Opinion
January, 1823.
A writ of habeas corpus was issued January 9, 1823, directed to Stephen D. Taylor to have the body of Reese Morris, son of Hannah Harman, an infant under the age of twenty-one years, before the Chancellor, etc. This writ was issued on the affidavit of Hannah Harman, the mother of said Reese.
Stephen D. Taylor brought the boy before the Chancellor on the 11th January and returned or certified on said writ that on or about the 7th February, 1816, the mother of said child carried him to said S. D. Taylor and requested him, S. D. Taylor, to take the child, then about two and an half years old, and raise him; and that she agreed to bind him to the said S. D. Taylor, which through negligence was never done, and that ever since the said February, 1816, the child had been in his possession, and that he had fed, clothed and raised the said Reese.
The following suggestion was made against the said return in the name of said Reese, viz that when said custody was obtained by the said Stephen D. Taylor, there was no such promise on the part of said Hannah to bind said Reese to said S. D. Taylor, and that no such promise had at any time since been made by said Hannah. That said S. D. Taylor was, at the time of obtaining the custody of him, said Reese, following the trade of a blacksmith, and that any promise on the part of the mother to bind him would have been with a view to his learning of and being taught by the said S. D. Taylor the art and mystery of blacksmithing. That the said S. D. Taylor is now very poor and a sickly man; that his property has been lately sold by the Sheriff of Kent County for the payment of his debts, and that his present circumstances are such that he will not have it in his power to teach the said Reese the said art and mystery of blacksmithing, and otherwise to render him altogether incapable of being a suitable master to the said Reese or any other apprentice.
Witnesses were examined on the part of the State and said S. D. Taylor.
The following is the copy of the record and judgment made by THE CHANCELLOR, except the abbreviations and figures.
And now, to wit, this 11th Jany. 1823, Stephen D. Taylor, named in the annexed writ of hab. carp., brings here before me, N. R. Chancellor, at my Chambers, the body of the said Reese Morris, named in said writ, and makes return of said writ, and certifies the cause of the capture and detention of the said R. M. as the same is endorsed on said writ. And thereupon H. Harman, the mother of said Reese, who, together with her counsel, Martin W. Bates, are here present before the Chancellor, by her said counsel prays, farther time to make suggestions against the return aforesaid of said S. D. T. And thereupon farther time is given, and the farther hearing of this case to the 13th day of the said month of January, to the town of Dover.
And now the said Reese Morris, named in said writ of hab. corp., makes suggestion against the said return of the said S. D. T. here at Dover on the 13th Jany. aforesaid, the said S. D. T., Reese Morris, and H. Harman, the mother of the said R. M. and Martin W. Bates, counsel for said H. and acting to obtain the discharge of the said Reese, being here present before the Chancellor. And the said parties respectively pray that summons should issue for their witnesses respectively that the material facts may be ascertained. Whereupon a summons is issued for John Bell, Thomas Stevenson and James Stevenson, witnesses for the State; and another summons is issued for George Amos, Mary Knight, Thomas York and Eleanor Jester, witnesses for the said S. D. T., both of which said summonses are returnable on Wednesday, the 15th day of this said month of
Jany. aforesaid at the Chambers of the Chancellor. And the farther hearing —
So the record proceeds with the case, which is here omitted, to the final hearing and the judgment. The judgment is as follows:
And all the proof of the parties being made, it appears to the Chancellor that the said H. Harman, mother of the said Reese, when a single woman, the said Reese being illegitimate, about the month of February, 1816, when the said Reese was between 2 and 3 years old, carried the said R. to the said S. D. T. to learn the trade of a blacksmith, when he the said R. should be sufficiently old and grown for that purpose, and that she intended and promised the said S. D. T. to bind said R. to the said S. D. T. to learn said trade, and that said Reese has continued to reside with the said S. D. T. ever since until this time. And it farther appears to the Chancellor that the said S. D. T. is as competent now to teach the said Reese the trade of a blacksmith as he then was; but that the said R., though a healthy, hearty child, is at present too small and too young to be put to the said business. And it farther appears to the Chancellor that the said Reese has been maintained entirely by the said S. D. T. at his, the said S. D. Taylor's, own proper cost and expense, for nearly 7 years, while the said R. was unable to render any service. And the said Reese now beginning to be useful, it seems to the Chancellor that it would be unjust to remove the said R. from the said S. D. Taylor unless compensation were made to the said S. D. T. for so raising and maintaining the said R. since February, 1816. And that said S. D. Taylor offering to yield up the said R. M. upon the payment of 50 dlls. to him as a compensation for the raising and maintaining the said R. as aforesaid for the time aforesaid, which offer Gabriel Harman, the husband of the said H., here before the Chancellor absolutely rejects; and the said offer of the said S. D. T. being in the opinion of the Chancellor reasonable, and the said H. refusing, and having refused to bind the said Reese to the said S. D. T. as she originally intended and promised; and it appearing to the Chancellor to be the object of the said Hannah, now the said R. is beginning to be useful and to be able to render some compensation for the expenses in maintaining him as aforesaid, to get possession of the said R. for the benefit and advantage of her, the said H, and her husband, Gabriel Harman, without making satisfaction to the said S. D. T. for his care, expenses and trouble in raising and maintaining said R.
since the said month of February, 1816; and, as the said Ft. M. tho' too young to influence the decision by his will, appears to be fed and well clothed, and manifestly prefers remaining with the said S. D. T. and seems to have an affectionate attachment to the said Stephen D. Taylor, it is ordered by the Chancellor that the said Reese Morris be, and is hereby remanded to the custody of the said Stephen D. Taylor.
NOTE. 3 Burr. 1434, Rex v. Delaval et al., 1 Bl.R. 410, 3 Burr. 1436, the court are bound, ex debito justitio to set the infant free from improper restraint. But they are not bound to deliver the infant over to anyone, nor to give the infant any privilege, though he has a privilege redeundo, unless the court should see ground to declare the contrary. 3 Burr. 1437, the true rule is that the court are to judge upon the circumstances of the particular case and to give their directions accordingly.