Joab Houghton
Joab Houghton (1811 – January 31, 1876) was an American lawyer and judge who served as the first Chief Justice of New Mexico.
A native of New York, Houghton came to New Mexico when it was still a Mexican territory, and became a successful merchant. Though lacking any legal education, he was appointed Chief Justice when New Mexico was occupied by the United States in 1846 during the Mexican–American War. In 1850, Houghton led an anti-slavery faction in the drafting of New Mexico's proposed constitution during its first attempt at statehood. His service as Chief Justice ended in 1851, and he practiced law in Santa Fe, as he would during much of his life, and also served as a district attorney during the American Civil War.
Houghton was again appointed a justice of the Supreme Court of New Mexico Territory from 1865 to 1869. He made numerous political enemies, and his rulings regarding property confiscated during the Civil War were widely criticized as contrary to basic legal principles. After his replacement on the bench, Houghton spent his last years in private legal practice.
Early life and business
Houghton was born in New York in 1811.[1] He attended college and then worked as a civil engineer. Houghton arrived in New Mexico in 1843, traveling over the Santa Fe Trail on a trading expedition. [2] He entered into a mercantile partnership in Santa Fe with brothers Eugene and Thomas Leitensdorfer, doing business as E. Leitensdorfer & Co. from 1844 until 1848, when it went bankrupt.[3] Prior to its failing, it was considered the leading mercantile house west of the Missouri River.[4] Houghton also began a partnership with Jared W. Folger in 1847, operating as Houghton & Folger.[5]
Chief Justice of the New Mexico provisional government: 1846–1851
Houghton was appointed the U.S.
In 1847, Houghton presided over several trials for treason resulting from the Taos Revolt, an insurrection against the American occupation that culminated in the assassination of Governor Charles Bent.[14] Houghton's dramatic sentencing of conspirator Antonio Maria Trujillo to death by hanging has been frequently noted by historians:[15]
Antonio Maria Trujillo:—A jury of twelve citizens, after a patient and careful investigation, pending which all the safeguards of the law, managed by able and indefatigable counsel, have been afforded you, have found you guilty of the high crime of treason. What have you to say why the sentence of death should not be pronounced against you? Your age and gray hairs have excited the sympathy of both the court and the jury. Yet, while each and all were not only willing but anxious that you should have every advantage placed at your disposal that their highly responsible duty under the laws to their country would permit, you have been found guilty of the crime alleged to your charge. It would appear that old age has not brought you wisdom, nor purity, nor honesty of heart. While holding out the hand of friendship to those whom circumstances have brought to rule over you, you have nourished bitterness and hatred in your heart. You have been found seconding the acts of a band of the most traitorous murderers that ever blackened with the recital of their deeds the annals of history. Not content with the peace and security in which you have lived under the present government, secure in all your personal rights as a citizen, in property, in person, and in your religion, you gave your name and influence to measures intended to effect universal murder and pillage, the overthrow of the government and one widespread scene of bloodshed in the land. For such foul crimes an enlightened and liberal jury have been compelled, from the evidence brought before them, and by a sense of their stern but unmistakable duty, to find you guilty of treason against the government under which you are a citizen. And there only now remains to the court the painful duty of passing upon you the sentence of the law, which is that you be taken from hence to prison, there to remain until Friday, the 16th day of April next, and that, at two o'clock in the afternoon of that day, you be taken thence to the place of execution, and there be hanged by the neck till you are dead! dead! dead! And may the Almighty God have mercy on your soul!
— JOAB HOUGHTON, Judge. Court records, Santa Fe District Court, March 16, 1847.[16]
It is not certain, however, whether the sentence was ever carried out.[17]
Houghton was strongly opposed to slavery and believed its introduction to New Mexico would have a detrimental effect on its people and industries. These views made Houghton extremely unpopular with members of Congress from southern states.
Between judicial appointments: private practice, political rivalries, and wartime prosecutions
Houghton's service as Chief Justice ended March 1, 1851; the incoming governor of the newly formed Territory,
After leaving the bench, Houghton practiced law in Santa Fe, and helped form the Historical Society of New Mexico.[25] He was appointed Superintendent of Public Buildings on January 15, 1853, and designed the plans for the new capitol building. Its construction halted in 1857 due to lack of funds; it would not be completed until 1889, when it was repurposed as a federal courthouse that is still in use, as the Santiago E. Campos United States Courthouse.[26] In 1861, he was appointed Register of the United States General Land Office in Santa Fe; he served in that position until 1868.[27]
At the start of the American Civil War, Houghton took the lead in rallying support for the Union and against Texas, which had seceded.[28] He was named the wartime district attorney for New Mexico on September 19, 1861; he zealously got indictments for treason against several prominent citizens who he believed were southern sympathizers, but was unable to obtain any convictions.[29]
Justice of the Territorial Supreme Court, 1865–1869
On December 21, 1865, Houghton was nominated by President
Later life and death
Houghton subsequently practiced law in Santa Fe until 1874, when he moved to Las Vegas, New Mexico.[37] He died there on January 31, 1876.[38]
Notes
- ^ History of New Mexico 1907, p. 301. Sources do not specify where in New York he was born or lived.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 36; Webb 1995, p. 45 n.58; Simmons 1996, p. 29.
- ^ Webb 1995, pp. 41 n.47, 45 n.58; Twitchell 2007, pp. 348–349, n.631.
- quill pens were previously in use in New Mexico. Simmons 1996, p. 29.
- ISBN 0-8061-2951-4.
- ^ History of New Mexico 1907, p. 301.
- ^ History of New Mexico 1907, p. 83; Twitchell 1909, p. 84 (providing date, and identifying the appointing document: Ex. Doc. #60, page 22, page 176).
- ^ "Late from Santa Fe", The Somerset Herald (November 24, 1846), p. 1.
- ^ History of New Mexico 1907, p. 301; Poldervaart 1947, p. 37.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 40.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, pp. 47–48.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 40.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 40.
- ^ Twitchell 1909, pp. 122–144 gives a detailed description of the insurrection and its consequences; see also History of New Mexico 1907, pp. 100–101 and Poldervaart 1947, pp. 37–39.
- ^ For historians taking special note of Houghton's sentence, see, e.g., Twitchell 1909, p. 141 ("The sentence imposed by the court is worthy of a place in this connection, as it is the only sentence of the kind passed by any court in the history of New Mexico"); Poldervaart 1947, p. 38 ("If not the trial, certainly the sentence imposed upon Trujillo will live as one of the most interesting in New Mexico history ..."); Torrez, Robert J., The Revolt and Treason Trials of 1847, New Mexico Office of the State Historian, archived from the original on September 28, 2010, retrieved October 5, 2010 ("Judge Joab Houghton's sentence is not only the earliest, but one of the most eloquent of the many such condemnations pronounced by New Mexico's territorial judiciary.").
- ^ Reproduced in, e.g., Twitchell 1909, pp. 141–142.
- ISBN 978-0-7864-4825-8 ("Trujillo was hanged at Sante Fe [sic?], New Mexico, on April 16, 1847, but the historical record contains none of the details of that event.").
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 41.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, pp. 42–43.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, pp. 43–44; Twitchell 1909, pp. 174–175, 392.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 36.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 46.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 115.
- ^ Leitensdorfer v. Webb, 61 U.S. 176 (1857).
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 46.
- ^ Torrez, Robert J., 1853 - The Building of the New Capitol, New Mexico Office of the State Historian, archived from the original on September 28, 2010, retrieved October 5, 2010.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 46; Webb 1995, p. 46 n.58.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 43.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 46.
- ^ Journal of the executive proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, 1864-1866, THURSDAY, December 21, 1865.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, pp. 46–47.
- ^ Twitchell 2007, pp. 348–349, n.631.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 47.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, pp. 47–48.
- ISBN 1-893122-80-8.
- ^ Poldervaart 1947, p. 300.
- ^ History of New Mexico 1907, p. 301; Poldervaart 1947, p. 50.
- ^ History of New Mexico 1907, p. 301 (providing year and place of death only); Webb 1995, p. 46 n.58 (giving date and place of death, citing to Weekly New Mexican, Feb. 8, 1876). However, Twitchell 1909 and Poldervaart 1947, p. 50 both give 1877 as his year of death (Poldervaart likely in reliance on Twitchell, whom he quotes on the same page).
References
- History of New Mexico: Its Resources and People, Vol. I, Pacific States Publishing Co., 1907.
- Poldervaart, Arie (1947), "Black-Robed Justice in New Mexico, 1846–1912", in Reeve, Frank D.; Walter, Frank A. F. (eds.), New Mexico Historical Review, Vol. XXII, The Historical Society of New Mexico and the University of New Mexico.
- Simmons, Marc (1996), Coronado's Land: Essays on Daily Life in New Mexico, ISBN 0-8263-1702-2.
- ISBN 978-0-86534-574-4.
- Twitchell, Ralph Emerson (1909), The History of the Military Occupation of the Territory of New Mexico, 1846 to 1851, Denver: The Smith-Brooks Company.
- Webb, James Josiah (1995), Bieber, Ralph Paul (ed.), Adventures in the Santa Fe Trade, 1844–1847, ISBN 0-8032-9772-6.