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State v. Mann | 13 N.C. 263 (1829)
Historians tell us that for as long as there have been human societies, there has been slavery, with all its cruelties and horrors. Slavery in the preCivil War United States was particularly horrendous, as explained in the eighteen twenty nine North Carolina case of State versus Mann.
John Mann leased Lydia, a slave, from her owner, Elizabeth Jones, for a year. During that year, Mann sought to punish Lydia for something. Lydia ran off, and Mann ordered her to stop. When she kept running, Mann shot Lydia, wounding her.
Mann was charged with battery of Lydia. The jury found that Mann’s shooting of Lydia was cruel, unwarrantable, and disproportionate to whatever offense Lydia had committed. The jury convicted Mann of battery, and Mann appealed to the North Carolina Supreme Court.
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