Alexander Hamilton Papers
Documents filtered by: Author="Hamilton, Alexander" AND Correspondent="Hamilton, Alexander" AND Correspondent="Speaker of the House of Representatives"
sorted by: date (ascending)
Permanent link for this document:
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Hamilton/01-14-02-0072

Report on the Petition of Lewis Garanger, [1 March 1793]

Report on the Petition of Lewis Garanger

[Philadelphia, March 1, 1793
Communicated on March 2, 1793]1

[To the Speaker of the House of Representatives]

The Secretary of the Treasury to whom was referred by an order of the House of Representatives of the 12th. of February, the Petition of Lewis Garranger, on behalf of himself and his brother Charles Garranger,2 thereupon respectfully makes the following Report:

The petition among other objects sets forth that the interest due upon certain certificates which had been issued in favor of Lewis Garanger in November 1783, when he was in confinement for debt, and upon those issued in favor of Charles Garanger in July 1784 having been mortgaged to the Creditors of the two Brothers, was on that account not put upon the same footing with the certificates granted to other foreign Officers, upon which the interest was payable at the House of Mr. Grand3 banker at Paris. The Petitioner now prays payment of principal and interest of the said certificates in specie, under the regulation made in favor of certain foreign Officers.4

It appears that the accounts of the Petitioner and his brother for pay and subsistence were liquidated by the commissioner of Army accounts and final settlements issued to them, which were afterwards exchanged for certificates of Registered debt.

If it was in the option of the petitioner either to take certificates upon which the interest was payable at Paris in specie, or to prefer the other certificates of the register of the Treasury, it appears that the election was made in favor of the latter. The Petitioner is at present a holder of Registered debt. Any other modification, except the funding of it, if once admitted would form a precedent, which might in many other cases be productive of consequences fraught with inconvenience.

The Secretary therefore submits it as his opinion that so far as the petition relates to the special object in question, no legislative interference will be adviseable. As it relates to other objects, the Secretary on account of the lateness of the present session begs leave to defer his opinion until the meeting of the next Congress.

All which is humbly submitted.

Alexander Hamilton.
Secy of the Treasury.

Copy, RG 233, Reports of the Secretary of the Treasury, 1784–1795, Vol. IV, National Archives.

1Journal of the House, I description begins Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States (Washington, 1826), I. description ends , 730. The communicating letter, dated March 1, 1793, may be found in RG 233, Reports of the Secretary of the Treasury, 1784–1795, Vol. IV, National Archives.

2On February 12, 1793, “A petition of Lewis Garanger, in behalf of himself and his brother, Charles Garanger, was presented to the House and read, praying that the amount of the certificates of debt granted to the petitioner and his said brother, for their services in the late Army of the United States, and of the interest which has accrued thereon, may be paid in specie at the Treasury; also, that a claim for balance of subsistence due to them while prisoners of war, and for their passage to France, and travelling expenses to Paris, may be allowed and paid, with interest from the date of the said certificates” (Journal of the House, I description begins Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States (Washington, 1826), I. description ends , 700).

3Ferdinand Grand.

Index Entries