RECORD GROUP 26: COURT OF OYER AND TERMINER RECORDS GUIDE
Date Span: 1782-1784
.5 linear foot (1 box)
Historical Note:
The full title of this court was the Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Gaol Delivery. The North Carolina General Assembly established the court in 1782. It was the oldest court above the level of county court established in what became Tennessee. Prior to this time, cases heard above the level of the County
Court had to go before the Superior Court of Law and Equity at Morganton, North Carolina, a considerable distance from the Tennessee frontier. As the act creating the court noted, “…whereas the extensive mountains that lie desolate between the inhabited parts of Washington, and the inhabited parts of Burke
counties, make the transportation of criminals from the former to the latter difficult and on the way may frequently find means to break custody and escape; wherefore that offenders in the said counties of Washington and Sullivan may be more easily and certainly brought to justice,” a new court was needed in the west. (State Records of North Carolina, volume XXIV, Laws, 1777-1788, page 451.) Oyer means to “to hear” and terminer means “to determine,” so the court was to hear and determine cases that originated in Washington and Sullivan counties. The following year, when Greene County was created, it also fell under the court’s jurisdiction. The terms originated in the medieval legal system of England taken from the Anglo-French “oyer et terminer.” Court was held twice per year beginning on February 15th and August 15th at the Washington County Courthouse in Jonesborough. Spruce McCay was
the judge, Waightstill Avery the attorney general, and John Sevier, in addition to his duties as clerk of the county’s Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, was appointed clerk of the Court of Oyer and Terminer. McCay (c. 1755-1808) tutored a young Andrew Jackson in the law. Avery County, North Carolina is named for Waightstill Avery (1741-1821). At the November 1784 session, the North Carolina General Assembly adopted a bill creating the Washington judicial district out of the District of Morgan and creating a Superior Court of Law and Equity. This court was to be held beginning on February 15th and August 15th of each year. (Sources: State Records of North Carolina, volume XIX, page 765 and volume XXIV, pages 689-690.) So, the first court session would have been on February 15, 1785. This court replaced the Court of Oyer and Terminer.
Scope and Content:
The record group consists of one set of surviving minutes for August 1782 and documents for several surviving court cases that originated in Washington, Sullivan, and Greene counties, 1782-1784. Note: Based on the law creating the court, it should have met twice (February and August) in 1782, 1783, and 1784
before dissolving.
Arrangement: The record group is arranged into two series, as follows:
Series A: Minutes, 1782
Series B: Case Files, 1782-1784
Series B. Case Files, 1782-1784
Series Description:
Series B consists of 18 court cases in which actual documents survived. This is referenced by the check mark in the column titled “Case.” There are an additional 13 court case titles mentioned in the minutes of August 1782 but for which no actual documents have been found. The location of these latter cases is given as Box 1, folder 1 under the Box/Folder heading to indicate these are found only in the minutes. The page numbers are given for any case mentioned in the court minutes. A variety of civil and criminal cases are documented, including damages, debt, defamation, assault, horse stealing, larceny, and murder. The cases are arranged chronologically by date and then alphabetically by the case title.
*NOTE – The check marks underneath the heading, “CASE” indicates whether we were able to find a case to go with the record indicated in the minute book.
