Francois Xavier Martin

François Xavier Martin (March 17, 1762 – December 10, 1846), was a Franco-American lawyer and author, the first Attorney General of State of Louisiana, and longtime Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. Born in Marseille, he moved to Martinique in 1780, and then immigrated to North Carolina just before the end American Revolutionary War. He was appointed as Attorney General of the Territory of Orleans after the Louisiana Purchase; he also helped untangle layers of French and Spanish colonial law in the territory and subsequent state of Louisiana. His legal writing and reviews of cases was important to codification of Louisiana law in the 1820s.
Likely his most well-known case in his decade as Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court was that of the
Early life and career
Martin was born in Marseille, France, and was of Provençal descent. In 1780 as a young man he went to the French colony of Martinique in the Caribbean.[1]
Before the close of the
He was probably the translator and publisher of the book by Stéphanie Louise de Bourbon-Conti, daughter of Louis François de Bourbon, prince de Conti (1717–1776) and Louise Jeanne de Durfort, duchesse de Mazarin (1735–1781), who moved in the social circles of Louis XVI. Issued in French as Mémoires historiques de Stéphanie-Louise de Bourbon-Conti, and containing an eyewitness account of the French Revolution, her memoirs appeared in an English edition published in New Bern, North Carolina in 1801.[3]
Political career
François Martin was elected as a member of the lower house of the North Carolina General Assembly, where he served in 1806 to 1807.
In 1809 he was appointed
The American territorial administration began to try to create laws consistent with its own tradition, and in 1808 the
In 1811 and 1813, Martin published reports of cases decided by the superior court of the Territory of Orleans.[2]
Attorney-general and supreme court judge
In February 1813, Martin was appointed
Respected for his learning, Martin was appointed presiding judge of the
In 1845, Martin and his court issued the final ruling in the widely publicized case of Miller v. Belmonti (1845 La), which was a
Members of the German-American community believed that Sally Miller was Müller. They arranged for an attorney to file a freedom suit for her against Miller's owners, challenging her slave status on the grounds that she was a native-born European. Much contradictory evidence was introduced, and the documentation and claimed identities were confusing. A lower court ruled that Miller had been sold as a legal slave, but Martin and the justices of the supreme court ruled that she was free. Their decision in Miller v. Belmonti (1845 La) included the following statement:
That on the law of slavery in the case of a person visibly appearing to be a white man, or an Indian, the presumption is he is free, and it is necessary for his adversity to show that he is a slave.[5]
It was an unpopular decision in a time and place where many slaves were mixed race and appeared to be "white". The case highlighted the prevalence of interracial relationships between white men and enslaved women that resulted in mixed-race children. In addition, the abolitionist movement was then viewed as a threat to the culture and cotton economy of the South.
Martin's eyesight had begun to fail when he was seventy; after 1836 he could no longer write opinions with his own hand and would dictate them.[2] He refused to resign from the court. As a consequence, together with his court's unpopular decision above, in March 1846 the Louisiana State Constitutional Convention abolished the Supreme Court, ending Martin's career as a jurist. When the Convention reconstituted the court the following day, it did not reappoint Martin or his fellow five justices.
That year he died in New Orleans in December 1846. His holographic will in favor of his brother in France (written in 1841 and devising property worth nearly $400,000) was unsuccessfully contested by the state of Louisiana. The state argued that the will was void as a legal and physical impossibility because of Martin's blindness, or as being an attempted fraud on the state.[1] Under the will, the state could not levy the customary 10% estate tax since the property went to Martin's heirs in France.
Published works
- Edited Acts of the North Carolina Assembly from 1715 to 1803 (2nd ed., 1809).
- A Treatise on Obligations, Considered in a Moral and Legal View. Newburn, N.C.: Martin & Ogden, 1802 (reprint Union, N.J.: Lawbook Exchange, 1999). Translation of Robert Joseph Pothier's Traité des obligations.
- A General Digest of the Acts of Legislatures of the Late Territory of Orleans and of the State of Louisiana (1816), published both French and English versions
- The History of Louisiana, from the Earliest Period. 2 vols. New Orleans: Gresham, 1827–1829 (reprint Pelican, 1963).
- The History of North Carolina. 2 vols. 1829.
Legacy and honors
- Martin earned the name "Father of Louisiana Jurisprudence." His work was the foundation for the work of Edward Livingston, Pierre Derbigny, and Louis Moreau-Lislet, who wrote the Louisiana codification of 1821–1826.
- Elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1812.[6]
- Elected to the Académie de Marseille in 1817.[7]
Notes
- ^ a b c d e Celebration of the Centenary of the Supreme Court of Louisiana (March 1, 1913), in John Wymond, Henry Plauché Dart, eds., The Louisiana Historical Quarterly (1922), p. 114.
- ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911.
- ^ www.bibliopolis.com. "Historical Memoirs of Stephanie Louise de Bourbon Conti by Anne Louise Francoise Billet, Stephanie Louise de Bourbon on Frey Fine Books". Frey Fine Books. Retrieved 2024-12-05.
- ^ Carol Wilson, "Sally Muller, the White Slave", Louisiana History, Vol. 40, accessed 8 March 2011
- ISBN 0871139219
- ^ "MemberListM | American Antiquarian Society". www.americanantiquarian.org.
- ^ MARTIN, François Xavier Archived 2013-10-21 at the Wayback Machine in the Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, accessed 19 April 2017.
References
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Martin, François Xavier". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 794. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
External links
- Image of Francois Martin
- Francois Xavier Martin at Find a Grave
- MARTIN, François Xavier in Louisiana Historical Association's Dictionary of Louisiana Biography (Scroll down to Martin.)
- François-Xavier Martin in Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities' KnowLouisiana encyclopedia