Sunday,
April 18, 1847.Peoria, IL. | Lincoln writes to Grant Goodrich, an attorney in Chicago with
whom he is working on three related cases in the U.S. Circuit Court. Lincoln
and Goodrich represent plaintiff William Anderson in the case of
Anderson v. Lawrence, plaintiff William
Dayton in the case of Dayton v. Lawrence,
and plaintiff William R. Voce in the case of Voce v. Lawrence. In each case, the plaintiff is suing
defendant Grove Lawrence in an action of assumpsit to recover damages for
"fraud and misrepresentation in the sale of land." Lincoln writes that he has
been tardy in replying to Goodrich's recent letter because he has been "so busy
with our own court, [and] with preparations to go on the circuit." Lincoln
agrees that Goodrich should "take no further testimony in New-York." Lincoln
advises Goodrich to "Bring down with you to court, all the home
testimony you can, on all points, and let the cases rest upon that."
Grant Goodrich to William H. Herndon, 9 December 1866, Herndon-Weik
Collection, Library of Congress, Washington, DC; Abraham Lincoln to Grant
Goodrich (transcript printed), 18 April 1847, CW 10:9-10. |