[1298] Ib. 118-19.

[1299] Ib. 122-23.

[1300] 2 Peters, 150-56.

[1301] Marshall to Greenhow, Oct. 17, 1809, MSS. "Judges and Eminent Lawyers," Mass. Hist. Soc.

[1302] See supra, 209-18, of this volume.

[1303] 12 Wheaton, 214 et seq. John Saunders, a citizen of Kentucky, sued George M. Ogden, a citizen of Louisiana, on bills of exchange which Ogden, then a citizen of New York, had accepted in 1806, but which were protested for non-payment. The defendant pleaded a discharge granted by a New York court under the insolvent law of that State enacted in 1801. (Ib.) On the manuscript records of the Supreme Court, Saunders is spelled Sanders. After the case was filed, the death of Ogden was suggested, and his executors, Charles Harrod and Francis B. Ogden, were substituted.

[1304] Washington, Johnson, Thompson, and Trimble each delivered long opinions supporting this view. (12 Wheaton, 254-331, 358-369.)

[1305] Ib. 334.

[1306] Ib. 335.

[1307] Ib. 337.