Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
Two months having elapsed since I made the proposal respecting the note of hand due from your brother Justus to me, and being still without an answer from him, I presume either that the proposal was not agreeable to him, or that some accident has delayed or misdirected his answer, and prevented its coming to hand.1
I have now settled once more in this town, and resumed the practice
of the law— But I have to maintain a family, necessarily expensive to a certain degree,
and I am burthened with the heavy charge of furnishing my house at a time when I am
without any income sufficient to meet it— I mention these circumstances solely for the
purpose of justifying the request that you yourself would pay that attention to this
debt which your sense of honour and of justice will dictate— When my late brother
Charles gave up the security upon which that very debt rested, I mean the mortgage, it
was, as he declared, not only for your accommodation, but
of essential benefit to you. I think therefore I may with some reason expect that you will provide at least for the punctual payment of the
interest— Indeed, if Coll: Smith will consider for a moment
his present situation and mine, the use which my money has
been of to him, and the manner in which it was obtained (I mean by Charles’s surrender
of the landed 162 security) I am confident that the generosity which
forms so distinguished a trait of his character will induce him to discharge the debt
itself— The sum being now, a trivial object to him, though it has become a very serious
one to me.
If you conclude to pay the note and interest, or the interest alone, please to let me have your answer, as soon as possible— As the convenience and even the comfort of my family depend in a considerable degree upon it.
I am, Dear Sir, with great regard and attachment your friend and
very humble servt:
P. S. The interest due on the note is now largely upon the third year— The two years in arrear amount to 280 dollars— I will send you either a receipt for that, or indorse over the note itself to you, according as shall be most agreeable to yourself.
LbC (Adams
Papers); internal address: “Coll: W. S. Smith.
New-York.”; APM Reel 135.
On 20 Nov. 1801 JQA wrote to WSS
(LbC, APM Reel 135) with a
proposal for his brother Justus Bosch Smith regarding the settlement of a 10 Sept.
1798 debt for $2,000, plus interest of $307.10, a loan that CA had drawn
from JQA’s funds without authorization. Although the loan was in Smith’s
name, it had been intended to provide financial assistance to WSS.
JQA suggested that instead of settling in cash, Smith could convey to
him lands that were “equivalent to the amount of his note and the interest due upon
it.” JQA asked WSS to ensure that Smith included a
topographical description of the land he chose to convey. Smith did not respond to
JQA’s offer, prompting JQA to write this letter to
WSS and then to Smith on 31 Oct. 1803, demanding that he “immediately settle the said note, or at least transmit to
me the four years interest.” Smith replied on 14 Nov., not found, proposing that he
repay the note in installments, to which JQA consented. In Jan. 1804 he
instructed Smith to deposit the first installment with AA2 so that he
could collect it when he traveled through New York. While Smith made the first
payment, he failed to adhere to the repayment plan, and JQA did not
receive full restitution until he settled the debt with Smith’s estate in Feb. 1820
(vols. 12:105; 13:294, 295; JQA to Smith,
31 Oct. 1803, 5 Dec., 17 Jan. 1804, 8 Jan. 1805, 27 Sept., all LbC’s,
APM Reel 135).