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15 Geo. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 137 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/geojlap15 and id is 142 raw text is: 



      The Understanding of Neither Slavery Nor
      Involuntary Servitude Shall Exist Before the
                     Thirteenth Amendment


                              DAVID R. UPHAM*

                                  ABSTRACT
  By  providing that [n]either slavery nor involuntary servitude shall exist,
the authors of the Thirteenth Amendment  adopted a prohibitory formula, origi-
nating in the Northwest Ordinance of 1787  that was subsequently incorporated
into the organic laws of many territories and states, and by 1865, had been for
decades  subject to extensive interpretation and  commentary.  To  assess the
original understanding  of the Thirteenth Amendment,  then, it is necessary to
examine  the pre-Amendment  understanding  of this prohibitory language. In this
article, I review this evidence and draw   the following conclusions: (1) the
prohibition was deemed  derivative of the natural-rights principles of the Decla-
ration of Independence;  (2) the prohibited slavery and involuntary servitude
represented two distinct, yet partially-overlapping, concepts; (3) the prohibited
slavery and involuntary servitude did not encompass traditional servitudes like
those between parent and  child; (4) the stipulated non-existence of slavery and
involuntary servitude concerned chiefly their legal existence and perhaps also
their actual existence; and (5) this stipulated non-existence did not, ipso facto,
prohibit racial discrimination or any other badges of servitude.
INTRODUCTION                    .......................................... 138

  I.  JEFFERSON'S DECLARATION  AND JEFFERSON'S ORDINANCE    ........ 141

  II. SLAVERY V. INVOLUNTARY  SERVITUDE     ......................   146

III.  THE EXCEPTIONS              ..................................... 154
      A.  Traditional Servitudes Remaining Lawful Under  the
          Ordinance  ........................................ 155
      B.  Possible Modifications of Arrangements Arising from
          Contracts: Master-Apprentice  and Obligor-Obligee  ....... ..  160



  * Associate Professor of Politics, University of Dallas; Ph.D., University of Dallas; J.D., the
University of Texas School of Law. I am very grateful for the criticism, advice, and encouragement
offered by participants in the 2015 Salmon P. Chase Lecture and Colloquium on the Constitution, held
at the Georgetown Center for the Constitution. I am further thankful to the editors and staff of this
journal for their fine work in preparing this article for publication. I dedicate this article to the memory
of Professor Harry V. Jaffa. D 2017, David R. Upham.


137

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