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Richard Peters

 
US Supreme Court: Peters, Richard, Jr.

(b. Belmont, Pa., 4 Aug. 1779, sometimes reported as 17 Aug. 1780; d. Belmont, Pa. 2 May 1848), fourth Supreme Court reporter, 1828–1843; also reported Justice Bushrod Washington's circuit opinions, 1826–1829. Peters is best remembered for his part in Wheaton v. Peters, the Supreme Court's first copyright case. Peters's Condensed Reports (1830–1834) republished the reports of Alexander Dallas, William Cranch, and Henry Wheaton. By paring concurring and dissenting opinions, arguments of counsel, and annotations, Peters was able to cut prices by 75 percent, thereby making the Court's opinions widely affordable but also destroying Wheaton's market. Wheaton sued. The Court's 1834 decision recognized statutory enactment as the only basis for copyright law in the United States, required copyright claimants to show punctilious compliance with the Copyright Act's statutory formalities, and held even such compliance incapable of affording copyright in the Court's opinions. Practically speaking, Peters won.

Apart from Wheaton, Peters was less successful. He conceived an early headnote reference system but botched its execution; Congress complained generally about the “accuracy and fidelity” of his Reports; and he offended several justices politically. The Court dismissed him in 1843.

See also Reporters, Supreme Court.

Bibliography

  • Morris L. Cohen and Sharon Hamby O'Connor, A Guide to the Early Reports of the Supreme Court of the United States (1995), pp. 61–74.
  • Craig Joyce, The Rise of the Supreme Court Reporter: An Institutional Perspective on Marshall Court Ascendancy, Michigan Law Review 83 (1985): 1291–1391.
  • Sandra Day O'Connor, The Majesty of the Law: Reflections of a Supreme Court Justice, edited by Craig Joyce (2003), chapter 4, The Supreme Court Reports, pp. 24–30

— Craig Joyce

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Richard Peters
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Peters, Richard, 1744-1828, American jurist, b. Philadelphia. After serving as secretary of the board of war (1776-81), he was briefly in the Continental Congress (1782-83) and then in the state legislature (1787-91). After 1792 he was a judge of the U.S. District Court for Pennsylvania and handed down decisions in many admiralty cases. He was very interested in the improvement of agriculture.
Wikipedia: Richard Peters
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Richard Peters is the name of:

  • Richard Peters (cleric) (1704–1776), Pennsylvania colonial minister, uncle of the Continental Congressman
  • Richard Peters (Continental Congress) (1744–1828), Pennsylvania jurist, Continental Congressman, Continental Army official
  • Richard Peters (reporter) (1780–1848), Reporter of Decisions to the U.S. Supreme Court, son of the Continental Congressman
    • Each of these two is known as Richard Peters, Jr., as the younger relative of the preceeding.
  • Richard Peters (Atlanta) (1810–1889), a founder of Atlanta, grandson of the Continental Congressman
  • Richard Peters (football coach), American football coach at Ottawa University
  • Rick Peters, American actor
  • Rick Peters (baseball)

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Copyrights:

US Supreme Court. The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. Copyright © 1992, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Richard Peters" Read more