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Background of Slave Freedom Suits in Missouri
"Once free, always free" was a doctrine upheld by Missouri
courts in determining slave freedom suits. Dred Scott sued for
his freedom because he had been a resident of Illinois and the
Wisconsin territory.
The Petition to Sue for Freedom the first step in the
legal process governed by the Missouri statutes. The circuit
court granted permission to sue when several conditions,
including the posting of bonds, were met.
Dred Scott, like most slaves, was not allowed to learn to read
or write and was thus unable to sign his name to the petition for
freedom. He made his mark with an "X".
- Slaves could sue under the 1807 territorial statute (1824
state law) that allowed any person held in bondage to petition
the appropriate court for permission to sue as a poor person if
s/he had evidence of wrongful enslavement. In most cases, St. Lou
is slaves based cases on residence in free territory.
- St. Louis produced a relatively large number of freedom suits
in the early 19th century (1824-1844) for a city with a fairly
small African-American population. Slaves had easy access to
information and legal advice in the city and a high level of autonomy and mobility. (Hiring out, although illegal, was condoned
by many slave owners because of its profitability.)
- The Missouri Supreme Court decision of Winny v. Whitesides
(1824) established Missouri's judicial criteria for eligibility
for freedom and set an important and original precedent for
Missouri courts. If a slave owner took a slave to Illinois and
set up residence there, the slave would be free under the terms
of the 1787 Northwest Ordinance (a federal law that prohibited
slavery in all American territory north and west of the Ohio
River) even if the slave were returned to slave territory
- The McGirk court (1820-1841) placed a premium on adhering to
the law irrespective of political considerations when determining
slave freedom suits; this attitude changed with the appointment
of William Napton and William Scott to the court in the mid-
1840s.
- Dred and Harriet Scott were among the last people to petition
for freedom in St. Louis (1846). They won the case in the lower
court, but their owner appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court,
which ruled in favor of the owner in 1852.
- The 1852 decision ended the ability of slaves in Missouri to
sue for freedom based on residence in a free state. Although the
freedom statute remained on the books until 1865, the Supreme
Court continued to be pro-slavery.
"Background of Missouri Slave Suits" was prepared by the
Missouri State Archives.
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