David Cooper (jurist)
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David Cooper (1821 – ) was an American lawyer and jurist. He served from 1850 to 1853 as an associate justice of the Minnesota (Territory) Supreme Court.


Biography

Cooper was born on July 22, 1821, in Frederick County, Maryland. In 1831, he moved to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where he attended Pennsylvania College. He later studied law in the office of his brother. He was admitted to practice law in 1845 and practiced in Louistown, Pennsylvania. In 1848, he canvassed a portion of Pennsylvania for the Whig Party. As a result of this service to the Whig Party, Cooper was appointed by President Zachary Taylor as an associate justice of the Minnesota Territorial
Supreme Court A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts in most legal jurisdictions. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort, apex court, and high (or final) court of appeal. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ...
on March 15, 1849. He was confirmed by the Senate on March 19, 1849. He held the office from July 14, 1850, to April 7, 1853. When the Mdewakanton uprising broke Governor Alexander Ramsey asked him to go to Gull Lake and ascertain Chippewa Chief Hole in the Day's position. Judge Cooper was Hole-in-the-Day's legal advisor.Chief Hole-in-the-Day and the 1862 Chippewa Disturbance A Reappraisal, Mark Diedrich, Minnesota History Magazine, Spring 1987, p.200 Minnesota Historical Society, 345 Kellogg Blvd, St Paul, M

/ref> When he arrived at Hole in the Day's village, he learned the Sioux had attacked the Chippewa at Otter tail lakes.News from Chippewa Country, The Weekly Pioneer and Democrat, Sept. 5, 1862, p.4, Library of Congress, Washington D.

/ref> He also informed Gov. Ramsey that the Chippewa were dancing with Sioux scalps when he arrived. Cooper later practiced law in St. Paul, Minnesota, until 1864, when he moved to Nevada Territory, where he made mining titles the specialty of his law practice. He later moved to Utah and died a patient in a Salt Lake City inebriate asylum at an age of about 55.


Criticism by Legal Profession and Newspapers

Along with Chief Justice
Aaron Goodrich Aaron Goodrich (6 July 1807 – 24 June 1887) was an American lawyer, jurist and diplomat. Biography Goodrich was born in Sempronius, New York, in 1807. In 1815, the family moved to a farm in western New York state, where Aaron attended country s ...
, Cooper was frequently criticized by members of the legal profession as unfit and incompetent. However, no charge of corruption or malfeasance was ever made against either of them. After an unfavorable editorial regarding Justice Cooper appeared in the St. Paul Pioneer newspaper in 1851, Justice Cooper's brother, Joseph Cooper, assaulted the newspaper editor, James M. Goodhue, with a knife and inflicted two wounds. Goodhue responded by firing a pistol at Cooper, who received a shot in his groin. Joseph Cooper died approximately two months later, and it was said that the pistol wound had hastened his death.


References


Sources

* Douglas A. Hedin, ed., Documents Regarding the Nominations, Confirmations, Recess Appointments, Commissions, Oaths of Office, Removals, and Terms of the Ten Justices who Served on the Supreme Court of Minnesota Territory, 1849-1858 Available online at:http://www.minnesotalegalhistoryproject.org/assets/Documents%20Part%202-A.pdf * Clark Bell, "The Supreme Court of Minnesota", Vol. 17, Medico-Legal Journal (1869), reprinted at: http://www.minnesotalegalhistoryproject.org/assets/Bell%20Medico-Legal%20Journal%20(1899).pdf * L. Hubbard, W. Murray, J. Baker, W. Upham, Minnesota in Three Centuries, 1655-1908, Vol 2, pp. 427–28, 449-50 (1908). Available at: https://books.google.com/books?id=mGgLAQAAIAAJ&dq=justice%20david%20cooper%20minnesota%20supreme%20court&pg=PR1 * http://onetuberadio.com/2014/01/13/a-golden-age-of-journalism-and-politics/ {{DEFAULTSORT:Cooper, David 1821 births 1870s deaths Year of death missing People from Frederick County, Maryland People from Utah Territory Minnesota Territory judges 19th-century American judges Nevada lawyers Pennsylvania lawyers Gettysburg College alumni 19th-century American lawyers