Appeals to the Privy Council |
Report No. 05_1768_00 |
Apthorpe v Pateshall |
Massachusetts |
Case Name Short |
Apthorpe v Pateshall |
Case Name Long |
Charles Ward Apthorpe v Richard Pateshall |
Acts of the Privy Council, Colonial Series |
APC Citation | v.5 [56] p.122–123 – 15 January 1768 – entry 1 |
PC Register Citation | George III v.6 (January 1768 – April 1769) p.7: PC 2/113/7 |
APC Citation | v.5 [56] p.123 – 17 February 1768 – entry 2 |
PC Register Citation | George III v.6 (January 1768 – April 1769) p.55–56, 60: PC 2/113/55–56, 60 |
Colonial Courts |
Superior Court – June 1766 |
Participants |
Apthorpe, Charles Ward Pateshall, Richard of Boston (administrator of Robert Pateshall) Pateshall, Robert, deceased |
Description |
Proceedings to dismiss for non-prosecution an appeal brought by Apthorpe against a judgment of the Superior Court of Masschusetts. |
Disposition |
Dismissed for non-prosecution |
References in Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council from the American Plantations |
Table of Cases (Apthorpe v Pateshall) |
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DOCUMENTATION |
Printed Cases |
Not found |
Privy Council Documents in PC 1 at The National Archives at Kew |
TNA Document | Committee report – 9 Feb. 1768 – PC 1/54/63 | view_Document |
Notes about Document |
Referenced in APC, v.6 [783] p.461 |
Other Documents |
Other Documents | See the report of the colonial court proceedings in Quincy, Massachusetts Reports 1761–1772, p. 179–187. |
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ADDITIONAL RESEARCH |
It is virtually certain that the case that Smith found (p.166) in the Massachusetts Superior Court of Judicature Judgment [recte Record] Book, 1766–1767, f.9[v–10v], the case reported in Quincy’s Reports (see Other Documents), and the case that is the subject of the Privy Council proceedings (see the Committee Report in TNA Documents) are the same case. The parties have the same names, the dates match, the folio reference that Smith gives matches the reference that Quincy gives on p.186, and Quincy tells us that Apthorpe’s counsel moved to take an appeal to the Privy Council, which motion was granted. |
Charles Donahue, Jr. |