William Sampson (lawyer)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

William Sampson
Engraving by F. Grimbede from Memoirs of William Sampson, 2nd edition, 1817
Born26 January 1764
Derry, Ireland
Died28 December 1836
New York City, New York, United States
OccupationLawyer
OrganizationNew York Manumission Society
Political partyDemocratic-Republican Party
MovementSociety of United Irishmen
SpouseGrace Clark
ChildrenWilliam, John, and Catherine Anne

William Sampson (26 January 1764 – 28 December 1836) was a

Catholic auricular confession as privileged. Maintaining that the tradition of common law denied citizens equal access to the law, and was a systematic source of injustice, Sampson pioneered the American codification
movement.

Early life

Sampson was born in Derry, in the Kingdom of Ireland, to Mary Spaight Sampson and Arthur Sampson, an Anglican clergyman. He attended Trinity College Dublin and after studying law at Lincoln's Inn, in London, he was admitted to the Irish bar in 1792. He settled in Belfast where he served as Junior Counsel to John Philpot Curran in the north-east circuit. In 1790 he married Grace Clarke of Belfast, whose parents, the Rev. John Clarke and Catherine Anne Clarke (née Coates), were early members of the Belfast Society for Promoting Knowledge.[1] With his wife's brother-in-law, the physician and polymath James MacDonnell, he had a mutual friend in the Society's librarian, the future republican martyr Thomas Russell. With Russell, Sampson was to co-author popular political commentary[2] and satire.[3]

Counsel for United Irishmen, agitator and exile

William Sampson, self portrait circa 1785
William Sampson, self portrait circa 1785

Counsel and radical pamphleteer

In 1782, Sampson was commissioned in the Irish Volunteers. That year, seizing on the occasion of the American War of Independence, the militia movement helped free the Irish Parliament from direct dictation from London. But it failed in what for many Volunteers, particularly in the Presbyterian north-east, was their chief object: to break the monopoly hold upon the parliament of the landed Anglican interest—"the Protestant Ascendancy".[4]

In 1791, when rallying in celebration of the

United Irishmen
against charges of criminal libel, sedition and treason.

Sampson published anonymous reports of the trials, and contributed to the United Irish paper in Belfast, the Northern Star. Writing as "Fortesque", he urged judicial independence from the Crown.[7] As a preface to demands for still greater change, with Thomas Russell he dispensed with the reformer's usual praise for the celebrated charters of English liberty: Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights and Habeas Corpus. In their Review of the Lion of Old England; or Democracy Confounded (1794) (dedicated to the reputedly enlightened "Empress of all the Russias", Catherine II),[2] they suggested that, honoured in the breach in Ireland, the invocation of these charters did little more than "amuse the masses".[8]

In The Trial of Hurdy Gurdy (1794), serialised in the Northern Star, Sampson and Russell pilloried the Crown’s suppression of dissent: a barrel organ is charged with playing a seditious tune,

transportation (to Botany Bay) of the Scots radical (and honorary United Irishman) Thomas Muir; and in Belfast Ça Ira had triggered a military riot.[9][10]

Sampson claimed to have taken the

the Crown at war with the French Republic, all avenues of "experiment" were closed. Sampson's clients turned increasingly toward the prospect of a French-assisted insurrection. In 1795, with Curran, he represented the Rev. William Jackson, an emissary to the United Irishmen from the French Directory.[13][14] Convicted of treason, the preacher and playwright collapsed and died in the dock.[15]

Agitator and suspect

When on New Years Day 1797, news reached Belfast of a French fleet appearing off Bantry Bay, Sampson addressed an open-air town meeting. Rather than profess loyalty to the Crown, he decried the disarming of the Volunteers and condemned the licentiousness of the "English mercenaries" garrisoning the town. Drennan expressed his astonishment—that Sampson should "leap upon a joint-stool and harangue the populace, at such a time and on such a topic, with such temper, and near such a body of military"—and proposed that he was the "most active" man in Ireland.[16]

In October 1797, Sampson helped establish a rallying cry for the movement (and for the coming rebellion): "Remember Orr!". Having failed to secure an acquittal for William Orr on the capital charge of administering the United test to soldiers,[17] Sampson published sensational reports of the trial and execution (including Orr's declaration from the scaffold, in which his defence counsel may have had some hand). These appeared in The Press, a new paper he had established in Dublin with Arthur O'Connor, Drennan and others (the presses of the Northern Star in Belfast having been smashed by the military). From Drennan's pen, the paper also published a poem, then widely circulated, The Wake of William Orr, and a letter (signed "Marcus") which excoriated the Viceroy, Lord Camden, for having in Orr's execution disgraced the laws.[18] Charges of seditious libel were brought against the nominal owner of the paper, the journalist Peter Finnerty,[19] and the printer, John Stockdale.[20] In court, Sampson and Curran struck reporters less as defence counsel than as prosecutors pressing the indictment of the government.[19]

Dublin Castle was aware that Sampson was preparing further embarrassment. He was collecting affidavits detailing atrocities committed by the military as they sought to break up and disarm the United Irishmen and their Defender allies. While broadcasting their content in pamphlets and the Press,[21] he was supplying these to the liberal Lord Moira who in turn sought to present them to the King.[22] But, critically, a key informant was now placing Sampson, alongside O'Connor, at meetings of the Leinster (Dublin) Directory of the movement, and this at a time when the discussion was clearly of armed insurrection.[23]

Sampson’s response to the execution in May 1797 of four militia men who had refused to renounce their oath to the United Irishmen and betray their comrades[24]—his widely circulated, ballad, Death before Dishonour—had concluded with a clarion call to arms:[25][26]

Irish heroes grasp your arms,
Firmly clasp the pointed steel,
Shake their souls with fierce alarms,
Teach their harden’d hearts to feel.
Let the tyrants of the world
See their hateful reign is o’er;
From their seats let them be hurl’d,
Nor wield their iron sceptre more.

In March 1798, Sampson was charged with high treason.[1]

Arrest and exile

In April 1798, a month in advance of the

incorporation in a united kingdom with Great Britain—following the failed rebellion, the government's settled policy.[22]

In May 1799, he was sent to France, where, nursing a quiet disdain for Napoleon’s new imperial regime,[22] he lived under close police surveillance. Having been reunited in Paris, in May 1805 his family departed for Hamburg, and from there, in advance of Napoleon's troops, passed across to England. After being arrested and again permitted exile, Sampson took passage to the United States, now under the more welcoming presidency of Thomas Jefferson. On 4 July 1806, he arrived in New York City[28] where he was met and assisted by fellow exiles Thomas Addis Emmet and William James MacNeven. He was admitted to the New York bar in October. His wife, son, and daughter joined him in 1810.[1]

Lawyer and advocate in New York

Disputing race as a legal disability

In New York City, Sampson set up a business publishing accounts of the court proceedings in cases with popular appeal and which advanced arguments for reform. Sometimes he filled the role of both counsel and reporter. This was the case in two proceedings in which Sampson, representing the New York Manumission Society, upended precedents anchored in racism and in slavery: The Commissioners of the Almshouse v Alexander Whistelo (1808), involving a black man in a case of paternity; and Amos and Demis Broad (1809) in which Sampson succeeded in having sadistically abused slaves, a mother and her 3-year-old daughter, manumitted.[29]

In the Broad case, Sampson lamented that the law kept the woman from testifying on her own behalf: "the silence which fate, for I will not call it law, imposes on the slave who cannot tell us of his own complaint; gagged, and reduced to a state of a dumb brute . . . [is a] weighty obstacle to justice".[30]

In 1808, in a case in which he had occasion to defend "interracial" marriage, he noted that, ‘‘every man must follow his own pleasure . . . neither philosophy nor religion have forbade such mixtures.’’[31]

Labor's right of association

In 1810, Sampson published Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New-York for a Conspiracy to Raise Their Wages,[32] presenting his (unsuccessful) argument in The People v Melvin (1806) for quashing an indictment of unionising workers. Insisting on the supremacy of the elected legislature, Sampson's objected that the prosecution was reasoning "abstractedly" from principles of English common law without any reference to statute. It was this, alone, that allowed them to deny journeymen the right to "conspire against starvation" while, without notice or challenge, leaving master tradesmen in a "permanent conspiracy" to suppress wages.[33] This was one of the earliest attempts in the United States to establish the legality of the labor closed shop.[34]

"Friend of Religious and Civil Liberty"

In The Catholic Question in America (1813),

priest-penitent privilege.[38]

Historians of American Catholicism regard Philips as a "signal victory for religious, ethnic, and cultural equality".

Penal Laws[40][37] in which "all the principles of law [were] reversed".[41]

In 1824, he and Thomas Addis Emmet, again supported by Riker,[36] defended Irish weavers in Greenwich Village, charged with riot in a 12th of July confrontation with local Orangemen. As he had in Philips, Sampson took the opportunity to decry religious bigotry and to put Britain's resistance to complete Catholic Emancipation, on trial.[42]

In anticipation of Daniel O'Connell's victory at Westminster (the King signed the Catholic Relief Act ending the Protestant monopoly on parliament a month later), on St. Patrick’s Day, 1829, Sampson and MacNeven convened the “Friends of Religious and Civil Liberty” in Tammany Hall. The banqueting members were told they had gathered for same purpose that drew "good men of all nations and creeds" together in protesting the “enslavement of the Africans".[36] The same connection (upon which, O'Connell, an ardent abolitionist, had himself insisted)[43] had been confirmed for Sampson by France’s leading abolitionist, Abbé Henri Grégoire, who (via his translator, David Bailie Warden, veteran of the 1798 rebellion in County Down) had communicated his high praise for Sampson's achievement in Phillips.[44]

In 1831, Sampson had further occasion in Philadelphia to defend Catholics charged in an affray with Orangemen. It elicited the clearest statement of his republican conception of American citizenship. The American Orangemen think that the Catholics have "got into a Protestant country", but their republic, he argued, is "equally a Jewish country, a Seceding country, a fire worshiping country": it is "a country that tolerates all religions".[45]

Father of the American Codification movement

The French-American jurist Peter S. Du Ponceau described Sampson as "the Patriarch" of the American Codification movement.[46] In his parody of "The King v Hurdy Gurdy" (which he had re-published on his arrival in New York),[47] the need to reason from precedent allows the judge to usurp the function of both jurors (forbidden even to reason about the facts) and of legislators. In these apprehensions, Sampson was supported by the frequently sued publisher of the Philadelphia Aurora, William Duane. In Sampson Against the Philistines (1805), Duane argued that, “dark, arbitrary, unwritten, incoherent . . . and contradictory", the common law allows judges "not simply to administer the law, but [to] exercise a legislative and even an executive power directly in defiance and contempt of the Constitution”. and proposed that, conversely, a general codified law of reference would be “justice made cheap, speedy, and brought home to every man's door".[48][49]

In the Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers (1810), Sampson rehearsed the same general argument: an "indiscriminating adoption of common law" had caused the New-World society to carry over "barbarities" from the Old: laws that "can only be executed upon those not favoured by fortune with certain privileges" and that in some cases operate "entirely against the poor".[33] "The more I reflect upon the advantages this nation has gained by independence," he concluded, "the more I regret that one thing should still be wanting to crown the noble arch—a NATIONAL CODE".[50]

Sampson's summary Discourse on the Common Law (1823),[51] holding common law to be contrary to the ethos a democratic republic and urging, with reference to the Code Napoleon, its replacement by a general law of reference, was hailed as "the most sweeping indictment of common law idealism ever written in America" .[52] Widely reported in the newspaper and periodical press, it had a decided impact on public opinion.[53] It was a source of inspiration for Edward Livingston[54] who drew upon French, and other European, civil law in drafting the 1825 Louisiana Code of Procedure.[55] Later, Sampson's efforts appeared vindicated in New York where in 1846 a new state constitution directed that the whole body of state law be reduced to a written and systematic code, and in David Dudley Field's subsequent drafting of the New York Code of Civil Procedure (1848).[56][57]

The call for legal reform had not swayed the leaders of Jefferson's Democratic-Republican Party, in whose east-coast city electoral successes he, Duane and other Irish émigrés had played a significant role.[58][59] Sampson sought to disassociate codification from the doctrinaire insistence on positive legislation that had marked Jeremy Bentham's championing of the cause. But, focussing on the French experience, critics thought it sufficient to comment on the futility of trying to compress human behaviour into rigid categories.[60] Jefferson had remained neutral when Duane's attempted to force the issue in the 1805 election in Pennsylvania. Federalists joined with "Constitutional Republicans" to defeat the reform agenda.[61]

Opposition to Andrew Jackson and Tammany Hall

Despite the lack of support for legal reform, Sampson did not follow Duane and other radical elements within the dissolving Jeffersonian coalition into the Democratic Party of Andrew Jackson. Jackson stood both for the western expansion of slavery and in opposition to the policies Sampson believed necessary for the development of America's free-labor economy. In 1817-19, Sampson lobbied in Washington against the opposition of southern planters for protective import tariffs against foreign, mainly British, manufactured goods.[62]

In 1833, protesting the decision of Jackson (and his Secretary of the Treasury, Duane's son, William John Duane)[63] to withdraw funds from the Second Bank of the United States, Sampson ran, unsuccessfully, for Congress.[64] He was overwhelmed by the ability of the Tammany Hall Democratic Party machine to deliver the greater part of the growing Irish, and broader immigrant, vote.[65][66]

An indication of his diminished standing as a veteran United Irishman among the city's increasingly Catholic Irish community was the controversy surrounding his and MacNeven's decision in 1829 to raise a monument (at St. Paul's Chapel, Broadway) to their departed compatriot Thomas Addis Emmet and to do so, in part, with funds unused from those they had collected to support the final act of Catholic emancipation in the Ireland (Catholic entry to the Westminster Parliament). They found themselves denounced by the community's principal paper, the Irish Shield, as presumptuous and oligarchic and for failing in their gratitude toward Daniel O'Connell, the "Emancipator", to whom a monument was truly due.[67]

Last years and death

Tended, as his physician, by William MacNeven, William Sampson died in December 1836. He was buried in the Riker Family graveyard on Long Island[68] in what is now East Elmhurst, Queens, New York.[69] The white marble tomb, erected by his wife, Grace, and daughter, Catherine, bore an inscription describing him as "An United Irishman [who] defended the cause of civil and religious liberty".[70] He was later reinterred in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York, where he is now buried in the same plot as Catherine's husband William Theobald Wolfe Tone and his mother Matilda Witherington Tone, the son and wife of the Irish revolutionary Wolfe Tone.[71]

His son, John Philpot Curran Sampson, Deputy Attorney General in Louisiana, pre-deceased him in 1820.[72]

Selected writing

References

  1. ^ a b c d Thuente, Mary Helen (2009). "Sampson, William | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 10 January 2023.
  2. ^ a b Review of the Lion of Old England: Or the Democracy Confounded; as it Appeared from Time to Time in a Periodical Print. With Additions and Amendments, by the Reviewers. 1794.
  3. ^ Russell, Thomas; Sampson, William (1807). A faithful report of the trial of Hurdy-Gurdy, tried and convicted of a seditious libel in the court of King's Bench. New York: Bernard Dornin.
  4. .
  5. ISBN 978-0198207368.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link
    )
  6. .
  7. ^ Walsh, Walter (1991). "Redefining Radicalism: A Historical Perspective". Articles. 59: 656.
  8. ^ Walsh (1991), p. 647
  9. ^ Walsh (1991) pp. 664-665.
  10. .
  11. ^ William Bruce and Henry Joy, ed. (1794). Belfast politics: or, A collection of the debates, resolutions, and other proceedings of that town in the years 1792, and 1793. Belfast: H. Joy & Co. p. 145.
  12. ^ Walsh (1991), p. 653
  13. .
  14. ^ Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1888). "Curran, John Philpot" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 13. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  15. ^ Walsh (2014), p. 48.
  16. ^ Whelan (2020), p. 210.
  17. .
  18. ^ Whelan (2020), pp. 217-220, 287.
  19. ^ a b Cooper, Thompson (1889). "Finnerty, Peter" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 19. pp. 38–39.
  20. ^ Doyle, Carmel (2009). "Stockdale, John | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  21. .
  22. ^ a b c Best, E. J. (2013). "A Portrait of Counsellor William Sampson". lisburn.com. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  23. ^ Whelan (2020), p. 287.
  24. JSTOR 20641353
    .
  25. ^ "Death Before Dishonour; Or The Four Irish Soldiers - Cartlann". cartlann.org. 7 September 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  26. ^ "Death Before Dishonour; Or The Four Irish Soldiers", by William Sampson (1797), from The Literary Remains Of The United Irishmen, R. R. Madden ed., Dublin: James Duffy & Sons, 1887, pp. 177-179.
  27. JSTOR 25506214
    .
  28. .
  29. .
  30. .
  31. ^ Harris (2004), p. 110
  32. ^ Sampson, William (1810). Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New-York for a Conspiracy to Raise Their Wages . . . New York City: I. Riley.
  33. ^ .
  34. – via Catholic Law Scholarship Repository.
  35. ^ County), New York (State) Court of General Sessions (New York; Sampson, William (1813). The Catholic Question in America: Whether a Roman Catholic Clergyman be in Any Case Compellable to Disclose the Secrets of Auricular Confession. Edward Gillespy.
  36. ^ a b c Walsh (2014), p. 67-68.
  37. ^ a b Sampson (1813), pp. 115-138.
  38. ISSN 0019-6665
    .
  39. ^ Walsh (2005), p.1050.
  40. ^ Walsh (2005), pp. 1048-1049.
  41. ^ Walsh (2015), p. 43.
  42. ^ Walsh (2005), pp. 1053-1054.
  43. from the original on 25 August 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  44. ^ Walsh (2015), p. 64.
  45. JSTOR 25122342
    .
  46. ^ Walsh (1991), p. 644
  47. ^ Sampson, William (1806). A Faithful Report of the Trial of Hurdy Gurdy: Tried and Convicted of a Seditious Libel in the Court of King's Bench, on the Testimony of French Horn, the Approver: with the Arguments of Counsel, and the Charge of the Learned Chief Justice to the Jury. New York: Published and sold by Bernard Dornin.
  48. ^ Bushey, Glenn Leroy (1938). "William Duane, Crusader for Judicial Reform". Pennsylvania History. V (3 (July): (141–156), 144.
  49. .
  50. ^ Maxwell (1967), p. 240
  51. ^ Sampson, William (1824). An Anniversary Discourse: Delivered Before the Historical Society of New York, on Saturday, December 6, 1823; Showing the Origin, Progress, Antiquities, Curiosities, and Nature of the Common Law. E. Bliss and E. White.
  52. ^ Maxwell (1967), p. 240.
  53. ^ Maxwell (1967), pp. 243-244.
  54. S2CID 145512997
    .
  55. , retrieved 17 May 2020
  56. .
  57. ^ "William Sampson". Historical Society of the New York Courts. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  58. . Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  59. .
  60. ^ Maxwell (1967), p. 246.
  61. ^ Bushey (1938), pp. 153-156.
  62. ^ Walsh (2014), p. 65.
  63. ^ "William Duane". biography.yourdictionary.com. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  64. ^ Walsh (2014), p. 75.
  65. ^ "New York Election Results". Mahalo.com.
  66. ^ "Tammany Hall".
  67. ^ Walsh (2004-2006), p. 20-21.
  68. ^ E. J. Best. "Counsellor: A Portrait of Counsellor William Sampson". Lisburn Historical Society. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 9 December 2007.
  69. ^ "Lent-Riker-Smith Homestead". www.rikerhome.com. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  70. ^ Walsh (2014), p. 79.
  71. . Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  72. ^ "Litchfield Ledger - Student". ledger.litchfieldhistoricalsociety.org. Retrieved 12 January 2023.

See also