| Abated Suits |
Hogan
v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Account Action |
Jacobs
v. Jacobs (1828); Miles v. James
(1830); |
| Accounting |
Scott
& Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827); Blakley
v. Biscoe (1828); Postmaster v. Pickett
(1831); Postmaster v. Hornor, Strong
& Phillips (1831); |
| Administrator |
Scott
& Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827); |
| African-Americans |
Free
African Americans in Russell v. Hogan
(1823); |
| Agent |
Demoss
v. Montgomery (1824); Griffing
v. Noaks (1829); |
| Alimony |
Allen
v. Allen (1827); |
| Appeal |
Jeffrey v. Schlesinger
& Gillett (1822); Bentley v. Joslin (1834); Forbes
v. Simmons (1828); Griffing v.
Noaks (1829); Jacobs v. Jacobs
(1828);
|
| Appellate Practice & Procedure |
Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); Miles v. James
(1830); |
| Arkansas Gazette |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); Murphy v. Douglass
(1822); Latting v. Miles (1823); Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); Lindell &
Lindell v. Shields, et. al. (1828); |
| Assault and Battery |
1809
Grand Jury Venire; Clary v. John D.
Chisholm (1811); December 1811 Grand
Jury Venire; March 1812 Grand Jury
Venire; August 1812 Grand Jury Venire,
Miller v. Cassidy (1812); Phillips
v. Peeler (1812); U.S. v. Glass &
Glass (1815); United States v. McCall
(1828); United States v. Rayburn
(1828); |
| Assignment |
Russell
v. Purvis (1827); Griffing
v. Noaks (1829); McLain v. Johnson
(1830); Harrington v. Stroud (1831);
|
| Assumpsit |
Danby
v. Montgomery (1824); Cummins v. Cotton
(1826); Dent v. Ashley (1826); Harding
v. Walker (1826); Lemmons v. Toncray
(1827); Hogan v. Woodruff (1827);
Scott & Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827);
Trimble v. Stroud (1828); Harrington
v. Stroud (1831); Davis v. Crittenden
(1831); Scull v. Roane (1831);
Buzzard v. James (1832); French v. Tunstall (1832); Wilson & Stewart
v. Crittenden (1834); Williamson v. Janes (1836); |
| Attachment |
Murphy
v. Douglass (1822); Daniel v. Mitchell
(1827); |
| Attorney's Fees |
Ashley
v. James (1828); |
| Attorney's Negligence |
Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); |
| Authority from other states |
Lemons
v. Choteau (1828); |
| Ax |
United
States v. McCraney (1822); Demoss
v. Montgomery (1824); |
| Bacon |
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); |
| Bailment |
Bentley
v. Woodruff (1830); |
|
Bear Skins
|
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Beaver |
Johnston
v. Ball, Williams & Blalock (1824); |
| Beaver Skins |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Beef |
Johnston
v. Ball, Williams & Blalock (1824); |
| Boat |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); Murphy v. Howard
(1832); keel boat in Earheart v. Murphy and McCall (1832); steam boat
(Reindeer) and keel boat (Condor) in Thompson v. McHenry
(1834); |
| Book of Entries, Merchants' |
Jeffrey
v. Schlesinger & Gillett (1822); |
| Broken Covenant |
Musick
v. Rice & Boran (1825); |
| Card Games |
Harding
v. Walker (1826); |
| Cattle |
1809
Grand Jury Venire; March 1812 Grand
Jury Venire; Welborn v. Moore
(1824); Demoss
v. Montgomery (1824); alleged killing of cattle in Kerly v. Jones
(1828); alleged intentional drowning of cattle and cow theft in Bolinger
v. Smith (1835); |
| Certification |
Trimble v. Stroud (1828); |
| Chancery Court |
Dodge
v. Roane (1828); |
| Cherokees |
Clary
v. John D. Chisholm (1811), March
1812 Grand Jury Venire |
| Chancery Court Jurisdiction |
Blakley
v. Biscoe (1828); |
| Choctaw Indians |
United
States v. Osages (1824); tribe referred to in the libel case between
Robert C. Crittenden and William E. Woodruff as having received a
large strip of land in a treaty negotiated by Robert Crittenden -
the land encompassed large parts of Arkansas Territory and a large
portion of Arkansans lost their homes as a result of this cession
of territory, see Crittenden v. Woodruff
(1827); "Choctaw indian" was murdered in United States v.
Laforge & Peeler (1828); |
| Civil Procedure |
Forbes
v. Simmons (1828); |
| Code Duello |
Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); U.S. v. Desha
(1828); |
| Coffee |
Murphy
v. Douglass (1822); |
| Coins |
"Eagles"
mentioned in Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Commercial Paper |
Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); |
| Contempt of Court |
Howell
v. Crutchfield (1831); |
| Content of Pleadings |
United
States v. Lemmons (1828); |
| Contraband |
Seizure of
ardent spirits in U.S. v. One Barrel of Whiskey (1834); |
| Contracts |
Harding
v. Walker (1826); |
| Conversion |
Scull
v. Bentley (1823); Holliday v. Sevier
(1827); Compton v. Palmer (1835); |
| Corn |
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); |
| Cotton |
Jacobs
v. Jacobs (1828); Russell v. McElmurray
(1828); Russell v. Tindall (1828);
cotton bales in Hemphill v. Mirick (1831); Orr v. Thurmond (1832);
cotton gin built in Clark v. Shelton (1833); payment made in seed
cotton in Collins v. Johnson (1834); cotton gin built in McLain v.
Roundtree (1834); |
| Court's Notes |
Harrington
v. Stroud (1831); |
| Covenant Broken |
Musick
v. Boran (1824); Peay v. Martin
(1827); Russell v. Tindall (1828);
Russell v. McElmurray (1828); |
| Covin |
Dodge
v. Roane (1828); |
| Damages |
Excessive and
flagrant damages alleged in Bolinger v. Smith (1835); |
| Death of a Party |
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); Paxton v. Conway
(1827); |
| Debt |
Clary v. Webster
(1810), Clary v. Chisholm (1811),
Clary v. (John D.) Chisholm (1811),
Dill v. Wallis (1811), Wallis
v. Durst (1811), Miller v. Fowler
(1812), Michel v. Wallis (1812),
Wallis v. Lefevre (1812), Glass
v. Dean (1814), Moseley v. Murphy
(1814), Wallis v. Cassidy (1814),Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); Jeffrey v. Schlesinger
& Gillett (1822), Murphy
v. Douglass (1822), Yarbrough
v. Huttzman (1822), Blount v. Hampton
(1823), Morrison v. Walker (1823),
Russell v. English (1823), Billingsley
v. Bell (1824), Johnston v. Ball,
Williams & Blalock (1824), Kelly
v. Brumback (1824), Fenter v. Payton
(1825), Lemmons v. Toncray (1827),
Moore v. Paxton (1825), Dent
v. Ashley (1826); Moore v. Searcy
(1826); Vaugine v. Cossette (1826),
Garres v. Bradford (1827); Paxton
v. Conway (1827); Roane v. Dodge
(1827); Stone v. Williams et. al.
(1827); Russell v. Purvis (1827);
Scott & Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827); Stagner
v. Bradford (1827), Ashley v. James
(1828); Bradley v. Trammell (1828), Byrd
v. Hickman (1828); Dodge v. Roane (1828), Finney
v. Hoskins (1828); Jacobs v. Jacobs (1828), Lemons
v. Choteau (1828); Lindell &
Lindell v. Shields, et. al. (1828); Montgomery
v. Clark (1828); Montgomery
& Miller v. Peay (1828), Stone
v. Neill et. al. (1828); Izard
v. Newton (1828); Trimble v. Stroud (1828), West
v. Cotton & Caperton (1828); Woodruff
v. Lucas (1828); Griffing v. Noaks
(1829); Cocke v. Henson (1830);
McLain v. Johnson (1830); U.S.
Postmaster General v. Clark (1830); Postmaster
v. Pickett (1831); Spence v. Johnson (1830), Wilson
& Stewart v. Johnson (1830), Byrd v. Hickman (1831), Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831), Clark v. Shelton (1831),
Cornwall v. Griswell and Ruddell (1831), Davis
v. Crittenden (1831); Dillingham v. Skein (1831), Scull
v. Roane (1831); Poston v. Bradshaw (1831), Spence
v. Johnson (1831); Postmaster v.
Hornor, Strong & Phillips (1831); Bentley v. Johnson (1832),
Bentley v. Joslin (1832), Byrd v. Fowler (1832), French v. Tunstall
(1832), Morehouse v. Archer (1832), Orr v. Thurmond (1832), Robinson
v. Tunstall (1832), Standifer v. Dowlin (1832), Tilford v. Oakley
(1832), Desha v. Henderson & Byrd (1833), Fisher & Sevier
v. Spofford (1833), Fowler v. Wilson (1833), Gaston v. Harris (1833),
Chandler v. Byrd (1834), Collins v. Johnson (1834), McLain v. Roundtree
(1834), McLain v. Smith (1834), Simmerman v. Cross (1834), Stewart
v. Gray (1834), Thompson v. McHenry (1834), Badgett v. Cotter (1835),
Boswell v. Newton (1835), Byrd v. McKnight (1835), Chandler v. Byrd
(1835), Clark v. Phillips (1835), McDaniel v. Milam (1835), McLain
v. McCarty (1835), Pope v. Campbell (1835), Swift v. Thorn (1835),
Wamsley v. Cummins (1835), Wilson v. Tutewiler (1835), Fisher v.
Eason (1836), McKee v. Murphy (1836), Wilson v. Jarrett (1836),
|
| Debtor's Residence |
Lemons
v. Choteau (1828); |
| Decedents' Estates |
Musick
v. Rice & Boran (1825); Hogan
v. Woodruff (1827);Scott & Rutherford
v. Sevier & Johnston (1827);
Izard v. Newton (1828);
Trimble v. Stroud (1828); Blakley
v. Biscoe (1828); Grande v. Fooy
(1829); |
| Deer Skins |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Defamation |
Clark v. Hickman
(1827); Nance v. Hickman (1827); |
| Default Judgment |
Russell
v. Purvis (1827); Secrest v. Guest
(1828); |
| Detinue |
Lanusse v. Flanakin
(1826); Secrest v. Guest (1828);
Bentley v. Woodruff (1830); Hemphill
v. Mirick (1831); Williamson v. Buzzard (1833); Williamson v. May
(1833); Hynson v. Terry (1837);
|
| Dice |
Prosecution
for illegal operation of a dice bank in United States v. Secrest (1828); |
| Divorce |
Allen
v. Allen (1827); |
| Doctors |
Latting v. Miles (1823); Moore
v. Paxton (1825); |
| Domestic Violence |
Allen
v. Allen (1827); |
| "Due diligence" |
Lemons
v. Choteau (1828); |
| Duel |
Russell
v. Hogan (1823); Crittenden v. Woodruff
(1827); Paxton v. Conway (1827); United
States v. Oden (1827); United States v. Crittenden (1828); U.S.
v. Desha (1828); United States v.
Sevier (1828); October 1828 Grand
Jury Venire Writ (1828); |
| Elections |
Russell
v. Hogan (1823); Crittenden v. Woodruff
(1827); |
| Ejectment |
Grande
v. Fooy (1829); Hickman v. Scott (1835); |
| Escrow |
Stone
v. Williams et. al. (1827); |
| Estate Distribution |
Reece
v. Johnson (1826); |
| Evidence |
Jeffrey
v. Schlesinger & Gillett (1822); |
| Executions |
Russell
v. Hogan (1823); Musick v. Rice &
Boran (1825); |
| False Imprisonment |
Phillips
v. Peeler (1812); |
| Faro Bank |
Harding v. Walker (1826); United
States v. Lemmons (1828); United
States v. Rector, Scott & Scott (1828); October
1828 Grand Jury Venire Writ (1828); |
| Ferry |
Public
ferry mentioned in Paxton v. Crittenden
& Trimble (1825); |
| Flour |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| Foreclosures |
Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); |
| Forgery |
Clark v. Hickman
(1827); |
| Fraud |
Byrd
v. Hickman (1828); Dodge v. Roane
(1828); fraud and misrepresentation defense by Russell
v. Tindall (1828); fraud alleged by defendants in an action in
debt in Cocke v. Henson (1830); Davis
v. Crittenden (1831); fraud alleged by defendants in Cornwall
v. Griswell and Ruddell (1831); McDaniel v. Milam (1835); |
| Freight |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| French language, interpreter |
United
States v. Osages (1824); |
| Furniture |
Davies v.
Crittenden (1831); |
| Furs |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Gambling |
Russell
v. Hogan (1823); Harding v. Walker
(1826); U.S. v. Secrest (1827); United
States v. Lemmons (1828); United
States v. Rector, Scott & Scott (1828); |
| Garnishment |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| Goods, List of |
Clary
v. John D. Chisholm (1811); Schlesigner
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); Demoss
v. Montgomery (1824); Fenter v. Payton
(1825); Drope v. Miller (1826); |
| Government Officials |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Grand Juries, Venire Writs for |
1809
Grand Jury Venire; December 1810 Grand
Jury Venire; April 1811 Grand Jury
Venire; July 1811 Grand Jury Venire;
December 1811 Grand Jury Venire;
March 1812 Grand Jury Venire; August
1812 Grand Jury Venire; November
1812 Grand Jury Venire; April 1814
Grand Jury Venire; September 1814
Grand Jury Venire; March 1815 Grand Jury Venire; Clark
v. Hickman (1827); United States v.
Johnson (1827); United States v.
Oden (1827); U.S. v. Secrest
(1827); U.S. v. Laforge & Peeler
(1828); U.S. v. Skiggs (1828); U.S.
v. Smith (1828); October 1828 Grand
Jury Venire Writ (1828);U.S. v. Desha
(1828); United States v. Lemmons
(1828); United States v. McCall
(1828); United States v. Rayburn
(1828); United States v. Rector, Scott
& Scott (1828); United States
v. Sevier (1828); |
| Gunpowder |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Habeas Corpus |
U.S.
v. Laforge & Peeler (1828); |
| Horses |
1809
Grand Jury Venire; Durst v. Hall
(1810); Haden v. Clary (1814); wrongful
detention of in Murphy v. McElmurry
(1822) and Murphy v. Tindall (1822);
Morrison v. Walker (1823); Scull
v. Bentley (1823); Demoss v. Montgomery
(1824); United States v. Osages (1824);
horse race in Musick v. Rice & Boran
(1825); Daniel v. Mitchell (1827);
horse race in Stone v. Williams et. al.
(1827); horse stealing in United States
v. Davis (1827); Byrd v. Hickman (1828)(1831); injuries to horse
stolen by John Joseph Davis in United States v. Davis (1828); Cornwall
v. Griswell and Ruddell (1831); Clark v. Shelton (1833), alleged misrepresentations
regarding the eyesight of a gelding in Stewart v. Gray (1834); horse
theft in Bolinger v. Smith (1835); |
| Hunters |
United
States v. Osages (1824); |
| Indian Traders |
1809
Grand Jury Venire; |
| Indian Treaty |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Injunction |
Morrison
v. Walker (1823); Musick v. Rice &
Boran (1825); Paxton v. Crittenden
& Trimble (1825); Dodge v. Roane
(1828); McLain v. Roundtree (1834); |
| Interest Rate |
Russell
v. Tindall (1828); Russell v. McElmurray
(1828); Woodruff v. Lucas (1828);
|
| Intestate Decedents |
Berry
v. McLeland (1822); Russell v. English
(1823); |
| Iron |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Hats |
Durst
v. Hall (1810); |
| Hogs |
Alleged hog
theft in Bolinger v. Smith (1835); action of replevin for 56 heads
of hogs in McArthur v. Hogan (1835); |
| Jail |
Latting
v. Miles (1823); |
| Joint Obligors |
Liability of
joint obligors discussed in Chandler v. Byrd (1834); |
| Jurisdiction |
Blakley
v. Biscoe (1828); amount in controversy, see Murphy v. Howard
(1832); original and appellate jurisdiction, see Clark v. Shelton
(1833); |
| Jury Tampering |
Petit jury
in Russell v. Hogan (1823); |
| Jury Instructions |
Murphy
v. McElmurry (1822); Murphy v.
Tindall (1822); |
| Justice of the Peace Court |
Trimble v. Stroud (1828); Jacobs
v. Jacobs (1828); |
| Keel Boat |
Miller,
Montgomery, and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); |
| Land |
Miller
v. Cassidy (1812); Russell v. English
(1823); Paxton v. Crittenden & Trimble
(1825); Moore v. Searcy (1826);
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); Grande
v. Fooy (1829); |
| Land Grants, Spanish and French |
Morrison
v. Walker (1823); |
| Larceny |
Wilborne
v. Bentley (1824); Bollinger v. Smith (1835); |
| Laudanum |
Latting
v. Miles (1823); |
| Lawyer-Client Relationships |
Cummins
v. Cotton (1826); |
| Levy |
Musick
v. Rice & Boran (1825); |
| Libel (see also Slander) |
August
1812 Grand Jury Venire; Russell v.
Hogan (1823); Latting v. Miles
(1823); Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827);
|
| Linen |
Payment
to be made in country linen in Tilford v. Oakley (1832); |
| Malfeasance |
Malfeasance
of estate administrator in Blakely v. Biscoe (1828); |
| Merchant |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Millstones |
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); |
| Misconduct |
Official misconduct
in Latting v. Miles (1823);
|
| Mortgages |
Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); |
| Mules |
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); |
| Murder |
1809
Grand Jury Venire; March 1812 Grand
Jury Venire; United States v. McCraney
(1823); United States v. Osages
(1824); Cummins v. Cotton (1826);
United States v. Johnson (1827); U.S.
v. Laforge & Peeler (1828); United
States v. Skiggs (1828); U.S. v. Smith
(1828); October 1828 Grand Jury Venire
Writ (1828); |
| Newspapers |
The Arkansas
Gazette pubished allegedly libelous letters by "A Voter of
Pulaski County" criticizing Robert Crittenden, see
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); publication
of notice to heirs in Lindell v. Shields (1828); a Kentucky newspaper
called the Columbian Spy is mentioned in Tilford v. Oakley
(1832); the Arkansas Advocate is mentioned in Jenkins v. James
(1832); |
| Osage Indians |
United
States v. Osages (1824); the massacre perpetrated by the Osages
is referred to as an example of the results of Robert Crittenden's
absence and negligence as acting Governor of the Territory, see
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Oxen |
Morrison
v. Wallis (1812); Hudsel v. Bunch
(1812); oxen and yoke in Welborn v.
Moore (1824); Secrest v. Guest
(1828); |
| Partnerships |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); Miller, Montgomery,
and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); |
| Patroon |
Miller,
Montgomery, and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); |
| Peltry |
Michel
v. Wallis (1812); Johnston v. Ball,
Williams & Blalock (1824); Drope
v. Miller (1826); Thompson v. McHenry (1834); |
| Perjury |
August
1812 Grand Jury Venire; Clark v. Hickman
(1827); |
| Pirogues |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Pistol |
Pistol used
to kill William Montgomery, see United States v. Johnson (1828); pistol
duel in United States v. Crittenden (1828); |
| Plow |
Demoss
v. Montgomery (1824); Fenter v. Payton
(1825); |
| Poison |
Accusation
of poisoning in Latting v. Miles (1823);
|
| Politics |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Postal System |
U.S.
Postmaster General v. Clark (1830); Postmaster
v. Pickett (1831); Postmaster v.
Hornor, Strong & Phillips (1831); |
| Power of Attorney |
Lanusse nee
Macarty v. Flanakin (1826); |
| Preemption Rights |
Right of preemption
mentioned in Paxton v. Crittenden & Trimble (1826); Miller,
Montgomery, and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); |
| Privy |
Peay
v. Martin (1827); |
| Probate |
Berry
v. McLeland (1822); Dent v. Ashley
(1826); Moore
v. Searcy (1826); |
| Promissory Note |
Roane v. Dodge (1827); Harrington
v. Stroud (1831); |
| Quapaw Indians |
United
States v. Osages (1824); mentioned in the letters from A Voter
of Pulaski County in the summer of 1827; apparently Robert C. Crittenden
negotiated a treaty with them in 1824, see Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Raccoon Skins |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Realty, leases |
Peay
v. Martin (1827); |
| Remedies |
Finney
v. Hoskins (1828); |
| Replevin |
Haden
v. Clary (1814); Murphy v. McElmurry
(1822); Murphy v. Tindall (1822);
Earheart v. Campbell (1824); Wilborne v. Bentley (1824); McArthur
v. Hogan (1835); |
| Retainers |
Cummins
v. Cotton (1826); |
| Revivor |
Paxton
v. Conway (1827); Hogan v. Woodruff
(1827); Izard
v. Newton (1828); |
| Rifle |
United States
v. Smith (1828); |
| Road, Memphis to Little Rock |
Moore
v. Paxton (1825); |
| Robbery |
March
1812 Grand Jury Venire; |
| Sale of goods or property |
Constable's
sale in Murphy v. McElmurry (1822)
and Murphy v. Tindall (1822); public
vendue sale in Ledbetter v. Kendall (1835); public sale in Drope v.
Miller (1826); Russell v. Tindall
(1828); petition for sale of real estate in Ex parte Hickman (1836); |
| Salt |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); United States v.
Davis (1827); payment of salt in McDaniel v. Milam (1835); |
| Saw Mill |
Bently v. Joslin
(1834); |
| Scire Facias |
Finney
v. Hoskins (1828); Montgomery v.
Clark (1828); Wilson v. Eads
(1831); |
| Scrip |
Scott
& Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827); |
| Seed |
Cornwall v.
Griswell and Ruddell (1831); |
| Service of Process and Notice |
Time limits
on service of process and notice discussed in Chandler v. Byrd (1834); |
| Seven-up |
Harding
v. Walker (1826); |
| Silver |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Slander (see also Libel) |
Miller
v. Cassidy (1812); Smith v. Hudsel
(1812); Moore v. Paxton
(1825); Clark v. Hickman (1827); Nance
v. Hickman (1827); Kerly v. Jones
(1828); Patterson v. Hill (1831); Bollinger v. Smith (1835); |
| Slaves |
Phillips
v. Peeler (1810); Miller v. Cassidy
(1812); Morrison v. Wallis (1812);
Berry v. McLeland (1822);
Latting v. Miles (1823); Russell v.
Hogan (1823); Musick v. Rice &
Boran (1825); Drope v. Miller
(1826); Lanusse v. Flanakin (1826);
Daniel v. Mitchell (1827); Miller,
Montgomery, and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827);
Roane v. Dodge (1827); Dodge
v. Roane (1828); Reece v. Johnson
(1826); Bentley v. Woodruff (1830);
Poston v. Bradshaw (1831); Buzzard v. Oakley (1832); Clark v. Shelton
(1833); Williamson v. Buzzard (1833); Williamson v. May (1833); Chandler
v. Byrd (1834) and (1835); Williamson v. Janes (1836); Hynson v. Terry
(1837); |
| Smokehouse |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); Peay v. Martin
(1827); |
| Soldiers |
United
States v. McCraney (1822); |
| Specie |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Statute of Limitations |
Yarbrough
v. Huttzman (1822); |
| Stay of Execution |
Montgomery
& Miller v. Peay, et. al. (1828); |
| Steamboats |
Miller,
Montgomery, and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); |
| Sterling Money |
Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Stolen goods |
Ledbetter v.
Kendall (1835); |
| Store |
Schlesigner
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); Drope
v. Miller (1826); |
| Sugar |
Murphy
v. Douglass (1822); |
| Supersedeas |
Dodge
v. Roane (1828); Davis v. Crittenden
(1831); |
| Swamps |
Latting
v. Miles (1823); |
| Tallow |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); |
| Theft |
Morrison
v. Wallis (1812); United States v.
Osages (1824); United States v. Birmingham
(1828); October 1828 Grand Jury Venire
Writ (1828); |
| Threats Against Judge |
Howell
v. Crutchfield (1831); |
| Traders |
United
States v. Osages (1824); |
| Treaties |
Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Trespass by force and arms |
Phillips
v. Peeler (1810); Hudsel v. Bunch
(1812); Reece v. Johnson (1826);
Compton v. Palmer (1835); Ledbetter v. Kendall (1835); Jeffries v.
Marshall (1836); |
| Trespass on the Case |
Durst v. Hall (1810);
Clary v. John D. Chisholm (1811);
Wallis v. Durst (1811);
Morrison v. Wallis (1812); Wallis
v. Cassidy (1814); Jeffrey
v. Schlesinger & Gillett (1822); Murphy
v. Douglass (1822); Scull v. Bentley
(1823); Danby v. Montgomery (1824);
Welborn v. Moore (1824); Cummins
v. Cotton (1826); Curran v.
Searcy (1826); Dent v. Ashley (1826);
Clark
v. Hickman (1827); Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); Cummins v.
Cotton (1827); Daniel v. Mitchell
(1827); Lemmons v. Toncray (1827);
Miller v. Bentley (1827); Nance v. Hickman
(1827); Scott & Rutherford v. Sevier
& Johnston (1827); Ashley v. James (1828); Robinson v. Bryan
(1828); Holiday v. Sevier (1830); Campbell v. Izard (1831); Davis
v. Crittenden (1831); Harrington
v. Stroud (1831); McLaughlin v. Harned (1831); Patterson v.
Hill (1831); Scull v. Roane (1831);
Buzzard v. James (1832); Earheart v. Murphy and McCall (1832); Jenkins
v. James (1832); Wilson & Stewart v. Crittenden (1834); Compton
v. Palmer (1835); Williamson v. Janes (1836);
|
| Trespass on the case (libel) |
Miller v. Cassidy
(1812); Russell v. Hogan (1823); Latting v. Miles (1826);
|
| Trespass on the case (malicious prosecution) |
Morrison
v. Wallis (1812); |
| Trespass on the case (on promises) |
Miller,
Montgomery, and Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); Harrington
v. Stroud (1831); |
| Trespass on the case (slander) |
Miller
v. Cassidy (1812); Kerly v. Jones
(1828); Bollinger v. Smith (1835); |
| Trespass on the case (trover) |
Scull v. Bentley
(1823); Demoss v. Montgomery (1824);
Holiday v. Sevier (1830); Compton v. Palmer (1835); |
| Trial de novo |
Billingsley
v. Bell (1824); |
| Trover |
Scull
v. Bentley (1823); Demoss v. Montgomery
(1824); |
| Varience in Pleadings |
Garres
v. Bradford (1827); |
| Wagon |
Schlesigner
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); Holliday v.
Sevier (1827); road wagon mentioned in Secrest
v. Guest (1828); |
| Whetstones |
Fenter
v. Payton (1825); |
| Whiskey |
Clary
v. John D. Chisholm (1811); |
| Women |
Clary
v. John D. Chisholm (1811); Miller
v. Cassidy (1812); |
| Wood |
Plank and scantling
and laths, see Lemmon v. Toncray (1827);
|
| Writ of Attachment |
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); |
| Writ of Execution |
Wilborne
v. Bentley (1824); |
| Writ of Venire |
October
1828 Grand Jury Venire Writ (1828); |