Orville Charles Pratt (April 24, 1819 – October 1891) was an American jurist and attorney. He served as the 2nd Associate Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court serving from 1848 to 1852. He wrote the lone dissenting opinion in the controversy over the Oregon Territory’s capital between Oregon City and Salem.

Orville C. Pratt
2nd Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court
In office
1848–1852
Appointed byJames K. Polk
Preceded bynew position
Succeeded byGeorge Henry Williams
Personal details
BornApril 24, 1819
Ontario County, New York
DiedOctober 1891 (aged 72)
San Francisco, California

Early life

edit

Pratt was born on April 24, 1819, in Rushville, Ontario County, New York.[1] In New York he attended the Army Academy at West Point from 1837 to 1839.[1] He then studied law in Rochester, New York, earning admission to the state bar in 1841. Pratt then moved to Galena, Illinois, and set up practice in 1843.[2]

Oregon

edit

In 1849, Pratt moved to Oregon to assume the position of judge on the Oregon Supreme Court.[1] When he arrived he was the lone justice, so he exercised all of the judiciary’s powers from April 1849 until William Strong arrived 18 months later.[3] Pratt was appointed to the position by President Polk. Then in 1852 when Franklin Pierce became President Pratt was removed as judge, and when he was nominated to become chief justice of the Oregon court Stephen A. Douglas opposed the nomination and Pratt lost the nomination to George Henry Williams.[3]

While in office Pratt was controversial, and was the judge during the controversial case of the Cayuse Five.[4][5] He was known for traveling outside of the territory for his own personal gain, and took every opportunity to advance his personal, business, and political goals.[3] During the dispute over the location of the capital in the territory, he took the minority position of choosing Salem, ultimately Congress would decide the matter in Salem’s favor in 1852.[1][3] After leaving the court he was a judge of admiralty in Portland, Oregon, in 1855 to 1856. He also practiced law with Alexander Campbell after failing to receiving a political office.[6] Pratt then tried to get the money from the Ewing Young estate, but ultimately the Oregon Territorial Legislature and the Oregon Supreme Court denied the payment of the funds.[6]

Later years

edit

In 1856, Pratt moved to San Francisco. There he owned the 18-square-mile (47 km2) Rancho Aguas Frias and had a fortune estimated at over $1 million.[2] In California, Pratt practiced law in a partnership with Alex Campbell before being elected as judge of the twelfth judicial district.[7] While in that office, he ruled in favor of Charlotte L. Brown in her lawsuit against a San Francisco streetcar company after she was ejected for being African-American, helping to end what he termed the "barbaric practice" of racial segregation.[8] He was divorced in 1877, losing $750,000 ($15.5 million as measured in 2014 dollars) in the divorce settlement.[2] His wife had discovered Pratt was having an affair, and in order to avoid prosecution for adultery he agreed to the large divorce settlement.[6] He then married his former mistress, Eugenia Elizabeth Greene. Later in New York he was involved in a gambling issue where he refused to testify due to self incrimination issues.[2] In 1886, the University of Oregon granted Pratt an honorary doctor of laws degree.[2] Orville C. Pratt died in San Francisco in October 1891.[1]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e Corning, Howard M. Dictionary of Oregon History. Binfords & Mort Publishing, 1956.
  2. ^ a b c d e Terry, John. Oregon's Trails - Oregon's first judge left record that was often injudicious. The Oregonian, December 10, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d Clatsop County District Court Judges. Archived 2008-08-22 at the Wayback Machine Oregon Judicial Department. Retrieved January 14, 2008.
  4. ^ Koenig, Sarah (August 6, 2021). "The Whitman Monument, the Cayuse Five, and Landscapes of Western Memory".
  5. ^ Tate, Cassandra (April 16, 2010). "Trial of five Cayuse accused of Whitman murder begins on May 21, 1850".
  6. ^ a b c Lansing, Ronald B. 2005. Nimrod: Courts, Claims, and Killing on the Oregon Frontier. Pullman: Washington State University Press. p. 261.
  7. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe. 1885. History of California. The works of Hubert Howe Bancroft, v. 18-24. San Francisco, Calif: History Co., publishers. p. 223-4
  8. ^ Elaine Elinson and Stan Yogi, Wherever There’s a Fight: How Runaway Slaves, Suffragists, Immigrants, Strikers, and Poets Shaped Civil Liberties in California, Heyday Press, 2010, Chapter Four