Tag Archives: court records

Franklin County Circuit Court Order Book 12

The following is an index of Franklin County, Indiana Circuit Court Order Book 12. This book covers the August 1853 Term to the first part of the August 1857 Term.

Order books detail the daily business brought before the court. Additional details on cases may also be found in the Circuit Court Complete Record Books and in loose papers complied in Circuit Court packets.

See also Franklin County Court Records.

Digital copies are available through the Record Requests Page. Abstracts are available in Franklin County, Indiana, Circuit Court Order Book Abstracts, 1851-1861 | Paperback | PDF ebook

Franklin County Circuit Court Order Book 11

The following is an index of Franklin County, Indiana Circuit Court Order Book 11. This book covers the August 1851 Term to the February 1853 Term.

Order books detail the daily business brought before the court. Additional details on cases may also be found in the Circuit Court Complete Record Books and in loose papers complied in Circuit Court packets.

See also Franklin County Court Records.

Digital copies are available through the Record Requests Page. Abstracts are available in Franklin County, Indiana, Circuit Court Order Book Abstracts, 1851-1861 | Paperback | PDF ebook

Franklin County Circuit Court Order Book 10

The following is an index of Franklin County, Indiana Circuit Court Order Book 10. This book covers the second part of the August 1849 Term through the February 1851 Term.

Order books detail the daily business brought before the court. Additional details on cases may also be found in the Circuit Court Complete Record Books and in loose papers complied in Circuit Court packets.

See also Franklin County Court Records.

Digital copies are available through the Record Requests Page. Abstracts are available in Franklin County, Indiana, Circuit Court Order Book Abstracts, 1847-1851 | Paperback | PDF ebook

Franklin County Circuit Court Order Book 9

The following is an index of Franklin County, Indiana Circuit Court Order Book 9. This book covers the August 1847 Term through the first part of the August 1849 Term.

Order books detail the daily business brought before the court. Additional details on cases may also be found in the Circuit Court Complete Record Books and in loose papers complied in Circuit Court packets.

See also Franklin County Court Records.

Digital copies are available through the Record Requests Page. Abstracts are available in Franklin County, Indiana, Circuit Court Order Book Abstracts, 1847-1851 | Paperback | PDF ebook

Switzerland County Circuit Court Complete Record Book Index 1816-1832

The following is an index of Switzerland County, Indiana Circuit Court Complete Record Books, covering 1816-1832.

Additional details on cases may also be found in the Circuit Court Order Books and in loose papers complied in Circuit Court packets.

Digital copies are available through the Record Requests Page.

Switzerland County Divorce Packets – Part 1

Documents created by the courts or presented to the courts as evidence can be found in the court packets.

Divorce files can also be found in the court packets and probate packets.

Images are on FamilySearch with a free account in the collection: Switzerland County, divorce records, 1823-1950. A detailed guide for using the index to locate the images is available.

Documents have been unfolded and flattened inside file folders by FamilySearch. The images for each packet will typically begin and end with an image of a file folder or envelope. Make sure to scroll forward and backwards in the image sets to locate the beginning and end of each packet. Some packets contain multiple cases.

See Switzerland County Court Packets for additional indexes and frequently asked questions.

See Switzerland County Court Records and Probate Records for more records.

Switzerland County Court Packets – Part 1

Documents created by the courts or presented to the courts as evidence can be found in the court packets.

The digitized civil cases include civil, criminal, probate, and divorce cases, naturalizations, military records, and more.

Images are on FamilySearch with a free account in the collection: Switzerland County, civil case files, 1823-1900. A detailed guide for using the index to locate the images is available.

Documents have been unfolded and flattened inside file folders by FamilySearch. The images for each packet will typically begin and end with an image of a file folder or envelope. Make sure to scroll forward and backwards in the image sets to locate the beginning and end of each packet. Some packets contain multiple cases.

See Switzerland County Court Packets for additional indexes and frequently asked questions.

See Switzerland County Court Records and Probate Records for more records.

Fayette County Record of Wills and Order of Court, Volume 1, 1891-1939

Fayette County, Indiana Record of Wills and Order of Court Volume 1 contains transcriptions of wills, estate records, and court cases to quiet titles from 1891 to 1939.

See also Fayette County Probate Records and Court Records.

Digital copies may be requested from the Records Request page.

1833 Probate Court Rules

The following is a transcription of the 1833 probate court rules from Switzerland County, Indiana
“Indiana, Wills and Probate Records, 1798-1999,” Ancestry.com (http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=9045 : accessed 26 June 2017); Switzerland > Probate Order Book, Vol 1, 1814-1824, 1831-1837 and 1837-1841 > image 221, 1831-1837, p. 127.

May Term 1833

The Court now adopts the following rules for the government of this Court which is ordered to be spread on the words, to wit,

  1. All attorneys are to be sworn faithfully and impartially to perform and discharge the duties of an attorney of this Court &c.
  2. At the meeting of the Court on Each day, all the officers &c. will be expected to be present to attend to their several duties when called on, and it shall be the duty of the sheriff on each meeting of the court to call all the attornies [sic] attending the same in an audible voice
  3. The minutes of the preceding day must be read every morning by the Clerk before any business are taken up, the attorneys concerned, are requisted [sic] to attend and see that the enteries [sic] are correctly made by the Clerk.
  4. Motions must be made as soon as the minutes are read and signed on each day of the term, and onley [sic] one attorney will be allowed to argue motions on each side, unless the Court, under peculiar Circumstances should wish to hear Others.
  5. In all cases the attorney holding the affirmation shall have the opening and closing of the question.
  6. The Clerk will Docket litigated cases first in order, and each day of the term not incompatable [sic] with the laws and attornies [sic] in making motions will be heard in order according to their seniority.
  7. The Causes on the docket will be called and tried in the order in which they stand, unless for good cause shewn & case may be passed over or Continued by Consent.
  8. In Chancery cases councel will furnish the Court with epitome of each case the points and brief of the authorities they rely on, with references to evidence in support of the several points material to be examined, when required, and will in all cases, write the decrees and submitt [sic] them to the Court for approval or correction.
  9. When Counsel is addressing the Court or a Jury the opposing Counsel must be silent, In addressing the court the attorney will rise to his feet in his place and when he has closed his address he will immediatly [sic] resume his seat, and remain silent untill [sic] his oponent [sic] has closed his remarks, and while one attorney is speaking the others must keep their seates [sic].
  10. While one attorney is examining a witness the opposing counsel will not be allowed to interrupt him by cross examining the witness, but will wait untill [sic] he is told that the examination of the witness in Chief is ended.
  11. On the first day of each term, the Court will meet at eleven of the clock on each suceeding [sic] day at nine of the Clock.

Arthur Barkshire and Elizabeth Keith/Kuth Indiana Supreme Court court case – 1856

Arthur Barkshire and Elizabeth Keith were married on 18 June 1854 in Ohio County, Indiana. Elizabeth lived in the state of Ohio before their marriage and Arthur moved his new bride to Ohio County, Indiana. Unfortunately, the 1851 Indiana Constitution stated that “No negro or mulatto shall come into or settle in the State, after the adoption of this Constitution.” Arthur and Elizabeth were free blacks in 1854 and Elizabeth’s move to Indiana was therefore illegal. Arthur was found guilty for “encouraging Negro to remain in the State of Indiana” in the Ohio County Common Pleas Court and fined $10. He appealed to the Indiana Supreme Court saying that because of their marriage Elizabeth should be able to legally move to Indiana as his wife. Unfortunately the Supreme Court disagreed, says that since all contracts made with black who illegally entered the state shall be void, that their marriage contract was also void. The transcript from the Supreme Court as found in the Common Pleas Court records is below.

Sources:
Ohio County, Indiana Marriage Record Volume 1, p. 170; FHL digital film 4455441.
Ohio County, Indiana, Common Pleas Court, Order Book 1, p. 271-274


Indiana vs. Arthur Barkshire} information for encouraging Negro to remain in the State of Indiana

Come the parties and the following opinion of the Supreme Court of the State of Indiana in the above entitled case was received and ordered to be entered of Record in this court viz

State of Indiana, Supreme Court} May Term 1856
Monday May the twenty sixth 1856
Present: The Hon. William Z. Stuart, Ch[ief] J[udge], Samuel B. Gookins, Samuel E. Perkins, Andrew Davison} Judges

Arthur Barkshire vs. The State of Indiana} Appeal from the Ohio Common Pleas

Now at this time come the Parties by this attornies and the court being now sufficiently advised of and concerning the premises give the following opinion and Judgment pronounced by Judge Stuart.

This was a proceeding by Complaint against Barkshire for bringing a negro woman into this state in June 1854, and harboring her here in contravention of the Constitution and laws of Indiana. Trial by the court finding guilty and fine ten dollars. Barkshire appeals. The facts agreed upon by the parties are briefly these. That Arthur Barkshire the defendant is a man of color, that he has resided in Rising Sun Indiana for the last ten years, that since the adoption of the Constitution on the first of November 1851 said Arthur married a colored woman by the name of Elizabeth Kuth, who now resides with him as wife in Ohio County Indiana, that the marriage was solemnized in this State, that Elizabeth moved to the State of Indiana during the Summer of 1854 from the State of Ohio where she had long resided, that Elizabeth is a negro or mulatto, and that the defendant lived with and harbored her as his wife in Rising Sun, before and at the time of information filed.

The only question presented by the Record is, does this evidence warrant the conviction.

The 13th art[icle] of the Constitution provides that upon the adoption of that instrument in November 1851, no Negro or Mulatto shall come into or settle in the state, that all contracts made with those coming in contrary to such prohibition shall be void, that to employ or encourage such Negro to remain in the State shall be punished by fine, that all such fines shall be appropriated to Colonization, and the General Assembly shall pass laws to carry the provisions of the article into effect. I. R. S. 67.

Accordingly the General Assembly passed an act to enforce the 13th article of the Constitution Section 7th of that enactment reads “Any person who shall employ a Negro or Mulatto who shall have come into the State of Indiana subsequent to the 31st of October 1851 or shall encourage such Negro or Mulatto to remain in the state shall be fined in any sum not less than $10 nor more than $500.” I. R. S. 375.

At the same Session another act was passed to provide for the Colonization of Negros, Mulattos &c who were residents of this state on the 1st day of November 1851, and appropriating $5000 for that purpose. I. R. S. 222.

The policy of the State is thus clearly evolved. It is to exclude any further ingress of Negros and to remove those already among us as speedily as possible. The 13th art[icle] of the Constitution inaugurating this Policy was separately submitted to a vote of the people under the title “of exclusion and colonization of Negros.” It is matter of history how emphatically it was approved by the popular voice.

The marriage solemnized in Ohio County is urges as an exception, taking the case out of the Statute, but such an exception cannot be admitted; both because no such exception is Recognized either in the Constitution or in the law enacted to give it effect. And because the marriage itself, solemnized in contravention of both must be regarded as void. Marriage in this State is but a Civil Contract. As such it is clearly embraced in the Constitutional provision copied into the subsequent Law which declares all contracts made with Negros and Mulattos coming into the State contrary to the provisions of the 13th Art[icle] void. The consequences are not a legitimate consideration for the Courts. A Constitutional Policy so decisively adopted and so clearly conducive to the separate and ultimate good of both races should be rigidly enforced. So that Barkshire can claim nothing from the supposed relation of husband and wife. To give that relation any consideration favorable to him would be to countenance an infraction of the fundamental law. Barkshire can therefore be regarded only as any other person would be who encouraged the negro woman Elizabeth to remain in the State. It may not be improper to observe, though not before the court in this case, that Elizabeth herself seems to be liable under the 9th Sect of the Act to the same penalties for coming into the State or settling here.

It is therefore considered by the court that the Judgment of the court below be in all things affirmed at the costs of the appellant. All which is ordered to be certified to said Court.

State of Indiana SS.
I, William B. Beach clerk of the Supreme Court of said State certify that the foregoing is a full, true, and complete copy of the opinion and Judgment of said court in the above entitled cause.

In testimony whereof I hereto subscribe my name and affix the seal of said court at the city of Indianapolis this twenty fifth day of July AD 1856.

Wm. B. Beach C. S. C. per Joseph S. Kentzel dep[uty]