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1 From the United States Gazette. Important Slave Case 1839

handle is hein.trials/acpl0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 1rom te United states Gazette.
:1cO~1T~SZL7TE CASE.

The case which is stated in the following
opinion of JUnE HOPKINBON, delivered on %he
8th March, is of a character that cannot fail
to be interesting to the communiity. A request
was made for a copy for publication, which
was kindly and promptly complied with.
The ca;e and labor manifested in collating
and weighing the testimony, reflects much
credit upon the Judge, and his example in
preparing an opinion which so fully embraces
the circumstances of the case, as well as the
reasons upon which his decision is founded, is
worthy of imitation.
During 'this investigation the Court room
was filled to overflowing, and, the result was
received with shoutsof rejoicingand applause.
Counsel for claimant, E. D; INoRAHAM, Esq.
For the respondent, CHARLES GILPIN and
DAvID PAUL BaowN, Esqrs., Counsellors of
the Pennsylvania Society, for promoting the
Abolition of Slavery, &c.
OPINION DELIVERED, MARCH 8th, 1839,
In the case of ,Isaac or  William Stans-
bury ;' claimed as afugltive from the ser-
vice of Ruth Williams, of Prince George
county, in the Stale of Maryland.
OPINION OF JUDGE HOPKINSON.
The hearing of this case commenced on the
31st day of January last, and has been attend-
ed throughout the several sittings with an in-
creasing excitement and interest. There are
questions and circumstances involved in it
calculated to give it more importance than or-
dinarily belongs to examinations of this de-
scription.
On the one side we have a citizen of a sister
state, coming here under the protection and
authority of that state, claiming to have restor-
ed to her certain property, of which she al-
leges she has been unlawfully deprived ; and
insisting upon her right to my order to have
this property delivered to her by the injunc-
tions of the Constitution of the United States,
which I am bound to obey. Inthe other party,
who denies and resists this claim, we have an
individual who has lived among us, for more
than twenty-three years-has a wife and fami-
ly of children depending upon him, and a
home, from all which he must be separated, if
the claimant has made good her right. These
are considerations that make it peculiarly in-
cumbent on the Judge, who is to decide the
question, and to decide it by the evidence
that has been brought before him, to weigh
that evidence carefully and scrupulously, with-

out prejudice or influence from any other
quarter. He is to yield nothing, on the one
side to the power and patriotism of the state
of Maryland, which have been strongly invok-
ed for the cause of the claimant; nor, on the
other, to any feeling for the consequence of
his judgment to the respondent and his fami-
ly-much less to any opinions of his own on
the question of slavery.
Nobody recognises more fully and firmly
than myself the complete legal and constitu-
tional right of the owner of a slave in and to
his person and services-no one is more deep-
ly impressed than I am by thesolemn guaran-
ty, which those states of our Union, whose
laws permit slavery to exist in them, have re-
ceived and have a right to exact from every
other state ; that this right shall be faithfully
regarded, and that if a person held to labor or
service in one state by the laws thereof shall
escape into another, he shall be delivered up
to the party to whom such service or labor
shall be due. This right it is my duty and
desire to respect and secure, not only as a
Judge, sworn to respect and secure it, but as
a citizen of the United States ; firmly beliey-
ing the union of these states to be .our first
and greatest blessing, and. to maintain it. our
highest duty; and knowing that it cannot be
maintained but by a faithful performance of
all its obligations and provisions by all the
parties to it.  In my view, the happiness of
black and white, of the freeman and the slave,
is intimately, I may say in our present cir-
cumstances, inseparably connected with the
maintenance of that government, under which,
and by which, we have attained an unexam-
pled prosperity, and have secured to us every
right which a national people can wish for or
enjoy. I make these remarks, because the
topics to which they allude found no incon-
siderable place in the argument of this case.
I take the occasion, too, to observe, that the
experience of this case, as well as many others,
has shown that this mode of trial, directed by
the act of Congress, is better for both parties,
especially for the person claimed as a slave,
than a trial by Jury could be. This hearing
began on the last day of January-the claimant
of course came prepared with the ordinary
prima fade proof,.suflicient, if uncontradicted,
to entitle her to the possession of the respon.
dent. He was taken suddenly in the street,
without any notice or expectation of any such
design or danger.  He could not, therefore,

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