Court Opinion

ID: 8000952
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:49:14.439434+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:43.237256
License: Public Domain

Napton, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question in this case depends on the construction of the following provision in the will of John McKarney, which was made in August, 1833 : “ As to the residue of my slaves, to-wit, Marietta and her five children, Sam, Pliebe, Nance, George, and her young child, with all her increase, I will and bequeath them to my beloved wife Margaret during her natural life, with a request that she attend strictly to their morals, and instruct them all to read the English language ; but I expressly prohibit the sale of them under any circumstances; and after the death of the said Margaret, all of them that are twenty-one years of age are by me set free, on condition that they will enter under the care of the Colonization Society and emigrate to the American colony in Liberia, and as fast as they or their increase arrive at the said age of twenty-one years and comply with the above condition, I hereby set free. All of them that prefer remaining with any of my children, after the death of my said wife, to complying with the foregoing condition, are permitted to do so ; but I am to be distinctly understood, that they are not to be bought or sold even amongst my own children, .much less to strangers.”
The plaintiff is a son of Marietta, the woman named in the above provision, and is twenty-one years old. He alleges the death of the widow Margaret McKarney, and avers that by these provisions of the will of John McKarney he is free. He declares his willingness to comply with the conditions of said will and prays a judgment of liberation. To this petition there was a demurrer, and it was sustained.
*177The principal question which this clause in the will presents is whether the conditional emancipation provided for is valid. It is insisted that an act of emancipation made dependent upon the choice of the slave is of no effect, because the exercise of such a power on the part of a slave is incompatible with the nature of slavery.
And such appears to have been the opinion of the court of appeals of Virginia in the case of Bailey and others v. Poindexter, 14 Gratt. 132. In the case of Elder v. Elder’s Exec’r, 4 Leigh, 252, the decision was otherwise, and a provision of this character in a will was sustained and enforced. The case was one where the testator had, as in the present case, given to his slaves the choice of going to Liberia or remaining with his family as slaves. The chancellor appointed a commissioner to ascertain the wishes of the slaves, and under the direction of the court arrangements were made with the agent of the Colonization Society to have so many of the negroes as desired it transported to Liberia. There was no discussion in this case at the bar, so far as the report shows, of the question subsequently determined in Bailey and others v. Poindexter, nor does either one of the judges, who delivered opinions, allude to such an objection against the validity of the bequest; but the point was manifestly presented by the record, and the absence of any notice of it, both by the court and the counsel, would seem to authorize the inference that no doubts were entertained in relation to the legality of such a provision.
However this may be, we do not perceive any peculiarity in the condition of«slavery, as it exists in this country, which prevents the master from emancipating his slaves upon condition that the slave is willing. It is the act of the master, and not of the slave, which effectuates the emancipation. If the master can emancipate upon condition at all, why may not the choice of the slave constitute that condition, as well as any other event or act with which the slave has no concern ?
What policy is to be subserved by preventing the master *178from consulting the wishes of his slaves in a matter of this kind, when the law gives him the power of unconditional emancipation ? It may be said that the slave is npt qualified to make a wise choice; but this fact only furnishes an argument against emancipation under any circumstances, and has no especial force against the kind of emancipation attempted here. If the slave is incapable of exercising any will of his own, what additional capacity or fitness is bestowed on him by an absolute emancipation ? Is he not in point of fact as well qualified the day before he is declared free as the day after he his manumitted ? The legal incapacity of the slave to make a choice is a theory designed to recognize and enforce the legal dominion of the master, and it is a perversion of the theory to make it have the effect of diminishing the extent of that dominion.
Another point was made in this case — that the act of 1825, under which McKarney’s will was made, is unconstitutional, as it made no effectual provision, in conformity to the 26th clause of the third article of the constitution of this state, to obtain security, from the person emancipating his slave, that the slave so emancipated should not become a public charge. But it is obvious that this provision of the constitution can have no application to a case where a slave is only emancipated upon the condition of going to Africa, or elsewhere beyond the limits of this state. In such cases a compliance with the conditions necessarily relieves the public here from all liability to the slave’s future support. The constitution was intended to prohibit emancipation, where the emancipated slaves are suffered to remain in this state, unless the person so emancipating will give the security required.
We have given our opinion upon these points, because they will necessarily arise in the case if it is further prosecuted, and not because they are essential to the determination of the case as it now stands. We think the demurrer was properly sustained. The will of McKarney did not effect an unconditional emancipation of the slaves specified. They are, *179by its terms, “ set free on condition that they will enter under the care of the Colonization Society and emigrate to the American colony of Liberia.” They are allowed to choose between going to Liberia and remaining slaves with the testator’s children. If they prefer remaining in Missouri, they are not liberated by the will, although the testator attempts to impose restrictions upon their owners incompatible with the laws. Such restrictions are merely nullities; they do not have the effect of emancipating the slaves. It would be contrary to the plain intent of the testator to give them such a meaning. If he supposed or intended that the slaves, who did not choose to go to Liberia, should be nevertheless free, it was folly to place any restrictions concerning their sale out of or in the family of the testator. His intention was that they should remain slaves, but that they should not pass out of his family by sale, or from one member of the family to another. This latter intention can not be carried into effect, because it is against the laws of the state.
The plaintiff was not entitled to a judgment of liberation upon the case made in his petition. There is a general averment in the petition that the plaintiff is willing to comply with the conditions of the will, but this is insufficient. If such declarations as this bo held a sufficient compliance with a will of this character, emancipation under them will be in effect unconditional, thereby defeating, instead of carrying out, the intention of the testator. There are no doubt difficulties attending the execution of such a bequest, at best; but they are not insuperable. It is the duty of the executor or administrator to see to the execution of the will. There is no averment, in this case, that the administrator has shown any disinclination to furnish reasonable facilities for executing the testator’s purposes relative to these slaves. There is no averment that the Colonization Society have the means or the inclination to promote the purposes which the testator had in view. There is no averment even that the Colonization Society has any existence now, although, as a matter of history, we believe the society still has an agent in this state. *180This will was made more than twenty years ago, and the condition and prospect of that society may have undergone great changes. The court should be satisfied, not merely in reference to the plaintiff’s wishes, but that means are provided for accomplishing them, if his choice is to emigrate to Liberia. In Elder v. Elder, a commissioner was appointed by court to ascertain the wishes of the slaves and to correspond and contract with the African Colonization Society for the transportation of such of them as were willing to accept emancipation upon these terms. There is nothing to forbid a similar course from being taken here, if the administration should interpose obstacles to carrying out in good faith the provisions of the will; but it is manifest that this action is misconstrued ; there is no foundation for a judgment of immediate liberation.
Judgment affirmed;
Judge Ewing concurring.