Legal doings in 1893
Posted: Thu Feb 03, 2005 8:51 am
If you like to browse court cases, this is a marvelous web page taken from the Brooklyn Daily Standard Union (I assume a NYC newspaper) summarizing court cases for the first 3-4 months of 1893. I ran across it by looking for information on the 1891 murder of Helen Potts which was also a sensation in its time. The web page has no references to the Borden case however.
http://www.bklyn-genealogy-info.com/Cou ... Court.html
I loved this verdict:
"A VERDICT FOR SIX CENTS
In the suit of John MAYCOCK, to recover $5,000. damages from the Bridge
Trustees, for injuries sustained by falling between a car and platform, the
jury returned a verdict this morning, giving the plaintiff six cents damages.
The case was tried before Judge BROWN. In the Supreme Court."
If this case had been heard today, Mr. Maycock, would have ended up owning the railroad.
From another web site of legal books mentioning the Helen Potts murder:
[Carlyle W.] Harris [1868-1891] was a medical student accused of poisoning his young wife, Helen Potts, with morphine. Their marriage had not been disclosed, and after her death her mother claimed that Potts had pressured Harris to announce their marriage, which he had agreed to do the week she died. This news led to the exhumation of her body and a trial, which took place in New York in 1892. This transcript of the trial, one of only 50 that were printed, demonstrates the prosecution’s argument that Harris was a gambler and womanizer, and the defense argument that autopsy results were inconclusive. Harris was found guilty and executed in the electric chair at Sing Sing in May, 1893.
Harris’ mother, Hope Ledyard, an author and lecturer, proclaimed his innocence in a book about this famous trial, The Judicial Murder of Carlyle Harris. "
http://www.bklyn-genealogy-info.com/Cou ... Court.html
I loved this verdict:
"A VERDICT FOR SIX CENTS
In the suit of John MAYCOCK, to recover $5,000. damages from the Bridge
Trustees, for injuries sustained by falling between a car and platform, the
jury returned a verdict this morning, giving the plaintiff six cents damages.
The case was tried before Judge BROWN. In the Supreme Court."
If this case had been heard today, Mr. Maycock, would have ended up owning the railroad.
From another web site of legal books mentioning the Helen Potts murder:
[Carlyle W.] Harris [1868-1891] was a medical student accused of poisoning his young wife, Helen Potts, with morphine. Their marriage had not been disclosed, and after her death her mother claimed that Potts had pressured Harris to announce their marriage, which he had agreed to do the week she died. This news led to the exhumation of her body and a trial, which took place in New York in 1892. This transcript of the trial, one of only 50 that were printed, demonstrates the prosecution’s argument that Harris was a gambler and womanizer, and the defense argument that autopsy results were inconclusive. Harris was found guilty and executed in the electric chair at Sing Sing in May, 1893.
Harris’ mother, Hope Ledyard, an author and lecturer, proclaimed his innocence in a book about this famous trial, The Judicial Murder of Carlyle Harris. "