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Somerset v Stewart

Somerset v Stewart (1772) 98 ER 499 (also known as Sommersett v Steuart, Somersett's case, and the Mansfield Judgment) is a judgment of the English Court of King's Bench in 1772, relating to the right of an enslaved person on English soil not to be forcibly removed from the country and sent to Jamaica for sale. According to one reported version of the case, Lord Mansfield decided that:

Somerset v Stewart
CourtKing's Bench
Decided22 June 1772
Citation(s)(1772) 98 ER 499, (1772) 20 State Tr 1, (1772) Lofft 1
Case opinions
Lord Mansfield
Keywords
Slavery, abolition

The state of slavery is of such a nature that it is incapable of being introduced on any reasons, moral or political, but only by positive law, which preserves its force long after the reasons, occasions, and time itself from whence it was created, is erased from memory. It is so odious, that nothing can be suffered to support it, but positive law. Whatever inconveniences, therefore, may follow from the decision, I cannot say this case is allowed or approved by the law of England; and therefore the black must be discharged.[1]

Slavery had never been authorised by statute within England and Wales, and Lord Mansfield found it also to be unsupported within England by the common law, although he made no comment on the position in the overseas territories of the British Empire. The case was closely followed throughout the Empire, particularly in the thirteen American colonies.[2] Scholars have disagreed over precisely what legal precedent the case set.

Facts

James Somerset, an enslaved African, was purchased by Charles Stewart (or Steuart), a customs officer when he was in Boston, Province of Massachusetts Bay, a British crown colony in North America.[3]

Stewart brought Somerset with him when he returned to England in 1769, but in October 1771 Somerset escaped. After he was recaptured in November, Stewart had him imprisoned on the ship Ann and Mary (under Captain John Knowles), bound for the British colony of Jamaica. He directed that Somerset be sold to a plantation for labour. Somerset's three godparents from his baptism as a Christian in England—John Marlow, Thomas Walkin and Elizabeth Cade—made an application on 3 December before the Court of King's Bench for a writ of habeas corpus. Captain Knowles on 9 December produced Somerset before the Court of King's Bench, which had to determine whether his imprisonment was lawful.

The Chief Justice of the King's Bench, Lord Mansfield, ordered a hearing for 21 January; in the meantime he set the prisoner free on recognisance. Somerset's counsel's request to prepare arguments was granted, and so it was not until 7 February 1772 that the case was heard. In the meantime, the case had attracted a great deal of attention in the press and members of the public donated money to support the lawyers for both sides of the argument.

Granville Sharp, an abolitionist layman who continually sought test cases against the legal justifications for slavery, was Somerset's real backer. When the case was heard, five advocates appeared for Somerset, speaking at three hearings between February and May. These lawyers included Francis Hargrave, a young lawyer who made his reputation with this, his first case;[4] James Mansfield;[5] Serjeant-at-law William Davy;[6] Serjeant-at-law John Glynn;[7] John Alleyne;[8] and the noted Irish lawyer and orator John Philpot Curran,[9] whose lines in defence of Somerset were often quoted by American abolitionists, such as Frederick Douglass and Harriet Beecher Stowe in Uncle Tom's Cabin, chapter 37.

Somerset's advocates argued that while colonial laws might permit slavery, neither the common law of England nor any statutory law made by Parliament recognised the existence of slavery, and that slavery in England was therefore unlawful.[10] They also argued that English contract law did not allow for any person to enslave himself, nor could any contract be binding without the person's consent. The arguments focused on legal details rather than any humanitarian principles. When the two lawyers for Charles Stewart put their case, they argued that property was paramount and that it would be dangerous to free all the black people in England (who, according to Lord Mansfield's later judgment in the case, numbered 14,000 or 15,000).[11][12]

Judgment

After hearing oral arguments, Lord Mansfield proposed that Stewart could avoid the potentially far-reaching effects on slave-owners' profits if he were to allow Somerset to go free and not to insist on the court issuing a final judgment. Otherwise, Mansfield said that would give judgment, and "let justice be done whatever the consequence":

Easter Term, May 14, 1772.

... Mr. Stewart advances no claim on contract; he rests his whole demand on a right to the negro as slave, and mentions the purpose of detainure to be the sending of him over to be sold in Jamaica. If the parties will have judgment, fiat justitia, ruat cælum, let justice be done whatever be the consequence. £50 a head may not be a high price; then a loss follows to the proprietors of above £700,000 sterling. How would the law stand with respect to their settlement; their wages? How many actions for any slight coercion by the master? We cannot in any of these points direct the law; the law must rule us. In these particulars, it may be matter of weighty consideration, what provisions are made or set by law. Mr. Stewart may end the question, by discharging or giving freedom to the negro.

Stewart opted to continue with the case, and Mansfield retired to make his decision, reserving judgment for over a month. He gave his judgment on 22 June 1772. (This version is transcribed from a letter to the General Evening Post, reporting on the trial. It has modern paragraphing.)[13]

 
Lord Mansfield

Trinity Term, June 22, 1772.

We pay due attention to the opinion of Sir Philip York and Mr. Talbot in the year 1729, by which they pledged themselves to the British planters for the legal consequences of bringing slaves into this kingdom, or their being baptized; which opinion was repeated and recognized by Lord Hardwicke, sitting as Chancellor on the 19th of October, 1749, to the following effect: he said, that trover would lay for a negro slave; that a notion prevailed, that if a slave came into England, or became a Christian, he thereby became emancipated; but there was no foundation in law for such a notion; that when he and Lord Talbot were Attorney and Solicitor General, this notion of a slave becoming free by being baptized prevailed so strongly, that the planters industriously prevented their becoming Christians; upon which their opinion was taken, and upon their best consideration they were both clearly of opinion, that a slave did not in the least alter his situation or state toward his master or owner, either by being christened, or coming to England; that though the statute of Charles II had abolished tenure so far, that no man could be a villein regerdane [sic; scribal error: read regardant], yet if he would acknowledge himself a villein engrossed in any Court of Record, he knew of no way by which he could be entitled to his freedom without the consent of his master.

We feel the force of the inconveniences and consequences that will follow the decision of this question. Yet all of us are so clearly of one opinion upon the only question before us, that we think we ought to give judgment, without adjourning the matter to be argued before all the Judges, as usual in the Habeas Corpus, and as we at first intimated an intention of doing in this case. The only question then is, Is the cause returned sufficient for the remanding him? If not, he must be discharged.

The cause returned is, the slave absented himself, and departed from his master's service, and refused to return and serve him during his stay in England; whereupon, by his master's orders, he was put on board the ship by force, and there detained in secure custody, to be carried out of the kingdom and sold. So high an act of dominion must derive its authority, if any such it has, from the law of the kingdom where executed. A foreigner cannot be imprisoned here on the authority of any law existing in his own country: the power of a master over his servant is different in all countries, more or less limited or extensive; the exercise of it therefore must always be regulated by the laws of the place where exercised.

The state of slavery is of such a nature, that it is incapable of now being introduced by Courts of Justice upon mere reasoning or inferences from any principles, natural or political; it must take its rise from positive law; the origin of it can in no country or age be traced back to any other source: immemorial usage preserves the memory of positive law long after all traces of the occasion; reason, authority, and time of its introduction are lost; and in a case so odious as the condition of slaves must be taken strictly, the power claimed by this return was never in use here; no master ever was allowed here to take a slave by force to be sold abroad because he had deserted from his service, or for any other reason whatever; we cannot say the cause set forth by this return is allowed or approved of by the laws of this kingdom, therefore the black must be discharged.

Significance

After the decision

Somerset was freed and his supporters, who included black and white Londoners, celebrated. Whilst argument by counsel may have been based primarily on legal technicalities, Lord Mansfield appeared to believe that a great moral question had been posed and he deliberately avoided answering that question in full, because of its profound political and economic consequences.[citation needed]

There were reactions from prominent individuals in Britain over the decision; Sharp rhetorically asked "why is it that the poor sooty African meets with so different a measure of justice in England and America, as to be adjudged free in the one, and in the other held in the most abject Slavery?"[14][15] The hymnwriter William Cowper wrote in a poem that "we have no slaves at home - then why abroad?"[16] Polymath Benjamin Franklin, who was visiting England at the time, was less impressed with the celebrations of British abolitionists over the case, criticising their celebrations,

O Pharisaical Britain! to pride thyself in setting free a single Slave that happens to land on thy coasts, while thy Merchants in all thy ports are encouraged by thy laws to continue a commerce whereby so many hundreds of thousands are dragged into a slavery that can scarce be said to end with their lives, since it is entailed on their posterity![17]

Mansfield is often misquoted as declaring that "this air is too pure for a slave to breathe in" but no such words appear in the judgment. Rather, these words are part of the peroration of William Davy, Serjeant-at-Law for Somerset, who previously had cited a report of a 1569 case, in the reign of Elizabeth I, in which "one Cartwright brought a slave from Russia and would scourge him; for which he was questioned; and it was resolved, that England was too pure an air for a slave to breathe in"; it is not clear that this was said in the Cartwright case. Some legal historians think it was a misquote of an excerpt from Lord Chief Justice John Holt's judgment in Smith v Gould, in which he is reported to have said: "as soon as a negro comes to England he is free; one may be a villein in England but not a slave".[18]

Precedent

Legal academics have argued for years over what legal precedent was set in the case.[19][20][21] Differences in reports of the judgment make it hard to determine how far Lord Mansfield went in acknowledging the principles behind his deliberately narrow ruling. The passage of the judgment in the standard collections of law reports does not appear to refer to the removal of slaves by force from the country, whereas the same passage in the informal report by letter to the Evening Post, quoted above, does.[22]

In 1785, Lord Mansfield expressed the view in R v Inhabitants of Thames Ditton that his ruling in the Somerset case decided only that a slave could not be forcibly removed from England against his will. In the Thames Ditton case, a black woman named Charlotte Howe had been brought to England as a slave by one Captain Howe. After Captain Howe died, Charlotte sought poor relief from the Parish of Thames Ditton. Mansfield stated that the Somersett case had determined only that a master could not force a slave to leave England, much as in earlier times a master could not forcibly remove his villein. He ruled that Charlotte was not entitled to relief under Poor Laws because relief was dependent on having been "hired" and this did not relate to slaves. In the official report of the case, Lord Mansfield is recorded as interrupting counsel to state "The determinations go no further than that the master cannot by force compel him to go out of the kingdom."[citation needed]

The official report of Thames Ditton case supports the account of his judgment given in The Times letter and it is the strongest argument for a limited scope to the decision. Mansfield's judgment in the Somerset case does not say explicitly that slaves became free when they entered England—it is silent as to what their status in England was. In the Thames Ditton case, Lord Mansfield appeared to compare a slave's status to that of "villein in gross"—an ancient feudal status of servitude that had not been abolished from English law but which had died out. He had not done so in the Somerset case despite the invitation of Stewart's counsel.

The Somerset judgment, even if limited to prohibiting the forcible removal of slaves from England, established a radical precedent. It went against the published opinion of the Attorney-General, Sir Philip Yorke and the Solicitor-General, Mr Talbot in 1729 and the court decision of Sir Philip Yorke, by then Lord Chancellor Hardwicke, in 1749 in the case of Pearne v Lisle.[23] The latter had stated that slaves were items of property (Hardwicke described them as 'like stock on a farm'), who were not emancipated either by becoming Christian or by entry into England, that possession of them could be recovered by the legal action of trover and that their master might lawfully compel them to leave England with him. The claim of 1749 relied on the opinion of 1729, which quoted no precedents and gave no reasoning. There were other freedom suits with different rulings before 1772, notably Shanley v Harvey (1763) and R v Stapylton (1771, also before Lord Mansfield). While Mansfield's judgment avoided making a definitive judgment about the legality of slavery in England, it nonetheless challenged the assumptions that enslaved people were no more than property and that "Britishness" and whiteness were inseparable categories.[24]

The precedent established by Somerset's case was seen to have wider implications. In The Slave Grace in 1827, Lord Stowell upheld the decision of the Vice-Admiralty Court in Antigua, whereby a slave who had returned to the colonies, after having resided in England for a year where she was free and no authority could be exercised over her, by her voluntary return had to submit to the authority over her resulting from the slavery law of Antigua.[25] Lord Stowell criticised Lord Mansfield's judgment in the Somerset case, describing it as having reversed the judgment of Lord Hardwicke and establishing that "the owners of slaves had no authority or control over them in England, nor any power of sending them back to the colonies".

Lord Stowell further said:

Thus fell a system which had existed in this country without doubt, and which had been occasionally forced upon its colonies and has continued to this day—that is, above fifty years—without further interruption.

This wider reading of Somerset's case appears to be supported by the judgment of Mr. Justice Best in Forbes v Cochrane[26] in 1824. He said, "There is no statute recognising slavery which operates in that part of the British empire in which we are now called upon to administer justice."[27] He described the Somerset case as entitling a slave in England to discharge (from that status) and rendering any person attempting to force him back into slavery as guilty of trespass but not all reports of the case agree.[28][29]

Whatever the technical legal ratio decidendi of the case, the public at large widely understood the Somerset case to mean that, on English soil at least, no man was a slave.[30]

Domestic effect

 
Dido Elizabeth Belle with her cousin Elizabeth Murray, the great-nieces of Lord Mansfield, both were brought up in Kenwood House.

While Somerset's case provided a boon to the abolitionist movement, it did not end the holding of slaves within England.[31][32][33] It also did not end British participation in the slave trade or slavery in other parts of the British Empire, where colonies had established slave laws. Despite the ruling, escaped slaves continued to be recaptured in England. Just a year after the Somerset ruling, there was a newspaper report of a runaway being recaptured and committing suicide in England.[30] In addition, contemporary newspaper advertisements show that slaves continued to be bought and sold in the British Isles.[34] In 1779, a Liverpool newspaper advertised the sale of a black boy and a clipping of the ad was acquired by Sharp.[35] In 1788, anti-slavery campaigners, including Thomas Clarkson and James Ramsay, bought a slave in England to prove that slavery still existed in the country.[36] In 1792, a Bristol newspaper reported the sale of a female African slave in the port.[37][38][39]

It was not until 1807 that Parliament decided to suppress the slave trade, outlawing the practice by British subjects and seeking to suppress the trade by foreigners, through the sea power of the Royal Navy. Although the slave trade was suppressed, slavery continued in various parts of the British Empire until it was abolished by the Slavery Abolition Act 1833. The slave merchants who funded Stewart's defence were not anxious about James Somerset or the relatively limited number of slaves in Great Britain but about how abolition might affect their overseas interests. In the end, merchants could continue trading slaves for 61 years after Lord Mansfield's decision. Commentators have argued that the decision's importance lay in the way it was portrayed at the time and later by the newspapers, with the assistance of a well-organised abolitionist movement.

Abolitionists argued that the law of England should apply on English ships even if not in the Colonies. Stewart's counsel, funded and encouraged by the slave merchants, argued that the consequence of a judgment in Somerset's favour might be to free the slaves in England, said to be 14,000 in number. As Lord Mansfield said in the case report, "The setting 14,000 or 15,000 men at once free loose by a solemn opinion is much disagreeable in the effects it threatens". He tried to persuade Stewart to settle by releasing Somerset and so avoid a decision, as he had done in other cases.[40]

In 1780, Mansfield's house had been firebombed by a Protestant mob because of his judgments in support of rights for Catholics. In the Thames Ditton case,[41] Lord Mansfield appeared to seek to limit the influence of the Somerset case.

Lord Mansfield freed Somerset by his ruling and did so in the face of the 1729 opinion of the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General, men whom Mansfield in the Somerset case described as "two of the greatest men of their own or any times". The prominence of the case emphasised the issues to the public. It was widely, and incorrectly, interpreted as ending slavery in Britain. Even Mansfield himself considered slavery to still be legal in Britain. When Mansfield died, his 1782 will granted his mulatto grand-niece, Dido Elizabeth Belle, her freedom, indicating that slavery continued to be legal.[42]

Abolitionists considered this case to be Lord Mansfield's legacy and a watershed in the abolition of slavery. It is an example in English law of the maxim he quoted as a warning to the parties in the case before he began his months of deliberation, "Let justice be done though the heavens fall".[43]

Influence in Great Britain and colonies

The Somerset case became a significant part of the common law of slavery in the English-speaking world, and helped launch a new wave of abolitionism.[44] Lord Mansfield's ruling contributed to the concept that slavery was contrary "both to natural law and the principles of the English Constitution", a position adopted by abolitionists.[45]

The case of Knight v Wedderburn in Scotland began in 1774 and was concluded in 1778, with a ruling by the Court of Session that slavery was contrary to Scottish law. Some lawyers thought that similar determinations might be made in British colonies, which had clauses in their Royal charters requiring their laws not to be contrary to the laws of England; they usually contained qualifications along the lines of "so far as conveniently may be". Activists speculated that the principles behind Lord Mansfield's decision, might demand a rigorous definition of "conveniently", if a case were taken to its ultimate conclusion. Such a judicial ruling never took place as the Thirteen Colonies gained independence by 1783 and established laws related to slavery, with the northern states abolishing it, several gradually.

The Royal Navy began unilaterally interdicting the atlantic slave trade in 1807 with the establishment of the West Africa Squadron. At its height slavery interdiction would take up a 6th of the Royal Navy's fleet and would interdict the African-Middle East slave trade.[46]

Slavery in the rest of the British Empire continued until it was ended by the Slavery Abolition Act 1833. India was excluded from these provisions, as slavery was considered part of the indigenous culture and was not disrupted.[citation needed].

Thirteen Colonies and United States

The Somerset case was reported in detail by the American colonial press. In Massachusetts, several slaves filed freedom suits in 1773–1774 based on Mansfield's ruling; these were supported by the colony's General Court (for freedom of the slaves), but vetoed by successive Royal governors. As a result[citation needed], some individuals in pro-slavery and anti-slavery colonies, for opposite reasons, desired a distinct break from English law in order to achieve their goals with regard to slavery.[47]

Beginning during the Revolutionary War, Northern states began to abolish or rule against maintaining slavery. Vermont was the first in 1777, followed by Pennsylvania (1780), Massachusetts (1783) and Connecticut (1784).[48][49] In Massachusetts, rulings related to the freedom suits of Brom and Bett v Ashley (1781) and Quock Walker (1783) in county and state courts, respectively, resulted in slavery being found irreconcilable with the new state constitution and ended it in the state.[50][51] In this sense, the Walker case is seen as a United States counterpart to the Somerset Case.[47] In the case of Quock Walker, Massachusetts' Chief Justice William Cushing gave instructions to the jury as follows, indicating the end of slavery in the state:

As to the doctrine of slavery and the right of Christians to hold Africans in perpetual servitude, and sell and treat them as we do our horses and cattle, that (it is true) has been heretofore countenanced by the Province Laws formerly, but nowhere is it expressly enacted or established. It has been a usage – a usage which took its origin from the practice of some of the European nations, and the regulations of British government respecting the then Colonies, for the benefit of trade and wealth. But whatever sentiments have formerly prevailed in this particular or slid in upon us by the example of others, a different idea has taken place with the people of America, more favorable to the natural rights of mankind, and to that natural, innate desire of Liberty, with which Heaven (without regard to color, complexion, or shape of noses-features) has inspired all the human race. And upon this ground our Constitution of Government, by which the people of this Commonwealth have solemnly bound themselves, sets out with declaring that all men are born free and equal – and that every subject is entitled to liberty, and to have it guarded by the laws, as well as life and property – and in short is totally repugnant to the idea of being born slaves. This being the case, I think the idea of slavery is inconsistent with our own conduct and Constitution; and there can be no such thing as perpetual servitude of a rational creature, unless his liberty is forfeited by some criminal conduct or given up by personal consent or contract ...[52]

After the American Revolution, the Somerset decision "took on a life of its own and entered the mainstream of American constitutional discourse" and was important in anti-slavery constitutionalism.[45]

In the Southern states, slavery was integral to the economy and expanded after the Revolution, due largely to the development of the cotton gin, making cultivation of short-staple cotton profitable as a commodity crop throughout the Deep South, in the early to mid-19th century. Slavery in the states was protected from federal interference by the new Constitution of the United States.

France and slavery

Somerset's case has been compared to the major French case on the same question, Jean Boucaux v Verdelin of 1738. Boucaux was born a slave in the French colony of Saint-Domingue (now Haiti). He was brought by his master Verdelin, an army sergeant, to France in 1728, where he served as his cook. After some years, Verdelin began to seriously mistreat Boucaux. The slave had married a French woman without Verdelin's consent, and the master had him imprisoned for fear that Boucaux would try to escape. Boucaux filed a freedom suit from prison, seeking confirmation of his free status in France. Following French practice, the arguments of the lawyers are recorded, but those for the judgment are not. The lawyers' arguments covered the whole history of the status of slavery in mainland France.[53]

Boucaux won his case and was awarded back wages for the period of his work in France. Later that year, the national legislature passed a law to clarify some of the issues raised by the case. It did not abolish slavery in France. The law was implemented with regulations requiring the registration of slaves. The law provided that masters could bring colonial slaves to live and train in a "useful trade" in France for up to three years, without losing the right to return such slaves to servitude in the colonies. Other cases followed.[53]

See also

References

  1. ^ Usherwood, Stephen. (1981) "The Black Must Be Discharged – The Abolitionists' Debt to Lord Mansfield" History Today Volume: 31 Issue: 3. 1981.
  2. ^ van Cleve, George (2006). ""Somerset's Case" and Its Antecedents in Imperial Perspective". Law and History Review. 24 (3): 601–645. doi:10.1017/S073824800000081X. ISSN 0738-2480. JSTOR 27641404. S2CID 145793676.
  3. ^ He was Receiver-General for the Eastern Middle District of British North America; born in the Orkney Islands in 1725, he had emigrated to Virginia in 1741. His name is spelt in various ways, as was then common.
  4. ^ Wise, Steven M. (2005), p. 11.
  5. ^ Wise, Steven M. (2005), p. 40.
  6. ^ Wise, Steven M. (2005), p. 116.
  7. ^ Wise, Steven M. (2005), p. 40.
  8. ^ Wise, Steven M. (2005), p. 153.
  9. ^ Blumenthal, Sidney (2016). A Self-Made Man: The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln, 1809-1849. New York: Simon & Schuster, p. 341.
  10. ^ Trade in serfs had been condemned by the Council of London in 1102
  11. ^ Watson, Alan (2006), p. 226.
  12. ^ Judgment in Somerset v Stewart, p. 507
  13. ^ Letter to the London General Evening Post of 21–23 June 1772, headed by the following. "To the Editor of the general evening post. SIR, The following is as correctly my Lord M——d's Speech on the Negro Cause, as my memory, assisted by some notes, could make it: it begins after the stating of the return. Your's, & c. A CONSTANT READER." The letter is somewhat at variance with other sources reporting on the words of the Mansfield Decision (including the citation in the previous section of this article). Such inconsistencies may be related to the enthusiasm which abolitionists propagated the decision, and the spin which they sought to put on it in relation to their campaign. See, "Slavery in England and the Law" 2 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine, History Cooperative
  14. ^ Slavery, Propaganda, and the American Revolution
  15. ^ Somerset: Lord Mansfield and the Legitimacy of Slavery in the Anglo-American World, p. 116.
  16. ^ The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe.
  17. ^ Eighty-eight Years - The Long Death of Slavery in the United States, 1777–1865
  18. ^ Smith v Gould, (1702) 2 Salk 666.
  19. ^ Oldham, James (1988). "New Light on Mansfield and Slavery". Journal of British Studies. 27 (1): 45–68. doi:10.1086/385904. JSTOR 175399. S2CID 159665835.
  20. ^ Nadelhaft, Jerome (1966). "The Somersett Case and Slavery: Myth, Reality, and Repercussions". The Journal of Negro History. 51 (3): 193–208. doi:10.2307/2716061. JSTOR 2716061. S2CID 150260460.
  21. ^ Fiddes, Edward (1934). "Lord Mansfield and the Sommersett Case". Law Quarterly Review. 50: 499–511.
  22. ^ fullest version in Howell's State Trials vol. 20, pp. 1–82; full decision and summary of arguments in English Reports vol. 98, pp. 499–510.
  23. ^ (1749) Amb 75, 27 ER 47.
  24. ^ Christer Petley, White Fury: A Jamaican Slaveholder and the Age of Revolution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), p. 150.
  25. ^ (1827) 2 Hag Adm 94.
  26. ^ Forbes v Cochrane (1824) 3 Dow & Ry KB 679 at 742, 2 B & C 448 at 463, 107 ER 450 at 456, 2 State Trials NS 147
  27. ^ Great Britain. Parliament (1834). The Debates in Parliament, Session 1833 – on the Resolutions and Bill for the Aboliton of Slavery in the British Colonies: With a Copy of the Act of Parliament. p. 325.
  28. ^ (1824) 2 Barnewall and Cresswell, p. 448.
  29. ^ "Slavery in England". Anti-Slavery Society. Retrieved 18 September 2015. In 1824 in Forbes v Cochrane (1824) 3 Dow & Ry KB 679 at 742, 2 B & C 448 at 463, 107 ER 450 at 456, 2 State Trials NS 147, Holroyd J held that where a person gets out of the territory where it [slavery] prevails and out of the power of his master and gets under the protection of another power, without any wrongful act done by the party giving that protection, the right of the master, which is founded on the municipal law of the particular place only, does not continue.
  30. ^ a b Simon Schama, Rough Crossings (London: BBC Books, 2005), p. 61.
  31. ^ Kenneth Little, Negroes in Britain (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul: 1972), pp. 204-5.
  32. ^ Folarin Shyllon, Black Slaves in Britain (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1974), pp. 25-9.
  33. ^ Gretchen Gerzina, Black England: Life before Emancipation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp. 90–132.
  34. ^ "The National Archives – Exhibitions – Black presence – rights". The National Archives. Retrieved 25 April 2009.
  35. ^ Prince Hoare, Memoirs of Granville Sharp (London: Henry Colburn, 1820), p. 93.
  36. ^ Carl Wadstrom, An Essay in Colonization (London: Darton and Harvey, 1795), II, p. 269.
  37. ^ Folarin Shyllon, Black Slaves in Britain (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1974), p. 170.
  38. ^ Michael Sivapragasam, Why Did Black Londoners not join the Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme 1783–1815? (London: Open University, 2013), pp. 3-4.
  39. ^ Mora Dickson, The Powerful Bond: Hannah Kilham 1774-1832 (London: Dennis Dobson, 1980), pp. 111-2.
  40. ^ e.g. R v Stapylton (unreported).
  41. ^ (1785) 99 Eng. Rep. 891
  42. ^ Michael Sivapragasam, Why Did Black Londoners not join the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor|Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme 1783–1815? (London: Open University, Dissertation, 2013), p. 14.
  43. ^ Though the Heavens May Fall: James Somerset and the End of Human Slavery by Steven M Wise, 2004
  44. ^ Peter P. Hinks, John R. McKivigan, R. Owen Williams (2007) Encyclopedia of Antislavery and Abolition, p. 643. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007
  45. ^ a b Justin Buckley Dyer, "After the Revolution: Somerset and the Antislavery Tradition in Anglo-American Constitutional Development"], The Journal of Politics Vol. 71, No. 4 (Oct. 2009), pp. 1422–1434, Published by: Cambridge University Press, JSTOR 20622367
  46. ^ Rough Crossings, Simon Schama, 2005, ISBN 9780563487098
  47. ^ a b Wiecek, William M. JSTOR 1599128 "Somerset: Lord Mansfield and the Legitimacy of Slavery in the Anglo-American World", University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Autumn 1974), pp. 86–146
  48. ^ . Chapter I, Article I: State of Vermont. 1777. Archived from the original on 25 July 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
  49. ^ A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr., In the Matter of Color: Race & the American Legal Process, Oxford University Press, 1978. pp. 91, 310.
  50. ^ Zilversmit, Arthur (October 1968). "Quok Walker, Mumbet, and the Abolition of Slavery in Massachusetts". The William and Mary Quarterly. Third. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. 25 (44): 614–624. doi:10.2307/1916801. JSTOR 1916801.
  51. ^ Harper, Douglass. "Slavery in Massachusetts". Slavery in the North. Retrieved 10 June 2007.
  52. ^ Harper, Douglass. "Emancipation in Massachusetts", Slavery in the North. Retrieved 22 May 2010
  53. ^ a b There is an extended account of the case in Chapter 2 of Peabody, Sue, There Are No Slaves in France: The Political Culture of Race and Slavery in the Ancien Régime, Oxford University Press US, 2002, ISBN 0-19-515866-0, ISBN 978-0-19-515866-3, google books

Bibliography

  • Blumrosen, Alfred W.; Blumrosen, Ruth G. (2005). Slave Nation: How Slavery United the Colonies & Sparked the American Revolution. Naperville: Sourcebooks. ISBN 9781402226113.
  • Buehner, Henry Nicholas. Mansfieldism: Law and Politics in Anglo-America, 1700-1865 (PhD dissertation Temple University, 2014).
  • Dziobon, Sheila. "Judge, jurisprudence and slavery in England 1729–1807", in Colonialism, Slavery, Reparations and Trade (2012): 185-210.
  • Gerzina, Gretchen Holbrook. Black London: Life Before Emancipation (Rutgers University Press, 1997)
  • Hulsebosch, Daniel J. "Nothing But Liberty: Somerset's Case and the British Empire", Law and History Review 24 (2006): pp. 547–557.
  • Nadelhaft, Jerome (1966). "The Somersett Case and Slavery: Myth, Reality, and Repercussions". The Journal of Negro History. 51 (3): 193–208. doi:10.2307/2716061. JSTOR 2716061. S2CID 150260460.
  • Paley, Ruth (2006). "Imperial Politics and English Law: The Many Contexts of 'Somerset'". Law and History Review. 24 (3): 659–664. doi:10.1017/S0738248000000833. JSTOR 27641406. S2CID 143983648.
  • Watson, Alan (2006). "Lord Mansfield; Judicial Integrity or its Lack; Somerset's Case". Journal of Comparative Law. 1 (2): 225–234.
  • Webb, Derek A. "The Somerset Effect: Parsing Lord Mansfield's Words on Slavery in Nineteenth Century America", Law & History Review 32 (2014): 455+.
  • Wiecek, William M. "Somerset: Lord Mansfield and the Legitimacy of Slavery in the Anglo-American World", University of Chicago Law Review 42, No. 1 (1974): 86-146.
  • Weiner, Mark S. (2002). "Notes and documents - New Biographical Evidence on Somerset's Case". Slavery & Abolition. 23 (1): 121–136. doi:10.1080/714005226. S2CID 144332627.
  • Wise, Steven M. (2005). Though the Heavens May Fall: The Landmark Trial That Led to the End of Human Slavery. ISBN 0-7382-0695-4. Also published as Though the Heavens May Fall: James Somerset and the End of Human Slavery.

External links

  • Judgment in Somerset case

somerset, stewart, 1772, also, known, sommersett, steuart, somersett, case, mansfield, judgment, judgment, english, court, king, bench, 1772, relating, right, enslaved, person, english, soil, forcibly, removed, from, country, sent, jamaica, sale, according, re. Somerset v Stewart 1772 98 ER 499 also known as Sommersett v Steuart Somersett s case and the Mansfield Judgment is a judgment of the English Court of King s Bench in 1772 relating to the right of an enslaved person on English soil not to be forcibly removed from the country and sent to Jamaica for sale According to one reported version of the case Lord Mansfield decided that Somerset v StewartCourtKing s BenchDecided22 June 1772Citation s 1772 98 ER 499 1772 20 State Tr 1 1772 Lofft 1Case opinionsLord MansfieldKeywordsSlavery abolition The state of slavery is of such a nature that it is incapable of being introduced on any reasons moral or political but only by positive law which preserves its force long after the reasons occasions and time itself from whence it was created is erased from memory It is so odious that nothing can be suffered to support it but positive law Whatever inconveniences therefore may follow from the decision I cannot say this case is allowed or approved by the law of England and therefore the black must be discharged 1 Slavery had never been authorised by statute within England and Wales and Lord Mansfield found it also to be unsupported within England by the common law although he made no comment on the position in the overseas territories of the British Empire The case was closely followed throughout the Empire particularly in the thirteen American colonies 2 Scholars have disagreed over precisely what legal precedent the case set Contents 1 Facts 2 Judgment 3 Significance 3 1 After the decision 3 2 Precedent 3 3 Domestic effect 3 4 Influence in Great Britain and colonies 3 5 Thirteen Colonies and United States 4 France and slavery 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksFactsJames Somerset an enslaved African was purchased by Charles Stewart or Steuart a customs officer when he was in Boston Province of Massachusetts Bay a British crown colony in North America 3 Stewart brought Somerset with him when he returned to England in 1769 but in October 1771 Somerset escaped After he was recaptured in November Stewart had him imprisoned on the ship Ann and Mary under Captain John Knowles bound for the British colony of Jamaica He directed that Somerset be sold to a plantation for labour Somerset s three godparents from his baptism as a Christian in England John Marlow Thomas Walkin and Elizabeth Cade made an application on 3 December before the Court of King s Bench for a writ of habeas corpus Captain Knowles on 9 December produced Somerset before the Court of King s Bench which had to determine whether his imprisonment was lawful The Chief Justice of the King s Bench Lord Mansfield ordered a hearing for 21 January in the meantime he set the prisoner free on recognisance Somerset s counsel s request to prepare arguments was granted and so it was not until 7 February 1772 that the case was heard In the meantime the case had attracted a great deal of attention in the press and members of the public donated money to support the lawyers for both sides of the argument Granville Sharp an abolitionist layman who continually sought test cases against the legal justifications for slavery was Somerset s real backer When the case was heard five advocates appeared for Somerset speaking at three hearings between February and May These lawyers included Francis Hargrave a young lawyer who made his reputation with this his first case 4 James Mansfield 5 Serjeant at law William Davy 6 Serjeant at law John Glynn 7 John Alleyne 8 and the noted Irish lawyer and orator John Philpot Curran 9 whose lines in defence of Somerset were often quoted by American abolitionists such as Frederick Douglass and Harriet Beecher Stowe in Uncle Tom s Cabin chapter 37 Somerset s advocates argued that while colonial laws might permit slavery neither the common law of England nor any statutory law made by Parliament recognised the existence of slavery and that slavery in England was therefore unlawful 10 They also argued that English contract law did not allow for any person to enslave himself nor could any contract be binding without the person s consent The arguments focused on legal details rather than any humanitarian principles When the two lawyers for Charles Stewart put their case they argued that property was paramount and that it would be dangerous to free all the black people in England who according to Lord Mansfield s later judgment in the case numbered 14 000 or 15 000 11 12 JudgmentFurther information Slavery at common law After hearing oral arguments Lord Mansfield proposed that Stewart could avoid the potentially far reaching effects on slave owners profits if he were to allow Somerset to go free and not to insist on the court issuing a final judgment Otherwise Mansfield said that would give judgment and let justice be done whatever the consequence Easter Term May 14 1772 Mr Stewart advances no claim on contract he rests his whole demand on a right to the negro as slave and mentions the purpose of detainure to be the sending of him over to be sold in Jamaica If the parties will have judgment fiat justitia ruat caelum let justice be done whatever be the consequence 50 a head may not be a high price then a loss follows to the proprietors of above 700 000 sterling How would the law stand with respect to their settlement their wages How many actions for any slight coercion by the master We cannot in any of these points direct the law the law must rule us In these particulars it may be matter of weighty consideration what provisions are made or set by law Mr Stewart may end the question by discharging or giving freedom to the negro Stewart opted to continue with the case and Mansfield retired to make his decision reserving judgment for over a month He gave his judgment on 22 June 1772 This version is transcribed from a letter to the General Evening Post reporting on the trial It has modern paragraphing 13 nbsp Lord MansfieldTrinity Term June 22 1772 We pay due attention to the opinion of Sir Philip York and Mr Talbot in the year 1729 by which they pledged themselves to the British planters for the legal consequences of bringing slaves into this kingdom or their being baptized which opinion was repeated and recognized by Lord Hardwicke sitting as Chancellor on the 19th of October 1749 to the following effect he said that trover would lay for a negro slave that a notion prevailed that if a slave came into England or became a Christian he thereby became emancipated but there was no foundation in law for such a notion that when he and Lord Talbot were Attorney and Solicitor General this notion of a slave becoming free by being baptized prevailed so strongly that the planters industriously prevented their becoming Christians upon which their opinion was taken and upon their best consideration they were both clearly of opinion that a slave did not in the least alter his situation or state toward his master or owner either by being christened or coming to England that though the statute of Charles II had abolished tenure so far that no man could be a villein regerdane sic scribal error read regardant yet if he would acknowledge himself a villein engrossed in any Court of Record he knew of no way by which he could be entitled to his freedom without the consent of his master We feel the force of the inconveniences and consequences that will follow the decision of this question Yet all of us are so clearly of one opinion upon the only question before us that we think we ought to give judgment without adjourning the matter to be argued before all the Judges as usual in the Habeas Corpus and as we at first intimated an intention of doing in this case The only question then is Is the cause returned sufficient for the remanding him If not he must be discharged The cause returned is the slave absented himself and departed from his master s service and refused to return and serve him during his stay in England whereupon by his master s orders he was put on board the ship by force and there detained in secure custody to be carried out of the kingdom and sold So high an act of dominion must derive its authority if any such it has from the law of the kingdom where executed A foreigner cannot be imprisoned here on the authority of any law existing in his own country the power of a master over his servant is different in all countries more or less limited or extensive the exercise of it therefore must always be regulated by the laws of the place where exercised The state of slavery is of such a nature that it is incapable of now being introduced by Courts of Justice upon mere reasoning or inferences from any principles natural or political it must take its rise from positive law the origin of it can in no country or age be traced back to any other source immemorial usage preserves the memory of positive law long after all traces of the occasion reason authority and time of its introduction are lost and in a case so odious as the condition of slaves must be taken strictly the power claimed by this return was never in use here no master ever was allowed here to take a slave by force to be sold abroad because he had deserted from his service or for any other reason whatever we cannot say the cause set forth by this return is allowed or approved of by the laws of this kingdom therefore the black must be discharged SignificanceAfter the decision Somerset was freed and his supporters who included black and white Londoners celebrated Whilst argument by counsel may have been based primarily on legal technicalities Lord Mansfield appeared to believe that a great moral question had been posed and he deliberately avoided answering that question in full because of its profound political and economic consequences citation needed There were reactions from prominent individuals in Britain over the decision Sharp rhetorically asked why is it that the poor sooty African meets with so different a measure of justice in England and America as to be adjudged free in the one and in the other held in the most abject Slavery 14 15 The hymnwriter William Cowper wrote in a poem that we have no slaves at home then why abroad 16 Polymath Benjamin Franklin who was visiting England at the time was less impressed with the celebrations of British abolitionists over the case criticising their celebrations O Pharisaical Britain to pride thyself in setting free a single Slave that happens to land on thy coasts while thy Merchants in all thy ports are encouraged by thy laws to continue a commerce whereby so many hundreds of thousands are dragged into a slavery that can scarce be said to end with their lives since it is entailed on their posterity 17 Mansfield is often misquoted as declaring that this air is too pure for a slave to breathe in but no such words appear in the judgment Rather these words are part of the peroration of William Davy Serjeant at Law for Somerset who previously had cited a report of a 1569 case in the reign of Elizabeth I in which one Cartwright brought a slave from Russia and would scourge him for which he was questioned and it was resolved that England was too pure an air for a slave to breathe in it is not clear that this was said in the Cartwright case Some legal historians think it was a misquote of an excerpt from Lord Chief Justice John Holt s judgment in Smith v Gould in which he is reported to have said as soon as a negro comes to England he is free one may be a villein in England but not a slave 18 Precedent Legal academics have argued for years over what legal precedent was set in the case 19 20 21 Differences in reports of the judgment make it hard to determine how far Lord Mansfield went in acknowledging the principles behind his deliberately narrow ruling The passage of the judgment in the standard collections of law reports does not appear to refer to the removal of slaves by force from the country whereas the same passage in the informal report by letter to the Evening Post quoted above does 22 In 1785 Lord Mansfield expressed the view in R v Inhabitants of Thames Ditton that his ruling in the Somerset case decided only that a slave could not be forcibly removed from England against his will In the Thames Ditton case a black woman named Charlotte Howe had been brought to England as a slave by one Captain Howe After Captain Howe died Charlotte sought poor relief from the Parish of Thames Ditton Mansfield stated that the Somersett case had determined only that a master could not force a slave to leave England much as in earlier times a master could not forcibly remove his villein He ruled that Charlotte was not entitled to relief under Poor Laws because relief was dependent on having been hired and this did not relate to slaves In the official report of the case Lord Mansfield is recorded as interrupting counsel to state The determinations go no further than that the master cannot by force compel him to go out of the kingdom citation needed The official report of Thames Ditton case supports the account of his judgment given in The Times letter and it is the strongest argument for a limited scope to the decision Mansfield s judgment in the Somerset case does not say explicitly that slaves became free when they entered England it is silent as to what their status in England was In the Thames Ditton case Lord Mansfield appeared to compare a slave s status to that of villein in gross an ancient feudal status of servitude that had not been abolished from English law but which had died out He had not done so in the Somerset case despite the invitation of Stewart s counsel The Somerset judgment even if limited to prohibiting the forcible removal of slaves from England established a radical precedent It went against the published opinion of the Attorney General Sir Philip Yorke and the Solicitor General Mr Talbot in 1729 and the court decision of Sir Philip Yorke by then Lord Chancellor Hardwicke in 1749 in the case of Pearne v Lisle 23 The latter had stated that slaves were items of property Hardwicke described them as like stock on a farm who were not emancipated either by becoming Christian or by entry into England that possession of them could be recovered by the legal action of trover and that their master might lawfully compel them to leave England with him The claim of 1749 relied on the opinion of 1729 which quoted no precedents and gave no reasoning There were other freedom suits with different rulings before 1772 notably Shanley v Harvey 1763 and R v Stapylton 1771 also before Lord Mansfield While Mansfield s judgment avoided making a definitive judgment about the legality of slavery in England it nonetheless challenged the assumptions that enslaved people were no more than property and that Britishness and whiteness were inseparable categories 24 The precedent established by Somerset s case was seen to have wider implications In The Slave Grace in 1827 Lord Stowell upheld the decision of the Vice Admiralty Court in Antigua whereby a slave who had returned to the colonies after having resided in England for a year where she was free and no authority could be exercised over her by her voluntary return had to submit to the authority over her resulting from the slavery law of Antigua 25 Lord Stowell criticised Lord Mansfield s judgment in the Somerset case describing it as having reversed the judgment of Lord Hardwicke and establishing that the owners of slaves had no authority or control over them in England nor any power of sending them back to the colonies Lord Stowell further said Thus fell a system which had existed in this country without doubt and which had been occasionally forced upon its colonies and has continued to this day that is above fifty years without further interruption This wider reading of Somerset s case appears to be supported by the judgment of Mr Justice Best in Forbes v Cochrane 26 in 1824 He said There is no statute recognising slavery which operates in that part of the British empire in which we are now called upon to administer justice 27 He described the Somerset case as entitling a slave in England to discharge from that status and rendering any person attempting to force him back into slavery as guilty of trespass but not all reports of the case agree 28 29 Whatever the technical legal ratio decidendi of the case the public at large widely understood the Somerset case to mean that on English soil at least no man was a slave 30 Domestic effect nbsp Dido Elizabeth Belle with her cousin Elizabeth Murray the great nieces of Lord Mansfield both were brought up in Kenwood House While Somerset s case provided a boon to the abolitionist movement it did not end the holding of slaves within England 31 32 33 It also did not end British participation in the slave trade or slavery in other parts of the British Empire where colonies had established slave laws Despite the ruling escaped slaves continued to be recaptured in England Just a year after the Somerset ruling there was a newspaper report of a runaway being recaptured and committing suicide in England 30 In addition contemporary newspaper advertisements show that slaves continued to be bought and sold in the British Isles 34 In 1779 a Liverpool newspaper advertised the sale of a black boy and a clipping of the ad was acquired by Sharp 35 In 1788 anti slavery campaigners including Thomas Clarkson and James Ramsay bought a slave in England to prove that slavery still existed in the country 36 In 1792 a Bristol newspaper reported the sale of a female African slave in the port 37 38 39 It was not until 1807 that Parliament decided to suppress the slave trade outlawing the practice by British subjects and seeking to suppress the trade by foreigners through the sea power of the Royal Navy Although the slave trade was suppressed slavery continued in various parts of the British Empire until it was abolished by the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 The slave merchants who funded Stewart s defence were not anxious about James Somerset or the relatively limited number of slaves in Great Britain but about how abolition might affect their overseas interests In the end merchants could continue trading slaves for 61 years after Lord Mansfield s decision Commentators have argued that the decision s importance lay in the way it was portrayed at the time and later by the newspapers with the assistance of a well organised abolitionist movement Abolitionists argued that the law of England should apply on English ships even if not in the Colonies Stewart s counsel funded and encouraged by the slave merchants argued that the consequence of a judgment in Somerset s favour might be to free the slaves in England said to be 14 000 in number As Lord Mansfield said in the case report The setting 14 000 or 15 000 men at once free loose by a solemn opinion is much disagreeable in the effects it threatens He tried to persuade Stewart to settle by releasing Somerset and so avoid a decision as he had done in other cases 40 In 1780 Mansfield s house had been firebombed by a Protestant mob because of his judgments in support of rights for Catholics In the Thames Ditton case 41 Lord Mansfield appeared to seek to limit the influence of the Somerset case Lord Mansfield freed Somerset by his ruling and did so in the face of the 1729 opinion of the Attorney General and Solicitor General men whom Mansfield in the Somerset case described as two of the greatest men of their own or any times The prominence of the case emphasised the issues to the public It was widely and incorrectly interpreted as ending slavery in Britain Even Mansfield himself considered slavery to still be legal in Britain When Mansfield died his 1782 will granted his mulatto grand niece Dido Elizabeth Belle her freedom indicating that slavery continued to be legal 42 Abolitionists considered this case to be Lord Mansfield s legacy and a watershed in the abolition of slavery It is an example in English law of the maxim he quoted as a warning to the parties in the case before he began his months of deliberation Let justice be done though the heavens fall 43 Influence in Great Britain and colonies The Somerset case became a significant part of the common law of slavery in the English speaking world and helped launch a new wave of abolitionism 44 Lord Mansfield s ruling contributed to the concept that slavery was contrary both to natural law and the principles of the English Constitution a position adopted by abolitionists 45 The case of Knight v Wedderburn in Scotland began in 1774 and was concluded in 1778 with a ruling by the Court of Session that slavery was contrary to Scottish law Some lawyers thought that similar determinations might be made in British colonies which had clauses in their Royal charters requiring their laws not to be contrary to the laws of England they usually contained qualifications along the lines of so far as conveniently may be Activists speculated that the principles behind Lord Mansfield s decision might demand a rigorous definition of conveniently if a case were taken to its ultimate conclusion Such a judicial ruling never took place as the Thirteen Colonies gained independence by 1783 and established laws related to slavery with the northern states abolishing it several gradually The Royal Navy began unilaterally interdicting the atlantic slave trade in 1807 with the establishment of the West Africa Squadron At its height slavery interdiction would take up a 6th of the Royal Navy s fleet and would interdict the African Middle East slave trade 46 Slavery in the rest of the British Empire continued until it was ended by the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 India was excluded from these provisions as slavery was considered part of the indigenous culture and was not disrupted citation needed Thirteen Colonies and United States The Somerset case was reported in detail by the American colonial press In Massachusetts several slaves filed freedom suits in 1773 1774 based on Mansfield s ruling these were supported by the colony s General Court for freedom of the slaves but vetoed by successive Royal governors As a result citation needed some individuals in pro slavery and anti slavery colonies for opposite reasons desired a distinct break from English law in order to achieve their goals with regard to slavery 47 Beginning during the Revolutionary War Northern states began to abolish or rule against maintaining slavery Vermont was the first in 1777 followed by Pennsylvania 1780 Massachusetts 1783 and Connecticut 1784 48 49 In Massachusetts rulings related to the freedom suits of Brom and Bett v Ashley 1781 and Quock Walker 1783 in county and state courts respectively resulted in slavery being found irreconcilable with the new state constitution and ended it in the state 50 51 In this sense the Walker case is seen as a United States counterpart to the Somerset Case 47 In the case of Quock Walker Massachusetts Chief Justice William Cushing gave instructions to the jury as follows indicating the end of slavery in the state As to the doctrine of slavery and the right of Christians to hold Africans in perpetual servitude and sell and treat them as we do our horses and cattle that it is true has been heretofore countenanced by the Province Laws formerly but nowhere is it expressly enacted or established It has been a usage a usage which took its origin from the practice of some of the European nations and the regulations of British government respecting the then Colonies for the benefit of trade and wealth But whatever sentiments have formerly prevailed in this particular or slid in upon us by the example of others a different idea has taken place with the people of America more favorable to the natural rights of mankind and to that natural innate desire of Liberty with which Heaven without regard to color complexion or shape of noses features has inspired all the human race And upon this ground our Constitution of Government by which the people of this Commonwealth have solemnly bound themselves sets out with declaring that all men are born free and equal and that every subject is entitled to liberty and to have it guarded by the laws as well as life and property and in short is totally repugnant to the idea of being born slaves This being the case I think the idea of slavery is inconsistent with our own conduct and Constitution and there can be no such thing as perpetual servitude of a rational creature unless his liberty is forfeited by some criminal conduct or given up by personal consent or contract 52 After the American Revolution the Somerset decision took on a life of its own and entered the mainstream of American constitutional discourse and was important in anti slavery constitutionalism 45 In the Southern states slavery was integral to the economy and expanded after the Revolution due largely to the development of the cotton gin making cultivation of short staple cotton profitable as a commodity crop throughout the Deep South in the early to mid 19th century Slavery in the states was protected from federal interference by the new Constitution of the United States France and slaverySomerset s case has been compared to the major French case on the same question Jean Boucaux v Verdelin of 1738 Boucaux was born a slave in the French colony of Saint Domingue now Haiti He was brought by his master Verdelin an army sergeant to France in 1728 where he served as his cook After some years Verdelin began to seriously mistreat Boucaux The slave had married a French woman without Verdelin s consent and the master had him imprisoned for fear that Boucaux would try to escape Boucaux filed a freedom suit from prison seeking confirmation of his free status in France Following French practice the arguments of the lawyers are recorded but those for the judgment are not The lawyers arguments covered the whole history of the status of slavery in mainland France 53 Boucaux won his case and was awarded back wages for the period of his work in France Later that year the national legislature passed a law to clarify some of the issues raised by the case It did not abolish slavery in France The law was implemented with regulations requiring the registration of slaves The law provided that masters could bring colonial slaves to live and train in a useful trade in France for up to three years without losing the right to return such slaves to servitude in the colonies Other cases followed 53 See alsoAbolitionism in the United Kingdom Boone v Eyre 1779 1 Henry Blackstone 273 a subsequent Lord Mansfield case relating to a condition precedent Dred Scott Little Ephraim Robin John and Ancona Robin John Ottobah Cugoano United Kingdom constitutional law United Kingdom labour law William CushingReferences Usherwood Stephen 1981 The Black Must Be Discharged The Abolitionists Debt to Lord Mansfield History Today Volume 31 Issue 3 1981 van Cleve George 2006 Somerset s Case and Its Antecedents in Imperial Perspective Law and History Review 24 3 601 645 doi 10 1017 S073824800000081X ISSN 0738 2480 JSTOR 27641404 S2CID 145793676 He was Receiver General for the Eastern Middle District of British North America born in the Orkney Islands in 1725 he had emigrated to Virginia in 1741 His name is spelt in various ways as was then common Wise Steven M 2005 p 11 Wise Steven M 2005 p 40 Wise Steven M 2005 p 116 Wise Steven M 2005 p 40 Wise Steven M 2005 p 153 Blumenthal Sidney 2016 A Self Made Man The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln 1809 1849 New York Simon amp Schuster p 341 Trade in serfs had been condemned by the Council of London in 1102 Watson Alan 2006 p 226 Judgment in Somerset v Stewart p 507 Letter to the London General Evening Post of 21 23 June 1772 headed by the following To the Editor of the general evening post SIR The following is as correctly my Lord M d s Speech on the Negro Cause as my memory assisted by some notes could make it it begins after the stating of the return Your s amp c A CONSTANT READER The letter is somewhat at variance with other sources reporting on the words of the Mansfield Decision including the citation in the previous section of this article Such inconsistencies may be related to the enthusiasm which abolitionists propagated the decision and the spin which they sought to put on it in relation to their campaign See Slavery in England and the Law Archived 2 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine History Cooperative Slavery Propaganda and the American Revolution Somerset Lord Mansfield and the Legitimacy of Slavery in the Anglo American World p 116 The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe Eighty eight Years The Long Death of Slavery in the United States 1777 1865 Smith v Gould 1702 2 Salk 666 Oldham James 1988 New Light on Mansfield and Slavery Journal of British Studies 27 1 45 68 doi 10 1086 385904 JSTOR 175399 S2CID 159665835 Nadelhaft Jerome 1966 The Somersett Case and Slavery Myth Reality and Repercussions The Journal of Negro History 51 3 193 208 doi 10 2307 2716061 JSTOR 2716061 S2CID 150260460 Fiddes Edward 1934 Lord Mansfield and the Sommersett Case Law Quarterly Review 50 499 511 fullest version in Howell s State Trials vol 20 pp 1 82 full decision and summary of arguments in English Reports vol 98 pp 499 510 1749 Amb 75 27 ER 47 Christer Petley White Fury A Jamaican Slaveholder and the Age of Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press 2018 p 150 1827 2 Hag Adm 94 Forbes v Cochrane 1824 3 Dow amp Ry KB 679 at 742 2 B amp C 448 at 463 107 ER 450 at 456 2 State Trials NS 147 Great Britain Parliament 1834 The Debates in Parliament Session 1833 on the Resolutions and Bill for the Aboliton of Slavery in the British Colonies With a Copy of the Act of Parliament p 325 1824 2 Barnewall and Cresswell p 448 Slavery in England Anti Slavery Society Retrieved 18 September 2015 In 1824 in Forbes v Cochrane 1824 3 Dow amp Ry KB 679 at 742 2 B amp C 448 at 463 107 ER 450 at 456 2 State Trials NS 147 Holroyd J held that where a person gets out of the territory where it slavery prevails and out of the power of his master and gets under the protection of another power without any wrongful act done by the party giving that protection the right of the master which is founded on the municipal law of the particular place only does not continue a b Simon Schama Rough Crossings London BBC Books 2005 p 61 Kenneth Little Negroes in Britain London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1972 pp 204 5 Folarin Shyllon Black Slaves in Britain Oxford Oxford University Press 1974 pp 25 9 Gretchen Gerzina Black England Life before Emancipation Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 pp 90 132 The National Archives Exhibitions Black presence rights The National Archives Retrieved 25 April 2009 Prince Hoare Memoirs of Granville Sharp London Henry Colburn 1820 p 93 Carl Wadstrom An Essay in Colonization London Darton and Harvey 1795 II p 269 Folarin Shyllon Black Slaves in Britain Oxford Oxford University Press 1974 p 170 Michael Sivapragasam Why Did Black Londoners not join the Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme 1783 1815 London Open University 2013 pp 3 4 Mora Dickson The Powerful Bond Hannah Kilham 1774 1832 London Dennis Dobson 1980 pp 111 2 e g R v Stapylton unreported 1785 99 Eng Rep 891 Michael Sivapragasam Why Did Black Londoners not join the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme 1783 1815 London Open University Dissertation 2013 p 14 Though the Heavens May Fall James Somerset and the End of Human Slavery by Steven M Wise 2004 Peter P Hinks John R McKivigan R Owen Williams 2007 Encyclopedia of Antislavery and Abolition p 643 Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 a b Justin Buckley Dyer After the Revolution Somerset and the Antislavery Tradition in Anglo American Constitutional Development The Journal of Politics Vol 71 No 4 Oct 2009 pp 1422 1434 Published by Cambridge University Press JSTOR 20622367 Rough Crossings Simon Schama 2005 ISBN 9780563487098 a b Wiecek William M JSTOR 1599128 Somerset Lord Mansfield and the Legitimacy of Slavery in the Anglo American World University of Chicago Law Review Vol 42 No 1 Autumn 1974 pp 86 146 Constitution of Vermont 1777 Chapter I Article I State of Vermont 1777 Archived from the original on 25 July 2012 Retrieved 12 February 2014 A Leon Higginbotham Jr In the Matter of Color Race amp the American Legal Process Oxford University Press 1978 pp 91 310 Zilversmit Arthur October 1968 Quok Walker Mumbet and the Abolition of Slavery in Massachusetts The William and Mary Quarterly Third Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 25 44 614 624 doi 10 2307 1916801 JSTOR 1916801 Harper Douglass Slavery in Massachusetts Slavery in the North Retrieved 10 June 2007 Harper Douglass Emancipation in Massachusetts Slavery in the North Retrieved 22 May 2010 a b There is an extended account of the case in Chapter 2 of Peabody Sue There Are No Slaves in France The Political Culture of Race and Slavery in the Ancien Regime Oxford University Press US 2002 ISBN 0 19 515866 0 ISBN 978 0 19 515866 3 google booksBibliographyBlumrosen Alfred W Blumrosen Ruth G 2005 Slave Nation How Slavery United the Colonies amp Sparked the American Revolution Naperville Sourcebooks ISBN 9781402226113 Buehner Henry Nicholas Mansfieldism Law and Politics in Anglo America 1700 1865 PhD dissertation Temple University 2014 Dziobon Sheila Judge jurisprudence and slavery in England 1729 1807 in Colonialism Slavery Reparations and Trade 2012 185 210 Gerzina Gretchen Holbrook Black London Life Before Emancipation Rutgers University Press 1997 Hulsebosch Daniel J Nothing But Liberty Somerset s Case and the British Empire Law and History Review 24 2006 pp 547 557 Nadelhaft Jerome 1966 The Somersett Case and Slavery Myth Reality and Repercussions The Journal of Negro History 51 3 193 208 doi 10 2307 2716061 JSTOR 2716061 S2CID 150260460 Paley Ruth 2006 Imperial Politics and English Law The Many Contexts of Somerset Law and History Review 24 3 659 664 doi 10 1017 S0738248000000833 JSTOR 27641406 S2CID 143983648 Watson Alan 2006 Lord Mansfield Judicial Integrity or its Lack Somerset s Case Journal of Comparative Law 1 2 225 234 Webb Derek A The Somerset Effect Parsing Lord Mansfield s Words on Slavery in Nineteenth Century America Law amp History Review 32 2014 455 Wiecek William M Somerset Lord Mansfield and the Legitimacy of Slavery in the Anglo American World University of Chicago Law Review 42 No 1 1974 86 146 Weiner Mark S 2002 Notes and documents New Biographical Evidence on Somerset s Case Slavery amp Abolition 23 1 121 136 doi 10 1080 714005226 S2CID 144332627 Wise Steven M 2005 Though the Heavens May Fall The Landmark Trial That Led to the End of Human Slavery ISBN 0 7382 0695 4 Also published as Though the Heavens May Fall James Somerset and the End of Human Slavery External linksPortal nbsp history Judgment in Somerset case Alternative version of judgment in Somerset case Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Somerset v Stewart amp oldid 1207241064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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