their freedom from
Naylor, he being the defendant in both actions. There, the mother
and daughter recovered their freedom from Swan, who had purchased
them of Wood.
This Court having cut off all evidence by hearsay and general
reputation -- 1st, that the female ancestor of the petitioners was
a white English woman and free, and 2d, that the record of the
recovery of freedom by John's mother and sister from Swan was
incompetent -- of course the petitioner had to go out of court,
having proved no case.
There, the verdict was not between the same parties. Here, the
suit was between George Naylor and the mother of Susan; as between
the mother and Naylor, the verdict was conclusive of her right to
freedom, and Susan, the child, was a privy in blood to the mother,
being her heir, if free, and as such heir, comes within the rule
laid down in
Davis v. Wood, and could avail herself of
that verdict as equally conclusive if she could further prove that
she was born after the impetration of the mother's writ.
Alexander v. Stokely, 7 Sergt. & R. 300;
Pegram v.
Isabell, 2 Hen. & M.;
Chancellor v. Milton, 2
B.Monroe 25. Or, if she could prove that she was born after Kirby's
death and that her mother recovered her freedom
Page 65 U. S. 213
under his will -- and which facts might have been established by
further proof -- these circumstances could be let in as additional
evidence. 2 Hening & M. 211.
Owing to the lapse of time since Mr. Kirby died, the petitioner
sought to establish her case by circumstantial evidence. It was
rejected, for what particular reason does not appear.
As already stated, we think the evidence offered had weight
enough in it to be pertinent, and ought therefore to have been
submitted to the jury.
64 U. S. 23
How. 187.
How it was proposed to be proved that Richard was a free man and
acquired his freedom under the will does not appear, but as to
Eliza, the sister, a record of recovery by her of her freedom
against Naylor was offered as evidence and rejected. The record
could have proved the existence of the verdict and judgment as a
FACT, and the legal consequences flowing from the fact -- namely
that the petitioner, Eliza, was a free person. As to George Naylor
and his representative, her status of freedom is a conclusive fact.
And what is the effect of the record as respects other persons?
Eliza sued George Naylor, declaring that she was free. He replied
that she was his slave. She had a verdict that she was free. By the
verdict and judgment, she took to herself all Naylor's title; it
was vested in her as Naylor had it.
Harris v. Clarissa, 6
Yerger's Ten.R. 243. He had had her in possession twelve years, and
had title by the act of limitations of six years, as to other
contestants who might set up claim to her as a slave. She can rely
on his title as if he had manumitted her; the record has this
effect. It stands on the footing that a recorded deed of
manumission to her from Naylor would stand, or that a recorded bill
of sale from him to a purchaser would stand. In either case, the
title paper could be given in evidence to prove the title, and the
title thus acquired must be deemed valid until someone else legally
establishes a better. This record evidence may be used in any suit
by a third person where the evidence is pertinent, of which the
court must judge from facts and circumstances appearing on the
trial, and to this effect are the adjudications of the state courts
generally.
Pegram v. Isabell, in Virginia, 2 Hen. & M.
210;
Alexander v. Stokely, 7 Sergt.
Page 65 U. S. 214
& R. 290, in Pennsylvania;
Vaughan v. Phebe, Martin
& Y. 6, in Tennessee;
Chancellor v. Milton, 2 B.Monroe
25, in Kentucky. In Maryland, no decision is found on the
subject.
In the next place, the record operates on the status of the
person; it sets him free or pronounces him a slave, and binds him
by the verdict either way.
Shelton v. Barbour, 2 Wash.Va.
82.
In some of the states, the suit may be in equity and the status
of freedom be established by a decree.
Fisher's Negroes v.
Dobbs, 6 Yerg. 119;
Reuben v. Paraish, 6 Humphrey
122.
It is ordered that the judgment of the circuit court be
reversed and the cause remanded for another trial.