Love, against Donelson and Hodgson

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by George Wythe

Love against Donelson
George Wythe bookplate.jpg
Title not held by The Wolf Law Library
at the College of William & Mary.
 
Author George Wythe
Editor
Translator
Published n.p. (Richmond, VA?): n.p. (Thomas Nicolson?)
Date n.d. (1801?)
Edition
Language English
Volumes volume set
Pages 34
Desc. 8vo (21 cm.)


Love, against Donelson and Hodgson is a published opinion by George Wythe, for the case Love v. Donelson in Virginia's High Court of Chancery.[1] The report was published as a supplement in pamphlet form in 1801 or later—almost certainly printed by Thomas Nicholson of Richmond, Virginia, who had published Wythe's Reports in 1795, and at least seven other pamphlets for Wythe, in 1796 and later.[2] Love v. Donelson was not reported in the second edition of Wythe's Reports, in 1852.[3]

Evidence for Inclusion in Wythe's Library

Upon his death, Wythe's personal copy of this pamphlet was bequeathed with his books to Thomas Jefferson, and subsequently became part of the collection at the Library of Congress. This copy has been bound in a volume with six other Chancery decisions published in pamphlet form. On the spine, the volume is titled: Wythe's Reports. Supplement. Virginia. 1796-99 (despite this case taking place in 1801). The pamphlet for Love against Donelson has a handwritten notation, "no. 7," on the first page.[4]

Several pages of the pamphlet contain manuscript corrections by Wythe in his hand, including a footnote in Greek, apparently scraped off and corrected to 'Κάλχας Θεστορίδης οἰωνοπόλων': "Calchas, son of Thestor, far the best of augurs" (bird-diviners).[5] On another page Wythe made a notation in the margin referring to Taylor's Elements of the Civil Law (1769).

References

  1. George Wythe, Love, against Donelson and Hodgson (Richmond, VA: Thomas Nicolson, 1801?).
  2. Charles Evans, in his American Bibliography, vol. 11 (1942), mistakenly gives the date of publication as 1796. Wythe states that the case took place in the "first year of the nineteenth centurie"; it is the opinion of the editors that the Chancellor would have understood that the new century began January 1, 1801, and therefore Love against Donelson must have been published sometime between 1801 and the year of Wythe's death, in 1806.
  3. George Wythe, Decisions of Cases In Virginia, By the High Court Chancery, with Remarks Upon Decrees By the Court of Appeals, Reversing Some of Those Decisions, ed. Benjamin Blake Minor (Richmond, Virginia: J.W. Randolph, 1852). Presumably, Minor did not have access to, or know of the existence of, the pamphlet. A bound copy of the pamphlets at the Virginia Historical Society (Wythe's Reports), owned by John Tyler, Sr., contains reports for: Aylett v. Aylett (1793); Field v. Harrison (1794); Case upon the Statute for Distribution (1796); Yates v. Salle (1792); Wilkins v. Taylor (1799); and Fowler v. Saunders and Goodall v. Bullock (both 1798; together in one pamphlet), but not Love v. Donelson (1801). William Munford's personal copy (Chancery Decisions), at the California State Library, contains the same cases bound in different order.
  4. Library of Congress catalog record. This volume contains pamphlets for: Case upon the Statute for Distribution; Field v. Harrison; Fowler v. Saunders and Goodall v. Bullock (in the same pamphlet); Wilkins v. Taylor; Yates v. Salle; and Love v. Donelson.
  5. Calchas was the prophet of Troy. Homer, Iliad 1.69.

See also

External links