From Thomas Jefferson to George Hammond, 30 March 1792
To George Hammond
Philadelphia Mar. 30. 1792.
Sir
A constant course of business has as yet put it out of my power to prepare an answer to your letter of the 5th. instant. In the mean time I have been taking measures to procure copies of the several acts therein complained of, that I might save you the trouble of producing proofs of them. My endeavors have failed in the instances below cited, of which therefore I am constrained to ask you to furnish the documents. I have prefixed to them your own marks of reference, that you may the more easily find them. I beg you to be assured that I would not have given you the trouble to produce any proofs which I could have obtained my self; and hope it will be considered as an evidence of this, that the list subjoined is only of 13. out of 94. numbers which your Appendix specifies. Of all the rest I either have, or expect copies in consequence of the measures I have taken. I have the honor to be with the most perfect esteem & respect, Sir, your most obedt. & most humble servt.,
Th: Jefferson
A. | 4. Act of Rho. isld. to confiscate and sequester estates and banish persons of certain descriptions. Passed Oct. 1775. Feb. Mar. May. June. July. Aug. Oct. 1775. Feb. May. June. Oct. 1783. | |
C. | 11. Act of Rho. isld. | to send out of the state N. Spink and John Underwood &c. |
12. | do. to send Wm. Young theretofore banished out of the State &c. | |
13. | do. allowing Wm. Brenton to visit his family &c. | |
14. | do. to banish S. Knowles &c. | |
D. | 15. Old Act of Maryland. | |
16. Act of Rhode isld. of May 1786. | ||
E. | 1. 2. 3. 4. 8. 9. The cases of Neale exrs. Osborne v. Mifflin’s exrs. Hoare v. Allen. Stewardson v. Dorsey. Rutgers v. Wadington. John Smith Hatfeild. The records of these cannot be dispensed with. |
PrC (DLC). FC (DNA: RG 59, SDR).
In the case of William Neale’s executors v. Comfort Sands the plaintiffs brought suit to compel payment of a debt that the defendant, a New York merchant, had contracted with Neale, a resident of London, before the Revolutionary War. The New York Supreme Court decided in favor of the plaintiffs in July 1786 but allowed Sands to deduct interest on the debt for the period from the passage of the Prohibitory Act in December 1775 to the British evacuation of New York in November 1783. The deduction amounted to £500 sterling (Summary of Neale’s Executors v. Sands, n.d., enclosed in Phineas Bond to Leeds, 10 Nov. 1789, PRO: FO 4/7, f. 272–3). Hammond had cited this case in support of his contention that the abatement of wartime interest on British debts was an infraction of Article IV of the treaty of peace (Hammond to TJ, 5 Mch. 1792). For discussions of the other legal cases cited by TJ, see notes to the letters to TJ from William Rawle, 9 Apr. 1792; Elias Boudinot, 11 Apr. 1792; Samuel Johnston, 13 Apr. 1792; Alexander Hamilton, 19 Apr. 1792; and Maryland Representatives and Senators, 23 Apr. 1792.