Edward Livingston
Edward Livingston | |
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United States Minister to France | |
In office September 30, 1833 – April 29, 1835 | |
Appointed by | Andrew Jackson |
Preceded by | William C. Rives |
Succeeded by | Lewis Cass |
11th United States Secretary of State | |
In office May 24, 1831 – May 29, 1833 | |
President | Andrew Jackson |
Preceded by | Martin Van Buren |
Succeeded by | Louis McLane |
United States Senator from Louisiana | |
In office March 4, 1829 – March 3, 1831 | |
Preceded by | Charles Dominique Joseph Bouligny |
Succeeded by | George A. Waggaman |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Louisiana's 1st congressional district | |
In office March 4, 1823 – March 3, 1829 | |
Preceded by | District created |
Succeeded by | Edward Douglass White, Sr. |
46th Mayor of New York City | |
In office 1801–1803 | |
Preceded by | Richard Varick |
Succeeded by | DeWitt Clinton |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New York's 2nd congressional district | |
In office March 4, 1795 – March 3, 1801 | |
Preceded by | John Watts |
Succeeded by | Samuel L. Mitchill |
Member of the Louisiana House of Representatives | |
In office 1820 | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Clermont, Province of New York | May 26, 1764
Died |
May 23, 1836 71) Rhinebeck, New York, USA | (aged
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) |
Mary McEvers, Louise d'Avezac de Castera |
Alma mater | College of New Jersey |
Profession | Lawyer, politician, diplomat |
Signature |
Edward Livingston (May 28, 1764 – May 23, 1836) was an American jurist and statesman. He was an influential figure in the drafting of the Louisiana Civil Code of 1825, a civil code based largely on the Napoleonic Code.[1] He represented both New York, and later Louisiana in Congress and he served as the U.S. Secretary of State from 1831 to 1833.[2]
Early life
Livingston was born in Clermont, Columbia County, New York. He was the youngest son of Robert Livingston and a member of the prestigious Livingston family. He graduated from Princeton University in 1781, was admitted to the bar in 1785, and began to practice law in New York City, rapidly rising to distinction. From 1795 to 1801 Livingson was a Democratic-Republican U.S. Representative in the United States Congress from the state of New York, where he was one of the leaders of the opposition to Jay's Treaty, and introduced the resolution calling upon President George Washington to furnish Congress with the details of the negotiations of the peace treaty with the Kingdom of Great Britain, which the President refused to share. At the close of Washington’s administration, he voted with Andrew Jackson and other radicals against the address to the president.
Livingston was a prominent opponent of the Alien and Sedition Laws, introduced legislation on behalf of American seamen, and in 1800 attacked the president for permitting the extradition to the British government of Jonathan Robbins, who had committed murder on an English frigate and then escaped to South Carolina and falsely claimed to be an American citizen. In the debate on this question Livingston was opposed by John Marshall.
In 1801 Livingston was appointed United States Attorney for the district of New York, and while retaining that position was in the same year appointed Mayor of New York City. When, in the summer of 1803, the city was visited with yellow fever, Livingston displayed courage and energy in his endeavors to prevent the spread of the disease and relieve distress. He suffered a violent attack of fever, during which the people gave many proofs of their attachment to him.
Upon his recovery he found his private affairs in some confusion, and he was at the same time deeply indebted to the government for public funds which had been lost through the mismanagement or dishonesty of a confidential clerk, and for which he was responsible as US attorney. He at once surrendered all his property, resigned his two offices in 1803, and moved early in 1804 to New Orleans in what would shortly become the Territory of Orleans (1804-1812). His older brother, Robert R. Livingston, had negotiated the Louisiana Purchase, in 1803. Edward Livingston soon built a large law practice in New Orleans; and in 1826 he repaid the Federal government in full, including the interest, which by that time amounted to more than the original principal.
Louisiana
Almost immediately upon his arrival in Louisiana, where the legal system had previously been based on Roman, French, and Spanish law, and where trial by jury and other particularities of English common law were now first introduced, he was appointed by the legislature to prepare a provisional code of judicial procedure, which (in the form of an act passed in April 1805) was continued in force from 1805 to 1825.
In 1807, after conducting a successful suit on behalf of a client’s title to a part of the batture or alluvial land near New Orleans, Livingston attempted to improve part of this land (which he had received as his fee) in the Batture Ste. Marie. Great popular excitement was aroused against him; his workmen were mobbed; and territorial Governor William C. C. Claiborne, when appealed to for protection, referred the question to the Federal government.
It has been alleged that Livingston’s case was damaged by then-President Thomas Jefferson, who believed that Livingston had favored Aaron Burr in the Presidential election of 1800, and that he had afterwards been a party to Burr’s schemes. Jefferson made it impossible for Livingston to secure his property title, since by asserting the claim that such battures were the property of the Federal government, Livingston's title obtained from the Territorial Court was invalid. In response, Livingston filed a civil lawsuit against Jefferson in 1810. After the case was dismissed on December 5 of 1811 by Chief Justice John Marshall due to lack of jurisdiction,[3] Jefferson, nonetheless, in 1812 published a pamphlet originally intended “for the use of counsel” in the case against Livingston, to which Livingston published a reply.
Louisiana became a U.S. state just one-and-a-half months before the U.S. Congress declared war upon Great Britain. During the War of 1812, Edward Livingston was active in rousing the ethnically-mixed population of New Orleans to resistance against the threat of British invasion. He used his influence to secure amnesty for Jean Lafitte and his followers when they offered to help defend the city, and in 1814–15 acted as adviser and one of several aides-de-camp to Major General Andrew Jackson, who was his personal friend.
Livingston Code
In 1821, by appointment of the Louisiana State Legislature, of which he had become a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives in the preceding year, Livingston began the preparation of a new code of criminal law and procedure, afterwards known in Europe and America as the "Livingston Code." It was prepared in both French and English, as was required by the necessities of practice in Louisiana, and actually consisted of four sections: crimes and punishments, procedure, evidence in criminal cases, and reform and prison discipline. Though substantially completed in 1824, when it was accidentally burned, and again in 1826, the criminal code was not printed in its entirety until 1833. It was never adopted by the state.
The Livingston Code was at once reprinted in England, France, and Germany, attracting wide praise by its remarkable simplicity and vigor, and especially by reason of its philanthropic provisions in the code of reform and prison discipline, which noticeably influenced the penal legislation of various countries. In referring to this code, Sir Henry Maine spoke of Livingston as “the first legal genius of modern times.”[4] The spirit of Livingston’s code was remedial rather than vindictive; it provided for the abolition of capital punishment and the making of penitentiary labor not a punishment forced on the prisoner, but a matter of his choice and a reward for good behavior, bringing with it better accommodations. His Code of Reform and Prison Discipline was adopted by the government of the short-lived Federal Republic of Central America under liberal president Francisco Morazán.
Livingston was the leading member of a commission appointed to prepare a new civil code for Louisiana, which for the most part the legislature adopted in 1825; and the most important chapters of which, including all those on contracts, were prepared by Edward Livingston alone. Livingston became again a U.S. Representative, this time as the first person to serve Louisiana's 1st congressional district. The preliminary work for the preparation of a new civil code was completed by James Brown and Louis Moreau-Lislet, who in 1808 reported a Digest of the Civil Laws now in force in the Territory of Orleans with Alterations and Amendments adapted to the present Form of Government.
Later career and family
Livingston served as a U.S. Representative from Louisiana from 1823 to 1829, a U.S. Senator from 1829 to 1831, and for two years (1831–1833) United States Secretary of State under President Jackson. In this last position he was one of Jackson's most trusted advisers. Livingston prepared a number of state papers for President Jackson, the most important being the famous anti-nullification proclamation of the 10th of December 1832.
From 1833 to 1835, Livingston was minister plenipotentiary to France, charged with procuring the fulfillment by the French government of the treaty negotiated by W. C. Rives in 1831, by which France had bound herself to pay an indemnity of twenty-five millions of francs for French spoliations of American shipping chiefly under the Berlin and Milan decrees, and the United States in turn agreed to pay to France 1,500,000 francs in satisfaction of French claims. Livingston's negotiations were conducted with excellent judgment, but the French Chamber of Deputies refused to make an appropriation to pay the first installment due under the treaty in 1833, relations between the two governments became strained, and Livingston was finally instructed to close the legation and return to America.
Livingston died at Montgomery Place, Rhinebeck, Dutchess County, New York, an estate left him by his sister, to which he had removed in 1831.
He was twice married. His first wife, Mary McEvers, whom he wed on April 10 of 1788, died less than three years later of scarlet fever.
In June 1805 he married Madame Louise Moreau de Lassy, a widow 19 years of age, whose maiden name was d'Avezac de Castera, and who was a refugee in New Orleans from the Haitian Revolution. She was a woman of extraordinary beauty and intellect, and she is said to have greatly influenced her husband's public career. Louise d'Avezac Livingston's brother was Auguste Davezac.
Tributes
The town of Livingston, Guatemala, is named after Edward Livingston, in commemoration of the Livingston Code.
Edward Livingston is the namesake of counties in Illinois, Michigan, and Missouri,[5] and a parish in Louisiana with its seat of Livingston. Also named for him is a town in Tennessee, and by extension, the town of Livingston, Texas, Lake Livingston in Texas, and the Livingston Dam.
Edward Livingston High School[6] (formerly a middle school) in New Orleans was named for him. Fort Livingston, a 19th-century coastal fortification, was named after Edward Livingston, along with today's Fort Livingston State Commemorative Area in south Louisiana.
Memberships and other Honors
- Elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1833.[7]
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "article name needed". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- ↑ Lawrence Friedman, A History of American Law (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2005), p. 118. Louisiana, along with Scotland and Quebec, is one of a few "mixed" jurisdictions whose law derives from both the civil and the common law traditions.
- ↑ U.S. Department of State, "Secretary of State Edward Livingston" (15 July 2003), http://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/livingston-edward.
- ↑ See Dumas Malone's biography, Jefferson and His Time - Volume 6, The Sage of Monticello, ch. 5, "The Batture Controversy".
- ↑ Cambridge Essays, 1856, p. 17.
- ↑ Eaton, David Wolfe (1916). How Missouri Counties, Towns and Streams Were Named. The State Historical Society of Missouri. p. 188.
- ↑ New Orleans Public Schools Superintendent's report of February 2013 page 13, accessed 06 April 2015.
- ↑ American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
Further reading
Hatcher, William B., Edward Livingston: Jeffersonian Republican and Jacksonian Democrat, Louisiana State University Press (1940).
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Edward Livingston |
- United States Congress. "Edward Livingston (id: L000366)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- Office of the Historian profile at U.S. Department of State
Edward Livingston at Find a Grave
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Martin Van Buren |
U.S. Secretary of State Served under: Andrew Jackson 1831–1833 |
Succeeded by Louis McLane |
Preceded by Richard Varick |
Mayor of New York City 1801–1803 |
Succeeded by De Witt Clinton |
United States Senate | ||
Preceded by Dominique Bouligny |
U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Louisiana 1829–1831 Served alongside: Josiah S. Johnston |
Succeeded by George A. Waggaman |
United States House of Representatives | ||
Preceded by John Watts |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New York's 2nd congressional district 1795–1801 |
Succeeded by Samuel L. Mitchill |
Preceded by Josiah S. Johnston |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Louisiana's 1st congressional district 1823–1829 |
Succeeded by Edward Douglass White, Sr. |
Legal offices | ||
Preceded by Richard Harison |
U.S. Attorney for the District of New York 1801–1803 |
Succeeded by Nathan Sanford |
Diplomatic posts | ||
Preceded by William C. Rives |
U.S. Minister to France 1833–1835 |
Succeeded by Lewis Cass |
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