
    FREE FRANK AND LUCY vs. DENHAM’S ADMINISTRATOR.
    
      From the Pulaski Circuit Court, the Hon. John L. Bridges sole Judge.
    
    ■-Crittenden, for plaintiffs; no attorney for defendant.
    June 11.
    _ •ofoolour'may contract marriages, & a bond by such a me covert cannot be enforced. .
   Opinion op the Court,

by Judge Owsrey.

THIS was an action of debt, brought by the adminis^rator °f William Denham, deceased, upon a sealed writing executed by free Frank and Lucy, stipulating for the payment of two hundred and twelve dollars to • , r. * intestate.

Lucy appeared and filed the following plea : -u Free Lncy, in her proper person, comes and prays judgment of the capias ad respondendum of the said administrator; because, she says, that at the time of the supposed execution of the note in the writing declared on by the plaintiff, she was, and is still, married to Frank, a person of color, and this she is ready to verify; wherefore she prays judgment of the said capias ad respondendum, .and that the same may be quashed,” &c.

To this plea the administrator replied, that he ought not to be barred from máintaining his said action, nor ■should the same be abated or quashed, by reason of any thing contained in said plea; because, he says, the'said defendants are free persons of color, and therefore not ■authorized to unite in the bonds of wedlock; and this he is ready to verify, &c.

■Free Lucy demurred to this replication; but her demurrer was overruled.

The assignment of errors questions the decision of the court upon the demurrer.

The replication is predicated upon the idea that free persons of color are incompetent to contract marriage; ■and were that position admitted to be correct, the con'dusion drawn by the court, in overruling the demurrer, would follow as a necessary consequence. But the principle is not perceived, upon which the position assumed in the declaration can be sustained. Whilst in a state of slavery, we admit that persons of color are incapable of contracting marriage, for any legal purpose. So long as they remain in that condition, they possess no freedom of will or of action, and of course, by no contract, can they either acquire any legal rights, or impose upon themselves any additional incapacity; but immediately upon being emancipated, the restraint which was imposed upon their will and actions, by thier bondage, is removed, and with that, their competency to contract matrimony is restored. Whether or not the act of this country concerning marriages, applies to persons of this description, is a question which it is not , necessray now to consider; for, to- marry, is a right common to all the human species, and whenever in fact contraced by persons able and willing to contract, the feme becomes subject to the disabilities of coverturethough in form the requisitions of the act of this country may not have been pursued.-

The court, therefore, erred in-overruling the demurrer of Lucy,and the-judgment must consequently, be* reversed with costs, the cause remanded to the court below, and further procedings there had, not inconsistent with the opinion of this court.  