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John Henry Wigmore ranks as one of the most important legal scholars in U.S. history. A law professor and later dean of Northwestern University Law School from 1901 to 1929, Wigmore was a prolific writer in many areas of the law. He is renowned for his ten-volume Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law, (1904-05), which is usually referred to as Wigmore on Evidence. Legal scholars consider this treatise one of the greatest books on law ever written.
Wigmore was born on March 4, 1863, in San Francisco, California. He graduated from Harvard University in 1883 and entered Harvard Law School in 1884. While attending law school he helped found the Harvard Law Review, which was to become the preeminent legal journal. After graduating in 1887, Wigmore was admitted to the Massachusetts bar and entered private practice in Boston. He supplemented his income by doing research and writing for Chief Justice Charles Doe of the New Hampshire Supreme Court.
In 1889 Wigmore moved to Tokyo, Japan, to accept the post of chief professor of Anglo-American law at Keio University. In addition to his teaching duties, Wigmore wrote extensively and researched Japanese legal history. Extremely adept at languages, he became fascinated by the field of comparative law and pursued this interest throughout his life.
Wigmore returned to the United States in 1892 and accepted a teaching position with Northwestern University Law School in 1893. He taught a variety of courses, including evidence, torts, and international law. In 1901 he accepted the position of dean, a post he held until his mandatory retirement in 1929. As dean, Wigmore raised money to build the Albert Gary Library, one of the finest university law libraries in the United States, as well as a new law school building. He recruited some of the leading legal scholars of his day and made Northwestern one of the most prominent U.S. law schools.
Wigmore's output as a writer was astounding. He produced forty-six original volumes of legal scholarship, thirty-eight edited volumes, and over eight hundred articles, pamphlets, and reviews. Much of Wigmore's writing was not of timeless quality, but his treatise on evidence is recognized as a classic because of the scope of its coverage and the insightful explanations of doctrine drawn from the most advanced U.S. jurisprudence.
Wigmore died April 20, 1943, in Chicago.
| Wikipedia: John Henry Wigmore |
John Henry Wigmore (4 March 1863 – 20 April 1943) was a U.S. jurist and expert in the law of evidence. After teaching law at Keio University in Tokyo (1889–1892), he was the dean of Northwestern Law School (1901 to 1929). He is most known for his Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law (1904) and a graphical analysis method known as a Wigmore chart.
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Born in San Francisco, son of John and Harriet Joyner Wigmore, he attended Harvard University and earned the degrees AB in 1883, AM in 1884, and LLB in 1887.
Wigmore's lasting influence is hard to measure in the evolution of legal systems in Japan and the United States.
He taught law at Keio University in Tokyo from 1889 through 1892. At that time, he began work on a compendium of Tokugawa legal decisions which would grow to 15 volumes before its completion in the mid-1930s.[1]
When Wigmore returned to the United States, he taught at Northwestern University. He became the dean of Northwestern Law School from 1901 to 1929.
In the 1880s Wigmore was also a leader for election law reform issues such as the secret voting method, and fair ballot access laws. He was also a manager of the 1907-founded Comparative Law Bureau of the American Bar Association, whose Annual Bulletin was the first comparative law journal in the U.S.
In 1904 he published his most famous work, Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law (usually known as Wigmore on Evidence or just Wigmore), an encyclopedic survey of the development of the law of evidence.
Wigmore's evidence rules are still used by many U.S. courts, including the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The modern basis for evidentiary rules in federal courts, however, are set forth in the Federal Rules of Evidence. Many states have evidence rules that are similar to those contained in the Federal Rules of Evidence. Among other things, these rules hold that evidence inadvertently disclosed is fair game in court, even if that evidence should have been protected by attorney-client privilege. Under recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, so-called "clawback agreements," under which information inadvertently disclosed can be retrieved, and the privilege effectively restored, are expressly permitted. If both sides are willing to enter into such an agreement, the adverse consequences of inadvertent disclosure can be minimized. A "clawback agreement" is most effective if it signed before any inadvertent disclosure occurs.
He also developed a graphical method for analysis of evidence known as the Wigmore chart.
Roalfe, W. R. (1977). John Henry Wigmore, Scholar and Reformer. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 0-8101-0465-2.
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