Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln/Volume 3/On Discrimination Between States in Federal Judiciary Facilities

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Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln, Volume 3
Abraham Lincoln, ed. Marion Mills Miller
On Discrimination Between States in Federal Judiciary Facilities.
783865Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln, Volume 3 — On Discrimination Between States in Federal Judiciary Facilities.Abraham Lincoln, ed. Marion Mills Miller

Remarks on Discrimination Between States in Federal Judiciary Facilities.

In the United States House of Representatives. June 28, 1848.

Discussion as to salary of judge of western Virginia.—Wishing to increase it from $1800 to $2500.

Mr. Lincoln said he felt unwilling to be either unjust or ungenerous, and he wanted to understand the real case of this judicial officer. The gentleman from Virginia had stated that he had to hold eleven courts. Now everybody knew that it was not the habit of the district judges of the United States in other States to hold anything like that number of courts; and he therefore took it for granted that this must happen under a peculiar law which required that large number of courts to be holden every year; and these laws, he further supposed, were passed at the request of the people of that judicial district. It came, then, to this: that the people in the western district of Virginia had got eleven courts to be held among them in one year, for their own accommodation; and being thus better accommodated than their neighbors elsewhere, they wanted their judge to be a little better paid. In Illinois there had been, until the present season, but one district court held in the year. There were now to be two. Could it be that the western district of Virginia furnished more business for a judge than the whole State of Illinois?