Suarez, de Legibus et Deo Legislatore, 9 (1), 14 (1), 15 (1), 29 (2), 36 (2), 158 (4).
Subject, of a right, 20.
alien and native, 48. Subjection, an element of law, 48, 64. Subjective and objective ideas of liberty, 38; of law, 78, 109 (1).
Suits for freedom, colonial statute, Del., 292; S. C., 299, 303.
Sumner, Senator, 160 (4), 167 (2), 376 (4), 380 (3), 470 (1). Superior, implied in law, 2.
Tithables, in statutes of Va., 230, 231, 236, 238, 242, 245; an indication of status, 359.
Torture, in British colonies, 115 (2). Tracy. See De Tracy.
Transit, international rule of, 345, 354, Transportation, English statutes regard- 365. ing, 219 (1).
of Indian captives, statute Va., 241; of emancipated negroes, 237. forbidden in certain cases, statute Va., 239, 242; Md., 251, 252; S. C., 300.
Supremacy of Judiciary under the Const., Treaty of Utrecht, 175.
Supreme power. See Sovereign power. Swedish settlements.
Tacitus, Mores Germanorum, 158 (1). Talbot, Lord, opinion on baptism of slave, 185 (2).
Taney, Chief Justice, on the rule of com- ity, 74 (1); on the rights of the negro race, 207(1); on the constitution secur- ing personal rights and rights of pro- perty, 463 (1); on the effect of the Declaration of Ind. on status of ne- groes, 471 (2); on power of Congress over slavery in the Territories, 528- 530, 556.
Taxables, in colonial stat., Md., 251; N. C., 294 (1).
Taylor, Elem. of Civil Law, 153 (1). Temple, Sir W., Essay on Gov., 417 (2). Tennyson, property in his writings, 583; quoted, 587 (1). Terms. See Phraseology. Territorial extent of law, 22, 23. Territories of the U. S., Sovereignty in, 411, 439, 589, and see Congress; Dred Scott.
-, equality of the States in respect to, the political doctrine, 554-558. Territory acquired by Gov. of U. S., 410. Testimony. See Negroes, Indians, Slaves. Texas. See Compromise Measures. Theft of one's self, 386 (1). Theories of State sovereignty, 408. Thibaut, System des Pandekten Rechts, transl. by Lindley, 19 (2), 26 (2), 40 (2, 3), 97 (2), 380 (5). Things, as objects of action, 19. Thompson, Hist. of Long Island, 277 (2), 278 (3).
Thoulouse, case of slave at, 337; law re- specting serfs, 339 (1).
intercolonial, of the Dutch and N. E. colonies, 268 (5).
with France for Louisiana. See Catron.
whether part of the law of the U. S., 590.
Tribaud, advocate, in case of Boucaut, Tribunals, their province, 24; in applying 338 (2), 344 (1), 376 (2). private international law, 33, 61, 67,
Trover, for slaves in England, 186, 188. Trumbull, Hist. of Conn., 121 (1), 270 (1). Trustees of Georgia, their exclusion of Tucker, St. George, in Va. Court of Ap- slavery, 310 (1). peals, 526 (1); edition of Bl. Comm., 208 (2), 223 (2), 225 (4), 245 (1), 400 (2), 405 (2), 408 (2).
H. St. G., Mem. of India Gov., 154 (2), 216 (1).
Turner, Hist. of Anglo Saxons, 136 (3). Twelve Tables, their origin, 144 (1); rule of, in favor of liberty, 382 (1).
Ulpianus, maxim of, 405 (1). Union of England with Scotland and Ire- land, 317.
United Colonies of New England, articles
of compact, 268 (5); extent of arti- cles respecting fugitives, 329, 331. United States, Courts, Commissioners of See Commissioners.
the Constitution of the, referred to a sovereign people, 394, 399.
the people of the, who are, 399–408. -, powers belonging to, 424-427. See Constitution, Government, People, Courts, Judicial power.
laws of classified, 440, 457. See national law, local law, internal law, international law.
Universal extent of law, described, 51, 80; | Voltaire, Dict. Philos., 157 (1), 159 (1) Voluntary association in foundation of N. E. Governments, 120, 265 (1), 267. Von Martens. See Martens.
criterion for it, 96; how shown in in- ternational law, 105. Universal attribution of rights, 51. See Rights. Universal jurisprudence defined, 17, 29; origin of, 85; is mutable, 36; enters into public law, 45, 152 (2); may sustain the effects of foreign laws, 88; is a part of the law of every state, 16, 88; how the same as natu- ral law, 93; how ascertained, 16, 93; distinguished from law of universal personal extent, 91-95; some of its principles may have limited personal extent, 103; recognition of, in Eng- lish law, 139, 142; the exposition of, in Roman law, 143; derived from Christian nations, 155; supporting slavery in antiquity, 154; how modi- fied by Christianity, 156; how sup- porting slavery of African heathens, 164, 170-188; its farther modifica- tion in respect to slavery, 188, 324, 353-357, 364; applied in the colonies to Indians and Africans, 202, 206; how now a standard of property un- der the Constitution of the U. S., 564-570.
Utilitarian school of jurists, 6 (1).
Van der Linden, Institutes of the Laws of Holland, 277 (2).
Van Leeuwen, Comm. on Roman-Dutch Law, 277 (2).
Vattel, Law of Nations, 3 (1), 46 (1), 313 (2), 345.
Vaughan, Ch. J., 27 (2).
Verdelin's slaves. See Boucaut. Vico, Giambatista, 144 (1). Victoria, Francis, 204 (2).
Vienna, Congress of Allied Powers at, 418 (1).
Villenage in England, 136; could not ex-
ist in the colonies by common law, 137. Viner's Abridgment, 27 (2). Vinnius, Commentaries, 30 (1), 147 (1),
150 (1), 158 (4), 159 (1), 167 (3). Virgil, Eneid, 147 (3); Moretum, 161 (1). Virginia. See Charters. Statute law of the colony, 228-247; introduction of ne- gro slavery, 205.
House of Burgesses, Petition of 1772, 225 (4), 245 (1); Declaration of Rights, 246; Committee Report 1799, on the Alien and Sedition Laws, 123 (2). Voet, de Statutis, 72 (1).
Wade, History of the Middle and Working Classes, 135 (1), 136 (3, 4), 137 (4), 159 (1), 471 (1); British Chronology, 188 (2). Waechter, in Archiv für die Civ. Praxis, 22 (1), 59 (1), 78 (1), 89 (1), 97 (2), 99 (4), 100 (1), 109 (1), 113. Waldeck's Institutes, 152 (1). Walker's Theory of Common Law, 141. Wallon, Hist. de l'Esclavage dans l'Anti-
quité, 154 (3), 156 (4), 157 (1). Walsh's Appeal, &c., 205 (3), 208 (2), 219 (3, 4). 225 (4), 370 (2). Walter, Lehrbuch d. Kirchen Rechts, 157 (1).
War, a source of slavery, 150, 151. Ward's Hist. of Law of Nations, 157 (1), 158 (4), 159 (2). Warwick, Earl of, charter to, 273 (3) Washburn, Jud. Hist. of Mass., 231 (1);
Paper on Slavery in Mass., 264, (1). Wayne, Mr. Justice, in Dred Scott's case, on the Missouri Compromise, 531. Webster, Daniel, Speech in Senate U. S., 7 March, 1850, 154 (2), 164 (2); in the Rhode Island Controversy, 413 (2); on extension of the constitution to the Territories, 423 (1). Wentworth, commission to, 265 (1),266 (1). Wesenbecius, Comm., 19 (3). Wheaton, El. of Internat. Law, 9(1), 10
(1), 34 (1), 57 (1), 93 (3), 145 (1), 147 (3), 152 (2), 176 (1); Hist. of Law of Nations, 145 (1), 152 (2), 175 (1), 176 (1), 204 (2); in Revue Franc. et Etrang., 161 (2).
Whewell, Elem. of Mor. and Pol., 5 (1), 9 (1), 15 (4), 24 (1), 36 (2), 47 (2), 130 (2). White persons, power of State Govern- ments to enslave, 527.
their intercourse with blacks. See Illicit Intercourse, Intermarriage. Wickliff, doctrine attributed to, 179 (2) Wicquefort, l'Ambassadeur, 336. Wildman, International Law, 9 (1). Wilkins, Leges Sax., 137 (2). Williams, Elisha, in N. Y. Cons. Conv., 413 (2). Williamson, Hist. of N. C., 294 (1). Wilmot, Ch. J. on customary law, 27 (2). Winthrop, Hist. of N. E., 261 (1).
Wooddeson, Lectures, 27 (2).
Yorke, Lord Chan. Hardwicke, opinion re- specting slaves being in England, and baptized, 185.
Woolsey, T. D., Presd., on Libertini, 214 Young, Chronicles of Massachusetts, 122
Wright's Tenures, 136 (4).
Xenophon, Cyropædia, 151 (1).
Zachariä, 58 (1). Zouch, 9 (1).
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