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THE DISTRICT COURTS.
The first district court held in the county was by
Judge James Sloan,* elected April 7, 1821.
The court convened in October of that year at Coonville, (now Glenwood).
There was then no court house in which to transact the legal business of
the county so recourse was had to private dwellings or even to stores. For
some unknown reason—perhaps the religious faith of Judge Sloan, who was a
Mormon—a great hostility had been originated toward him, and when he came
to convene court it was declared he should not proceed. The store house in
which court had usually been held being denied his honor, Mr. J. W.
Coolidge offered his store to the judge and the attorneys, which offer was
accepted and the court was duly convened. When the judge and the court
attaches reached the point of opening the session, threats, both loud and
numerous, were made, and declarations were rife that he should not open
court. He calmly but firmly insisted, and ordered the sheriff, James
Hardy, to proclaim the court in session, which that official at once
proceeded to do. Immediately thereafter Judge Sloan adjourned the court,
and thus ended the first session.*
There are no records but one of the district court in existence from the
time of the first holding until the October term, 1853.
The single document, or record, alluded to has reference to the first case
of divorce in the county, and is the following:
STATE 0F IOWA } ss.—In the District Court.
COUNTY OF MILLS
SAMUEL MARTIN,
vs. ss.—Bill for Divorce.
MARY MARTIN,
To the honorable District Court of Mills County:
Your Petisioner Samuel Martin by his Solisitor A. C. Ford humbly
represents that on the twenty ninth day of March A. D. 1837 in the State
of Illinois in the County of Sangimon your Petisioner inter married with
one Mary Bragg whome your Petisioner pray may be made a party Defendant to
this his bill of complaint and that your petisioner with the Defendant
subsequently Moved to this State and while your Petisioner lived with the
defendant as man and wife that they had born unto them three children (to
witt) Susan Ann Martin, William J. Martin, and John A. Martin and that on
the tenth day of September last past the defendant willfully and without
cause or provocation deserted your petisioner and also that the said
defendant did at several times while living with your Petisioner commit
the crime of adultery and your Petisioner also represents that he was also
and is and has been for the last six months a resident of this state and
that this application is not made through fear or restraint or out of any
levity but in sincerity and truth and for the causes set forth in this his
bill of Complaint your Petisioner humbly asks the court in view of the
premises herein specified that the said marriage may be dissolved and a
Decree of Divorce adjudged and that the guardianship of said Susan Ann
Martin, William J. Martin and John A. Martin may be adjudged and Decreed
to your petisioner states that the fore- going complaint is true and pray
the judgment of this court and that the said Marriage be desolved and a
Divorce Decreed in accordance with the Code in such cases made and
provided.
SAMUEL MARTIN.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 31st day of October A. D. 1851.
W.W. NOYES, Clerk.
The suit was continued, and finally adjusted by the granting of the decree
to the petitioner in the October term, 1853. In that year occurs the first
entry in the court minute book or record, the petition just quoted
having been obtained from the “valuable box in the cellar. ”District
Court, Mills county, October term, 1853.
At an adjourned term of the district court of said county begun and held
at Glenwood, on the 17th day of October, A, D. 1853, pursuant to notice
given in accordance with the code of Iowa, there were present. Hon. Samuel
H. Riddle, judge; Wm. Snuffin, clerk; George Hepner, prosecuting attorney,
and John Haynie, sheriff, when the following proceedings were had and
done, viz
On motion of A. C. Ford it is ordered that D. W. Price be and is hereby
enrolled as an attorney and counselor in this court.
On motion of H. P. Bennett, Mr. Geo. Hepner was appointed prosecuting
attorney, protem. The court was then adjourned until half past one o’clock
p. m.
Court was opened again pursuant to adjournment and the sheriff ordered to
summons fifteen grand jurors.
The case of State of Iowa against Wheatley Mickelwait, was called, and
adjourned till tomorrow.
The sheriff returned into court with the following grand jurors, viz: John
B. Wilson, Philip Miller, Jesse A. Painter, H. P. Allison, Wm. Davis, C.
W. Tolles, jr., J.W. Coolidge, Thompson Blair, Wm. Jessup, Edward
Gilliland, W. W. Greene, Stephen Miles, James L. Shields, A. McAlpine and
James L. Burger, of which Joseph W. Coolidge was appointed foreman of the
court, who, together with his fellows, being duly sworn and empanneled,
having received their charge from the court retired to consider the
presentments and indictments.
James B. McCabe and Henry hull being summoned on the grand jury, did not
appear, and by order of the court an attachment was issued for said
persons to the sheriff. Said sheriff returned into court with said
defendants. The said James B. McCabe and Henry Hull being duly sworn and
questioned by the court, the court acquitted James B. McCabe, by paying
costs, and Henry hull was fined one dollar and costs.
The court then ordered an adjournment until 9 o’clock to-morrow morning.
SAMUEL H. RIDDLE,
Judge Seventh Judicial District of Iowa.
The first case of this session of the district court was a case of
replevin, and was that of Simpson Snow vs. Monroe Holloway, which was
continued. The first indictment returned was for assault and battery, the
case
being that of State of Iowa vs. Wheatley Mickelwait, which was dismissed
on motion of counsel for defendant. The same personage again figures as
one against whom the second indictment recorded appears. He was indicted
for selling intoxicating liquor. When the case came on for a hearing the
defense “moved to set aside,” which was not sustained. A demurrer was then
filed, but the demurrer was overruled. Leave was given the defense until
the following morning, when he was to plead. This was the first case on
the morning of Wednesday, October 19, the defense filing a plea of not
guilty, whereupon tile court ordered the empanelling of a jury to try the
same. After the trial the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and fined the
defendant ten dollars. In addition to this indictment the grand jury
returned one against Lewis Johnson, for manslaughter; against John
Johnson, for an assault with intent to commit great bodily injury; against
W. Ellington, for betting; against J. D. Rogers and P. A. Hooper, for an
assault with intent to commit great bodily injury; and one against Samuel
Judy, Thomas Woods, John Johnson, J.D. Rogers, Seth Johnson and Geo.
Kirkmnan, for arson. The parties to the last named offense all obtained a
change of venue to Pottawattamie county, where the case was tried, with
what result it has not been possible to learn. William Ellington had to
pay two dollars and fifty cents for the privilege of betting, the jury
having returned a verdict of guilty when the cause came on for a hearing.
Judge Samuel J. Riddle presided at this term of the court, he having been
appointed successor to Judge James Sloan, who had resigned. There are
various reasons assigned as to why the honorable gentleman presented his
resignation.
It is said that it was brought about by interested parties who were
striving to foist themselves into public notice. One of the attorneys
before the bar of Fremont, A. C. Ford, was to receive the resignation of
Judge Sloan, secure the backing of his Whig friends, and Sloan was to
present the claims of Ford to Governor Hempstead, at Dubuque, where he
then resided. Sloan had in some way become related, in business matters,
to a certain Orson Hyde, who was editing a paper known as the Fremont
Guardian. In consideration of any service that Hyde might render him Ford
was to purchase the press of Hyde,* and in connection with Dawson should
use it as a campaign organ in support of Ford as a candidate fort he
district judgeship at the next election. Only one thing was lacking
in the chain of events as just stated—the friends on whom Ford relied for
recommendations signally failed him. It appears that he had been a
fugitive from justice from the state of California, and the fact was quite
generally known among the citizens of the county. Indeed, the opposition
took a stronger aspect than mere refusal to recommend his appointment—a
meeting was called in Sidney, in Fremont county, in February, 1852,at
which were passed a series of resolutions denouncing Hyde, and not at all
complimentary to Ford. Copies of the resolutions were sent to papers in
the eastern portion of the state, in western Missouri, and to Governor
Hempstead. Accompanying them was sent a recommendation to the governor to
appoint Allen A. Bradford as the successor of Judge Sloan. This petition
was heard and granted. Bradford received the appointment and entered upon
the duties of his office. Before the expiration of his first term his
official acts met with such general approval and his integrity of
character was so well known that there was scarcely any opposition in
electing him for the next term. But the matter did not end here. “Hyde
employed Ford and A. W. Babbitt to institute a suit for libel against the
ten citizens who reported these resolutions to the meeting. Ford brought
the papers for the suit down to Fremont from Mr. Hyde, and filed them with
the clerk, and had the sheriff to serve the parties' defendant with notice
of the suit. * * But when the court was held in the spring of 1852, by
Judge Bradford, a demurrer was filed to the statements in the petition,
alleging that to charge a man with selling his printing press, and using
his influence to have a man elected to an office, was not defamatory nor
libelous, as the fact imputed was not a crime. The demurrer was sustained,
the suit was ended, and everything went along smoothly after that.”—Lingenfelter.
Judge Bradford was a worthy man, and merited the confidence reposed in him
by the legal fraternity and court officials generally. He was a native of
Maine and retained very many of the peculiarities of his native state. In
court he was stately and dignified, permitted no gross violations of court
decorum, was prompt in his decisions, and taken altogether was a worthy
occupant of the bench of the district judgeship.
“Judge Bradford had some peculiarities—some eccentricities. His dress,
though it might be made of the costliest broadcloth, hardly ever fit his
person; his coat, pants and vest were nearly all the time either too
large, too small, too long, or too short, and sometimes one garment might
be too large or too short, when at the same time as to the fit of the
others it was vice versa. He hardly ever combed his hair, and would
frequently let his beard go two or three weeks without shaving; and it
frequently happened that when he had about half shaven himself he would
suddenly stop, pick up a newspaper and read it, and then neglect to
complete his toilet. And, when thus half shaven, one foot slip-shod, and
otherwise slatternly attired, he would go to church, to court, or around
amongst his friends. But with all his eccentricites he had many warm
friends, for he was ever a true friend to the virtuous, the industrious,
and the necessitous; no poor man ever went from his house hungry.”—Lingenfelter.
Judge Bradford did not complete the term for which he was elected. In some
difficulty with a man near Nebraska City he received a severe wound on the
head by a club in the hands of the same, which necessitated his
resignation of the judgeship. The difficulty seems to have been occasioned
by the boundary line of the respective claims of Judge Bradford and his
assailant. It was during the judicial career of Judge Bradford that the
first rules adopted by any district court in Mills county were spread upon
the proceedings and made a part of its record. They comprise eleven
distinct specifications, and cover nearly all the ordinary business of a
session of court. With the November term of 1854 the connection of Judge
Bradford with the judicial history of the county ceases.
The successor to Judge Bradford was the Honorable E. H. Sears, whose first
court in this district was opened the 19th day of February, 1855. There
seems to have been a change in the policy of political parties since that
date. Judge Sears, as had been his predecessor, was at that time a
democrat, but the application for his appointment was made by lawyers and
others who were whigs. The petition was presented to Governor Grimes, also
a whig, and the appointment was made on the basis of ability and moral
worth. Judge Sears, in all his judicial career proved the correctness of
the theory “the best men in the highest places.” His first term occurred
at a time well calculated to test his judicial powers and his legal
ability. New laws—for the most part obnoxious in themselves to many—had
been enacted, and the first causes in the county under these enactments
were tried before him. They were causes relating to the sale of
intoxicating liquors, and others pertaining to the swamp lands, both, in
their very natures, requiring the greatest judicial care and more than
ordinary legal ability in the court before which they were tried. There
was added another fact requiring good powers of discrimination,—that of
the nature of the bar of the county, at that time composed of the
strongest legal talent in western Iowa. Judge Sears gave such general
satisfaction and proved so admirably his fitness for the judgeship that to
his election the second time was presented no obstacle; and it was
accordingly done. He was a careful man and a wise judge—taking the
greatest pains to insure justice to all parties to a suit—civil or
criminal. This carefulness is evidenced by the following extract from an
address to the grand jury, delivered in 1859, showing the measures he
adopted to insure no errors on the part of the jurors.
JUDGE SEARS CHARGE.
“Gentlemen :—Before entering upon the important duties which you are
called upon to discharge, it may be well for you to make and answer the
following inquiries: What are the uses of a grand jury? Why was it
instituted? And did the people demand it?
“The people of England. our ancestors, did demand it, and thought they had
made a great advance in personal security and individual liberty when they
had obtained it from the reluctant and unwilling hands of despotism. Prior
to its institution the courts were looked upon by the mass of the people
as engines of cruelty. injustice and oppression, and not as the protectors
of innocence and the punishers of crime. Who does not remember the history
of the bloody assizes and the judicial act of a Jeffreys? And it was to
prevent fraud, oppression, favoritism, bribery, and all manner of
corruption in the administration of criminal jurisprudence, that the grand
jury was instituted. And how can you assist by your action as grand
jurors, in the accomplishment of this great object? It can only be
accomplished by laying aside every personal or partly consideration; by
rising above hatred or affection, and by knowing no person, friend or foe
in the discharge of your duties. To vindicate the law and mete out
simple-handed justice, should be your only motive. No one can be arraigned
before this court for a crime but on your presentment. You are responsible
to your country and to your God for the wrongful arraignment of the
innocent, and for the non-arraignment of the guilty.
“Courts and juries should never permit mere technicalities, evasions or
subterfuges to prevent the truth or thwart the administration of justice.
The temple of justice is no place for evasion and falsehood. And this
remark applies alike to the bar, the jury and the court. The court, imbued
with the spirit of equity, should hold with even hand the scales of
justice. The jury, rising above every personal consideration and
disregarding every subterfuge and evasion, should find the simple truth.
And the member of the bar who feels the responsibility and real dignity of
his position, will have a stronger regard for the faithful administration
of the law than successful evasion; and more pleasure in the triumph of
truth and right than in falsehood and injustice. He will feel that his
duty to himself as a man, to his country as a citizen, to his God and his
own conscience, as a responsible being, are infinitely higher in their
nature than the duty he owes his client. And when all of us feel our
responsibility and act up to the high duties which it imposes, may we not
hope that our courts (if it be true that they have lost it) will regain
the public respect, and enjoy the public confidence; and that men will not
feel called upon on account of any imagined inefficiency or uncertainty of
the courts, to take what they deem justice into their own hands, and
administer it summarily and in violation of all law. But are our courts
wholly to blame for this loss of confidence and growing disrespect for
their decisions? Has not the citizen a sacred duty to perform in relation
to the courts and in maintaining their character and authority? A decision
of a court having authority to make the same, is as much the law of the
land as a statute can be; and until the same is reversed in a legal way
and constitutional manner, should be respected and obeyed. He who creates
a disrespect for the courts of our country is doing an irreparable injury,
by shaking the confidence of the people in the faithful administration of
justice. While the courts themselves should not only be pure, but should
be above suspicion, and should avoid the least shadow of party or personal
bias. They should also be respected and sustained by that confidence which
alone can enable them to successfully perform the important function for
which they were instituted, to mete out simple handed justice between man
and man protect the innocent and punish the guilty.
But your special attention is called to your duty in regard to all country
officers. Gentlemen, let your inquiry into your county affairs and the
manner in which your officers have transacted their duties, be strict,
thorough and uncompromising; hold them to a strict account of their
stewardship and this court will give you all the assistance in its power
to enable you faithfully to perform this, as well as every other part of
your duty. Pursue these investigations, gentlemen, with diligence, not
urged thereto by a spirit of persecution or party prejudice, or personal
ill-will, and not deterred therefrom by favor, fear or personal
friendship. Give to all complaints against your public agents a patient
hearing; and let all come here with these complaints, if any they have, or
hereafter hold their peace.
“And now, gentlemen, remember that the position you occupy is one of vast
importance to your county, and to the entire state. Interests as dear as
life, as personal liberty, and as the rights of property, depend upon your
action. It is for you to say whether the law shall be maintained and
enforced and its violator receive the reward he merits, whether human life
and the person of the citizen shall be safe under its protecting care,
whether the rights of property shall be inviolate and the sovereignty of
the law maintained and order secured within your county, or whether the
law shall be trampled upon with impunity, every principle of justice and
good order outraged, and the violator with unblushing front and in open
defiance of all law, go unwhipped of justice. And, gentlemen, is the oath
you have just taken a mere form, a judicial farce, a solemn mockery before
high heaven, or is it binding upon your conscience, imposing the highest
obligation under which the human being can act in the discharge of
important duties, to himself, to his country and to his God? Acting then
in view of these high and solemn responsibilities enforced by an oath
administered by the authority of law, in the temple of justice, to the
searcher of all hearts, I cannot doubt but that you will so act as to
redeem this, your solemn pledge, maintain the dignity of the law, secure
its supremacy and give a sense of security to the citizen in all his
rights of person and of property within your county."
Judge Sears always appeared to be dignified and equal to any emergency
that might arise. He felt that the suffrage of his constituency called him
to execute justice upon the guilty and to protect the rights of liberty of
others. The following incident may serve to illustrate this feature of his
character, and the fidelity he exercised as a judge.
I recollect, says Hon. L. Lingenfelter, “of a very exciting time in his
court in this Fremont county in 1859. In 1857 the new constitution of Iowa
provided that a negro might testify the same as any other person in all
courts of judicature, federal or state. Under its provisions and the
statute made there under it happened, at the September term of the
district court for 1859, there were three blacks, to—wit: Green Garner,
Henry Garner and Thomas Reid, subpoenaed, and were in attendance to
testify in a certain case against some parties who were wealthy,
respectable and influential. When the case came on for trial the
court-house was crowded with men full of excitement, who were intent upon
an interruption should these witnesses be put upon the stand. Threats were
audibly made against the lawyers, the parties interested, the witnesses,
the officers of the court, and even against the court itself, should they
attempt to testify. But Judge Sears quailed not; he was firm, fearless and
unmoved. He called upon the sheriff to bid the spectators be seated and be
quiet, stating that they should have a good opportunity to hear all the
evidence; that what was now transpiring was something new, to be sure, but
it was now the law, and he hoped no man who loved the enforcement of law
would see it violated. This had a good effect. The witnesses were all
sworn, testified, and subjected to a cross-examination, and then retired
without molestation, and no one else injured or insulted."*
The successor to Judge Sears was Judge James G. Day, a graduate of an Ohio
college; at a law school in Cincinnati he received his legal education,
coming to western Iowa at his graduation therefrom. He served with
distinguished ability for two terms, and afterward became one of the
judges of the supreme court of the state—a position he now holds. Judge J.
W. McDill succeeded him, to be in turn succeeded by Judge J. R. Reid, the
present incumbent. Thus it may be seen that the district court of Mills
has had a most eventful history. It originally was held in private
residences, but now in a stately building erected specially to meet the
ends of justice. Its lists of attorneys comprise many men of distinction;
its different judges have been men, for the major part, of distinguished
ability, and its records-unfortunately—full well filled with causes both
criminal and civil. The scenes of other and older days will never be
repeated, and this sketch may serve to revive memories—many of them long
since dead.
An Incident of the District Court
In those days not every lawyer was a Wm. M. Evarts or a Jeremiah S. Black,
but all were good-natured and jolly and many of them practical jokers.
Cases were few and fees were small, and when the attorneys could not
entertain themselves in work pertaining to their profession they sought to
divert themselves in other ways.
The county being new, lawyers were not very abundant, and so it was
customary for nearly all the attorneys of the district to accompany the
judge from place to place where court was held and pick up clients when
and where they could. This practice was not very remunerative, but it has
its bright side, nevertheless. “The boys didn’t make much money,” a
veteran lawyer tells us, “but the had lots of fun.”
A good story is told of a prank played by the attorneys in the district
north of this, about the year 1850 or 1851. The judge for that district
was Williams. quite a character in his way, but withal an excellent judge
and one learned in the law. He combined the legal acumen of Lord Coke with
the proportions of Falstaff and the tendency to abjuration of a trooper of
the army in Flanders. To speak alliteratively, he was profound,
prodigious, and profane. The lawyers of his court were constantly annoying
him and he was condemning them and fining them for contempt. Yet Judge
Williams was a kind man at heart, and many is the good deed set down to
his credit in the book of the recording angel.
On one occasion the Judge and his retinue of lawyers set out on horseback
from the county seat of Grundy county for Eldora, the capital of Hardin
county. On the way the judge grew athirst and as they neared the Iowa
river was reminded by one of the lawyers, informed as to the facts, that
about half a mile from the road an Irishman kept whisky for sale in his
cabin. Leaving the party, his honor went in quest of the enlivening fluid
for which he had an enthusiastic fondness. The attorneys rode on and soon
reached the banks of the lowa. A light rain had fallen the evening and
morning preceding, and the stream was muddy, turbid, and to all appearance
deep. One of the party made a reconnaissance, however, and found that at
the worst the water was only “mid-sides,” and the party, laughing at their
first apprehensions, were soon on the west bank of the river safe, sound
and dry, and then halted to wait for the judge.
At once the idea of a joke on his worship occurred to the waggish
barristers, and they proceeded to carry it out. They hastily denuded
themselves, some of coats, same of boots and some of other articles of
apparel; and when the judge arrived on the opposite bank-which was in a
few minutes they presented all the appearance of men who had just disrobed
and who were now re-clothing themselves. The judge took in the situation
at once(?) and was further informed by the lawyers that if he wanted to
reach town in a dry suit he must strip off all his clothes, put them in
his saddle-bags and with the latter about his neck swim the raging
current! The profanity that followed was fearful, His honor anathematized
the weather, the stream, the county commissioners, the attorneys, (of
course,)—everything—until the air was almost blue and the atmosphere
smelled of sulphur. He would remove an article of clothing, and then shake
his fist at the irreverent wags across the river, who were visibly
enjoying the spectacle immensely, and objurgate. At last he stood forth,
in puribus naturaithus, a “man of unbounded stomach” and of wrath. The
spectacle can only be imagined; it can never be described! Mounting his
steed he timidly ventured into the stream, appealing to the frantic
attorneys to watch him carefully and come to his assistance if necessary.
He had proceeded but a few feet when the real condition of affairs became
apparent, for, in addition to the suspicious, or auspicious circumstance
of the shallowness of the water, the lawyers hurriedly bestrode their
horses, and as hurriedly galloped away.
It is needless to say that his honor made the passage in safety. He also
reached the hotel at Eldora in safety, and when he confronted those
attorneys in the little bar-room—but let us draw a veil! |