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5 Green Bag 120 (1893)
Under the Constitution of 1796

handle is hein.journals/tgb5 and id is 136 raw text is: 12T                  The Green Bag.
THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE.
I.
UNDER THE CONSTITUTION Of' 1796.

By ALBERT D. MARKS.

A T the time of the admission of the State
of Tennessee into the Union in 1796,
the now general division of the govern-
mental functions in three co-ordinate de-
partments was not fully developed.  The
Constitution then adopted (Art. V. Sec. i)
provided that the judicial power of the
State shall be invested in such superior and
inferior courts of law and equity as the
Legislature shall from time to time direct
and establish.
Under this authority the first act passed
by the Legislature of the new State provided
for Superior Courts of Law and Equity, em-
powered to finally decide cases. There were
to be three judges, to be elected by the
Legislature. Among its judges are to be
found the names of many men who after-
wards were illustrious in the history of both
the State and nation. Archibald Roane and
Willie Blount were thereafter Governors of
Tennessee. Gen. Andrew Jackson served
for six years, resigning in 1804. Judge John
Overton succeeded General Jackson, and sat
until the abolition of the  ourt.  Judge
Roane, having been elected Governor, re-
signed in i8oi to accept that office. Hugh
Lawson White was appointed in his stead,
and continued to act until his resignation
in 1807.
This system proved unsatisfactory, because
of the lack of harmony in the rulings of the
several judges throughout the State. The
evil of having the same questions decided
differently according to the county in which
the suit happened to be was prominently
brought to the attention of the people and the
Legislature by a series of articles contri-
buted to the press by Thomas H. Benton,
then a citizen of Tennessee practising law at

Nashville. As the result of this agitation,
the Act of Nov. i6, 18o9, was passed.
By that act the Superior Courts of Law
and Equity were abolished, and circuit courts
substituted. There was created by the same
act a Supreme Court of Errors and Appeals,
composed of two judges in error to be elected
by the Legislature, with whom a circuit judge
was to sit.
Hugh Lawson White was elected as a
judge of the new court, and George W.
Campbell was chosen as his colleague.
Judge Campbell, who was afterwards Secre-
tary of the Treasury under President Madi-
son,and Minister to Russia, resigned in I8iI,
John Overton succeeding him.
Hugh Lawson White, whose term of judi-
cial service began as a judge of the Superior
Court in i8oi, and who was one of the judges
of the newly created Supreme Court, was a
most remarkable man. He was doubtless
called to fill more positions of trust than any
man in the history of the country, though he
never made a canvas for an office. Born in
Iredell County, N. C., Oct. 30, 1773, he
came to East Tennessee in 1781 with his
father, Gen. James White, who there founded
the town of Knoxville.
At twenty he became the private secretary
of William Blount, then territorial governor,
and was made a judge of the Superior
Court, at the early age of twenty-eight, in
i8Oi.  The period of his judicial service
extended down to 1814. He served as a
judge of the Supreme Court after its crea-
tion in 18o9. He was twice a State Sena-
tor, afterwards United States District At-
torney, a Commissioner on the part of the
United States under the Florida treaty
with Spain, and President of the Bank of

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