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Promissory Note, 9 Feb. 1842 [Parker v. S. Foster]. Foster possibly entered the debt to help pay for a parcel of Nauvoo property his wife, Sarah Downing, and her sister Thomazine purchased in July 1841. The terms of sale for the property, comprising the south half of lot 3 in block 94 of Nauvoo, required payment of $200 by 1 April 1842. (Trustees Land Book A, Hotchkiss Purchase, block 94, lot 3; Helen Foster Snow, Biographical sketch of Sarah Downing, typescript, FamilySearch, accessed 6 Sept. 2018, https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/3224283?p=17539675.)
Trustees Land Books / Trustee-in-Trust, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Land Books, 1839–1845. 2 vols. CHL. MS 3437.
FamilySearch. Compiled by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. https://familysearch.org.
Docket Entry, ca. 16 July 1842 [Parker v. S. Foster]. On continuances, see An Act Concerning Justices of the Peace and Constables [3 Feb. 1827], Public and General Statute Laws of the State of Illinois [1834–1837], p. 405, sec. 8.
The Public and General Statute Laws of the State of Illinois: Containing All the Laws . . . Passed by the Ninth General Assembly, at Their First Session, Commencing December 1, 1834, and Ending February 13, 1835; and at Their Second Session, Commencing December 7, 1835, and Ending January 18, 1836; and Those Passed by the Tenth General Assembly, at Their Session Commencing December 5, 1836, and Ending March 6, 1837; and at Their Special Session, Commencing July 10, and Ending July 22, 1837. . . . Compiled by Jonathan Young Scammon. Chicago: Stephen F. Gale, 1839.
Docket Entry, ca. 16 July 1842 [Parker v. S. Foster]. The docket entry for the case mentions a subpoena for David Brinton, which was not returned. Brinton still attended the hearing, though he was not examined. JS, as mayor of Nauvoo and therefore, according to Nauvoo’s city charter, a justice of the peace, had jurisdiction “to hear and determine” all cases involving debts less than $100. (An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], p. 55, sec. 16; An Act Concerning Justices of the Peace and Constables [3 Feb. 1827], Public and General Statute Laws of the State of Illinois [1834–1837], p. 402, sec. 1.)
Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.
The Public and General Statute Laws of the State of Illinois: Containing All the Laws . . . Passed by the Ninth General Assembly, at Their First Session, Commencing December 1, 1834, and Ending February 13, 1835; and at Their Second Session, Commencing December 7, 1835, and Ending January 18, 1836; and Those Passed by the Tenth General Assembly, at Their Session Commencing December 5, 1836, and Ending March 6, 1837; and at Their Special Session, Commencing July 10, and Ending July 22, 1837. . . . Compiled by Jonathan Young Scammon. Chicago: Stephen F. Gale, 1839.
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