Building the Land of Dreams by Eberhard Faber
Author:Eberhard Faber [Faber, Eberhard]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: History, United States, State & Local, South (AL; AR; FL; GA; KY; LA; MS; NC; SC; TN; VA; WV), Revolutionary Period (1775-1800), 19th Century, Social History, General, Americas (North; Central; South; West Indies), Modern
ISBN: 9780691180700
Google: cXOYDwAAQBAJ
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 2018-07-10T16:05:12+00:00
A VETO, A MANIFESTO, AND A COMPROMISE
Rewriting the racial regime, however, represented only half of the legislatureâs agenda for its initial sessionâthe other half being âto revise and strengthen the imperfect, lame and unfinished code of laws,â to finish, in short, what the appointed council had begun, at Claiborneâs urging, the winter before. The territoryâs private law remained uncertain. And the creole leading lights of the legislatureâDestréhan, Boré, Sauvé, and others, now strongly influenced by a group of accomplished émigré attorneys from Saint Domingue, including Louis Moreau-Lislet and Ãtienne Mazureauâwere determined to ensure that the dreaded common law would not be imposed on their country. According to one American, those émigrésââmen of talents and information by no means despicableââhad labored to excite prejudices against the common law by associating it with British government, which Louisiana creoles found âodious.â Their covert goal was not the reestablishment or continuation of the colonial system but the introduction âof the laws and usages of modern France.â To combat this perceived threat, Americans cited the Northwest Ordinanceâs guarantee that territorial inhabitants should âalways be entitled to the benefits of judicial proceedings according to the course of the common law.â Creoles and Saint Dominguans, in turn, cited the 1805 Governance Actâs promise that âthe laws in force in the said territory ⦠shall continue in force until altered, modified, or repealed by the legislature.â The struggle to determine the territoryâs legal regime thus became a contest to define what, exactly, the âlaws in forceâ in the Orleans Territory were.37
But that determination, in fact, had already been madeâat the judicial level, if not the legislative. John B. Prevost was still the sole judge on what had been intended to be the three-judge superior court, still overwhelmed by the âherculean taskâ of comprehending âthe mysteries of a code obsolete in practice,â and trying without much guidance from the government to âform some kind of system, to give effect to my decrees and at the same time to unite public opinion.â38 On November 12, 1805, Prevost had invited the cityâs most prominent attorneys to debate the question of whether Spanish laws that predated the cession of Louisiana should be considered as still in forceâand, more broadly, the issue of the common vs. the civil law. First a number of American lawyers spoke in favor of the introduction of the common law as (they argued) mandated by the Northwest Ordinance; then Pierre Derbigny and Edward Livingston spoke in favor of the civil law. They argued that the phrase âcommon lawâ in the ordinance meant simply the commonly understood law of the land of Louisiana, not the Anglo-American legal system. Livingston, who had had a deep interest in civil law and codification since his earliest legal studies, also declaimed eloquently on the merits of civilian systems. One prominent Saint Domingue émigré lawyer, Etienne Mazureau, wished all Louisianians could have heard Livingstonâs oration and congratulated the New Yorker on his âgreat, sublime, admirable, stunningâ argument: âhappy the people whose interests will be
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