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were none.

Frauds on the Treasury-Gardiner Claim-Mr. Johnson, of Tennessee.

Some of the awards made were not paid, which circumstance resulted in the calling of another convention, and the making of another treaty in 1843, and the creation of another Board. This Board did but little; and there was another convention, which was to have been ratified on the 20th of November, 1843. That ratification never took place. During all this time these claims were increasing, and our citizens were without redress. The difficulties between the two Governments were thickening, and a war was expected.

We find in 1840 that this Mr. Gardiner went to Mexico as a kind of itinerant dentist, plugging and filing teeth for a livelihood. He wandered around until 1843; and the last seen of him was in the city of Mexico, in the year 1844. He was seen there by General Thompson, and by some others. He stated, and it is so stated by others, that he repaired to the interior, where, he alleges, he commenced mining operations to an amount of $300,000. All this time the difficulties between the Governments were constantly increasing, and war was expected. Mr. Thompson returned home, and Mr. Slidell was sent out. War was declared, as you will remember, in 1846. Gardiner commenced mining operations with little or no capital, and in two years' time he had invested, as he assumes, some $300,000. There are contradictory statements in regard to this matter; but it must be manifest to all reasonable and impartial persons who will make themselves familiar with the history of this whole transaction, that Dr. Gardiner had little or no capital to vest in mining operations at that time; and if he had, it is not reasonable to suppose he would have done so, in view of the belligerent attitude about being assumed by the two Governments.

We now come along to 1846; war was declared, this Gardiner was expelled from Mexico, his property lost, and his mines taken from him; and he now comes forward and sets up his claim, under the twenty-sixth article of the treaty of 1831. The war continued; and on the 2d of February, 1848, there was another treaty made. Mr. Gardiner was an observing and a shrewd man, and he saw, as every one who knows anything about such matters knew, that whenever a treaty of peace should be made, Mexico would be compelled to pay money to the United States, and be compelled to provide for the payment of claims, on the part of our citizens, against that Government.

By the treaty with Mexico of the 2d of February, we provide-after agreeing to take so much territory and pay $15,000,000-for the indemnification of citizens of the United States against the Mexican Government to the extent of $3,250,000. By this same treaty, another Beard of Commissioners was created, to consist of three members, and to hold its sessions in the city of Washington. Mr. Gardiner, having returned from Mexico to the United States, met here and renewed his acquaintance with Mr. Thompson. He stated his case to him, and they at once commence to conjure up or make out this claim-which did or did not exist to be brought before this Board. The claim was presented, and as the declaration will show, for the sum of $500,000. I will not say that Mr. Thompson, of South Carolina, was cognizant or guilty of anything wrong, but I will state as a fact, that when he came forward with the claim, as the documents will show, he had a programme for the taking of evidence, and as to what had to be done to establish the claim before the Board, and that, too, before he returned to Mexico, and before the declaration was made out. Both Mr. Thompson and Mr. Gardiner had been in Mexico and understood the condition of the two Governments, and were aware that Boards had set at various times upon claims between the United States and Mexico. When Gardiner returned with his proofs, a declaration was made out and filed before this Board.

Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. I would ask the gentleman from Tennessee, whether Mr. Thompson did anything more than give instructions conformably to regulations previously established by

this Board?

Mr. JOHNSON. I state facts, and it is for others to draw inferences. He drew a chart, or written instructions, by which this claim was to be made out. I am fully aware that lawyers sometimes give instructions as to how a case is NEW SERIES.-No. 5.

to be made out, and what character of proof is to be taken for that purpose; but in that instance, other things conform to the case. In this instance, however, the programme is made out, and the case is made to conform to it.

Mr. STEPHENS. Is it not the practice in all of the Departments of the Government-the Pension Office, for instance-where claims are to be presented, to establish rules of evidence by which claims are to be supported? Did not this Board do so in this case, and did Mr. Thompson do anything more than give instructions conforming to those regulations?

Mr.JOHNSON. I stated, when I first alluded to Mr. Thompson, that I would not charge that he was cognizant of, or intended to do, anything wrong, but would only state a fact.

Mr. STEPHENS. Certainly; and I ask the gentleman to state another fact.

Mr. JOHNSON. And that fact was that the affidavits were taken, and the case made out, in compliance with those instructions.

Mr. ORR. I will in this connection ask the gentleman a question, as he is familiar with the testimony in the case. Was it not proven before the committee that Dr. Gardiner exhibited to General Thompson the affidavits of certain persons in Mexico previous to the preparation of these instructions, and that those instructions were gotten up for the purpose indicated by the gentleman from Georgia?

Mr. JOHNSON. I think that the gentleman will find that fact stated by General Thompson himself, and by no one else.

HO. OF REPS.

They plead ignorance of the fraud whilst the claim was being investigated; they did not know it was a fraud, but they know now that it is. They know now where and how the money came; and, as honest men, worthy of public confidence and entitled to occupy a high place in the Government, they are bound to restore it.

Mr. GOODENOW. Major Lally ought to be involved in the same category.

Mr. JOHNSON. The gentleman from Maine says that Major Lally ought to be involved in the same category. I say that all, though there were a captain's company, the recipients of the proceeds of this fraud, ought to disgorge. If they retain it, I say in my place here, that in sound morals they are as filthy as a cage of unclean birds.

The gentleman from Connecticut [Mr. CHAPMAN] knows that I will make no unkind allusion to him. Since we formed each other's acquaintance here, our personal relations have been of the most amicable character. I am proud of his acquaintance. I have found him a shrewd and active business man. He has talents and business tact, and if I was not convinced of this before, I was on yesterday by the defense he made in this case. You saw his conciseness, his method, and the dependence of one part of his argument upon another. If you admit his premises, and follow him along to his conclusions, you will see that it is one of the prettiest and fairest cases in the world. It did his head credit; and I will not doubt his sincerity in the basis upon which he placed it. During the delivery of his speech I imagined myself in a criminal court, listening to the defense of a crimand that the gentleman was trying to make it appear not that his client was guiltless, but that the prosecution was malicious. It seemed that he wanted to mitigate the sentence of the court or the judgment of the jury, by pleading that the prosecution was a malicious one, without at all looking to the merits of the case.

Mr. ORR. General Thompson is an honorable⠀⠀inal, man, and it is due to him that his statement of fact should go out. Evidence of parties in Mexico was brought here by Dr. Gardiner, and the instructions given by General Thompson, as I understand him, were to put the affidavits referred to in form.

Mr. JOHNSON. They were instructions to him to make out his case. Here is the published testimony, and it is for the public, and not for me, to draw inferences. We find that in compliance with those instructions the case was made out and presented to this Board, and that an award was made to Dr. Gardiner of $427,000. About these facts there can be no mistake; and I tell gentlemen now, that before I am done I shall come to the touchstone in this matter. You may talk about high-minded, pure men, who lift themselves above ail that is low, and groveling, and disreputable, but there is a point in this case that will put them to the test. One thing has been ascertained since this claim has been allowed, and that is, that it is a fraudulent one, based only upon perjury and forgery. We know that perjury and forgery were the means by and through which the amount of money I have specified as being awarded to Dr. Gardiner, was taken out of the Treasury. Now, this fact, no one will controvert. The committee were of the unanimous opinion that it was a naked fraud upon the Treasury, sustained only by forgery and perjury. Then, if Mr. Thompson and Mr. Corwin are the recipients of money extracted from the Treasury by means of fraud and perjury; if they are the high-minded and honorable men they are represented to be, they will, upon every principle of sound morality and justice-upon the doctrine that the recipients of stolen goods shall, so soon as the fact is ascertained, restore them to their rightful owners-replace that money in the Treasury. Everybody acknowledges it is right that this money, which has been filched from the Treasury by fraud, so far as we can reach it, should be enjoined; and if a certain portion is enjoined in the hands of Corcoran & Riggs as money belonging to the Government, is it not equally right that another portion of the same money which has passed into the hands of Corwin and Thompson ought to be enjoined? I know that legally you cannot reach it, but I say that they are morally bound to return it. There is the touchstone. You that talk about honor; you that talk about having no knowledge of a fraud being intended at the time the claim was being prosecuted before the Board, know now that it is a fraudulent claim, and that you have stolen goods in your possession, which I know you are morally bound to restore to the rightful owner, to the last dollar. This tests the whole thing, and why debate it?

And we find, too, that is done very adroitly in this connection, by associating the idea of malicious prosecution as regards Mr. Corwin. Says he, "I am not his foe nor is he my foe; can the member from Ohio [Mr. OLDS] say as much?" Do you not see the course which he intended this thing to take, so as to impress upon the public mind the idea that there was enmity and ill-feeling existing between these two gentlemen, and that the whole proceeding here was malicious on the part of the member from Ohio, [Mr. OLDS?] Is it not evident that he desired to give that direction to the public mind? I do not know what the relations are between those two gentlemen. I have met and received them both as gentlemen, and I know nothing of their personal and political differences. I have looked upon them heretofore as equals, so far as those matters were concerned. Nor do I intend to inquire into their personal difficulties. But I can say for myself, as the gentleman from Connecticut [Mr. CHAPMAN] did, that I am not Mr. Corwin's foe, and I hope he is not mine. I have no reason to be his foe, as I have never received anything from him but kindness. I have met with him and passed the usual civilities of gentlemen, and nothing unkind has passed between us. The reason I make this remark is that I am in as favorable a condition to speak of this transaction as the honorable gentleman from Connecticut. Then why do you not acquit your man upon the merits of the case, not by innuendo, by indirection, and by making a false issue before the public mind, and there rest your case? What was the other ground upon which the gentleman relied? It was this, that the proceedings were ex parte. Ah! A malicious prosecution, based upon an ex parte examination of the witnesses. How does that fact stand? Was not Mr. Corwin before that committee? Did he not have the witnesses summoned, and did he not cross-examine them?

Mr. CHAPMAN. The gentleman from Tennessee misunderstood me if he understood me to say, so far as Mr. Corwin was concerned, that this was an ex parte examination. I made no such intimation; but I said, in express terms, that so far as Dr. Gardiner was concerned, it was due to him to say that it was ex parte, with the single exception to which I have adverted.

Mr. JOHNSON. I intended to come to that. The impression was made by what the gentleman

32D CONG.....2D SESS. Frauds on the Treasury-Gardiner Claim—Mr. Johnson, of Tennessee.

said, that it was an ex parte proceeding. I do not know what his intention was.

Mr. CHAPMAN. The intention was to make myself distinctly understood.

Mr. JOHNSON. Perhaps it is owing to my obtuseness, and not his want of clearness, and I will let it go in that way; but the impression calculated to be made by his speech was, that it was an ex parte proceeding, and that the witnesses had not been cross-examined. Well, so far as Mr. Gardiner was concerned, there was no ex parte proceeding. Mr. Gardiner was not on trial before that committee, and this bill contains no provision that would punish Mr. Gardiner, so far as I know. Mr. Corwin was the man with whom the committee had to do; and his connection with the Gardiner claim was what the committee were investigating. The gentleman from Connecticut nods his assent. This is the true state of the case. Mr. Corwin was present at the investigation, cross-examined, and had most of the witnesses summoned himself. So far as Mr. Gardiner is concerned, he is not upon trial at all, but we are to get at Mr. Corwin's connection with the Gardiner claim. That is what we are trying to do; and how does the matter stand so far as Mr. Gardiner is concerned? He was not on trial, and he was not before the committee, but he was heard by his counsel. About the close of the investigation, Mr. Gardiner writes a letter to the committee, in which he speaks of the investigation as being an ex parte proceeding, and claims the right of being heard. Did not the committee notify him that he could be heard and fix a day for him to come? Did Mr. Gardiner come?

Do you not see that the two main grounds upon which the gentleman from Connecticut [Mr. CHAPMAN relies, show that his argument is a specious one, made in true lawyer style, to acquit his client upon special pleading, when there is no merit in his case? That is the position which he occupies. We find in this connection that there has been something said by gentlemen about the committee going beyond the record. What does this resolution say?

"Whereas a strong suspicion rests upon the public mind that fraudulent claims have been allowed by the late Mexican Claim Commission, with one of which it is suspected that Thomas Corwin, Secretary of the Treasury, has been improperly connected: therefore," &c.

How does the fact stand? We are not to investigate whether Mr. Corwin knew that it was a fraudulent claim, (which we will come to directly,) but we are to investigate whether Mr. Corwin was improperly connected with the Gardiner claim. That is the point. Does not this investigation show that he was connected with it, and that he got a part-eighty-odd thousand dollars of it? I think it does. Is not his connection, then, with the claim improper? We say that it was an improper connection, that it was mere speculation, and that it was morally wrong.

In the bill before us, what do we propose to do? We intend to say that legally such a connection is wrong, not binding him more than anybody else, who has been guilty of the like offense. The offense was an improper one. Why was it so? Mr. Corwin was a Senator of the United States, placed there by the people to guard the people's Treasury, to take care of their money, and also, as one of the Senate, with the President of the United States, to make treaties with foreign Governments. We find when this very treaty was concluded between the Government of the United States and Mexico, on the 2d of February, 1848, that Mr. Corwin was in the Senate himself, and acted in his capacity as Senator. We find in this very treaty, as I remarked before, that three millions and a quarter were set apart to pay the claims of citizens of the United States against Mexico. We find that by this very treaty a Board of Commissioners was established. We find that while Mr. Corwin was Senator, when he was acting upon the treaty which made an appropriation of three and a quarter millions to pay these Mexican claimants, he received a fee to prosecute claims before the very Commissioners which he assisted in creating, and got a portion of the money appropriated out of the Treasury.

Mr. STANTON, of Ohio. I wish to know of the gentleman whether he considers that the committee were bound to inquire into anything be

yond what had been practiced by all of the members of Congress? whether he did not think they were bound to show that there was something peculiar in the case of Mr. Corwin from that of others?

Mr. JOHNSON. The gentleman from Ohio desires to know if Mr. Corwin acted differently from other members of Congress. If the gentleman will read the resolution, he will there find what we were appointed to do, and that was to ascertain Mr. Corwin's connection with the Gardiner claim, and whether that was an improper connection. We have found out what his connection was with that claim, and it is for the country and the House to determine whether it is an improper one or not. I consider it such, from the fact of his being a Senator at the time the treaty was made, voting for the appropriation to carry out the provisions of that treaty, and prosecuting a claim againt the Government provided for by that very treaty; and I think that the country will so determine it.

I do not intend to find fault with the report which the committee make here, but I wish to refer to it. The committee go on, and do what? They have ascertained Mr. Corwin's connection with the claim. They have shown what it was, and the country understands it. This committee after going on, and summing up the whole case, state that, "No testimony has been adduced before the 'committee proving, or tending to prove, that the Hon. Thomas Corwin had any knowledge that the claim of the said Gardiner was fraudulent, or 'that false testimony or forged papers had been or 'were to be procured to sustain the same.

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Now, do we not see how clearly that misses the case? The resolution required them to ascertain the improper connection. Does the improper connection depend upon Mr. Corwin's knowledge of its fraudulency? That is the point. The committee did not say that the connection was a proper one, but that he had no knowledge of the fraud. This connection was improper without a knowledge of the fraud, and if he had a knowledge of the fraud, it was but an aggravation of the improper connection. That is the whole of it, and you may

turn as you please upon this question, he stands improperly connected with this fraudulent claim, successfully prosecuted against the United States, and the money was obtained from the Treasury.

The gentleman from Ohio [Mr. BARRERE] seemed to strike a happy vein of argument yesterday upon this question; and it was that Mr. Gardiner was a bad man, and that Mr. Corwin was not responsible for it. He illustrated it by telling a story which Mr. Clay related of Mr. Grundy, that if Mr. Grundy was responsible for all the criminals he had defended he would have a great amount of sin for which to answer. That may be all true, but it is not Mr. Grundy defending a criminal in this case, but it is Mr. Corwin aiding a man in prosecuting a claim against the Government. He appears for the plaintiff and not for the defendant -for a man who is trying to commit a fraud upon the Treasury with the knowledge of its being a fraudulent claim, as I believe. We We say it is wrong

in that connection, and still more if he knew it to be wrong. The cases are not analogous at

all.

HO. OF REPS.

justify Mr. Corwin's connection with the claim morally, but he is willing to make it an offense legally. I cannot reconcile that sort of argument. It reminds me of a position assumed at one period of time by Professor Hoffman. He wrote as long ago as 1598-just two hundred years before the Virginia resolutions were adopted-that philosophy was the mortal enemy of religion, and that truth was divisible into two branches, one philosophical and the other theological, and that what was true in philosophy was false in theology, and vice versa. Now, the gentleman from Ohio seems to occupy this position, that that which is right in morals, is wrong in law, and that that which is right in law, is wrong in morals. I confess I cannot swallow that proposition. It seems to me that morals should constitute the basis of law.

Mr. BARRERE. I believe they have laws in some of the States that the citizens shall catch fish in certain streams only at certain seasons of the year. It is, therefore, legally wrong to catch fish in those streams at other seasons, but I do not think that if there was no such law, it would be morally wrong.

Mr. JOHNSON. It might be morally wrong in some places and not in others. That would de pend just upon the locality and the circumstances of the case. [Laughter.] But the gentleman goes on to justify Mr. Corwin on the ground that the fee was a contingent one. Now, I expect they have got a law in his State that no lawyer shall take a contingent fee; in other words, that if a lawyer brings suit for a certain amount on condition that he shall receive a certain proportion of it, he shall be stricken from the roll of lawyers. They would find him guilty of champerty.

Mr. BARRERE. The gentleman has misunstood me. I did not take the position he supposes with regard to the fee being a contingent one.

Mr. JOHNSON. I think the gentleman will find it difficult to understand his own position, when he sees it on paper. In the States we consider champerty immoral, and we pass laws making it a legal offense, because it is immoral. We say that it is morally wrong for a man to go about getting up suits in a neighborhood, and taking contingent fees, and we pass laws to punish him. But the gentleman tells me, with his profound understanding of theology and philosophy, that taking a contingent fee in a claim against the Government is a different thing from taking a contingent fee in a case before a court of justice. Now, if champerty is immoral in the States, and a punishable offense under State laws, I ask how, in the name of morals and common sense, it becomes right and moral in Secretaries, members of Congress, and other persons here? Such is the state of things here, that practices which are considered immoral in the States, and are consequently made indictable offenses, can be practiced with perfect impunity here, and no one must inquire into them. It is time that we had arrested this thing. The attention of the country is directed to it. It is high time that the indiscriminate plundering which is going on about the Departments, and about this capital, was put a stop

to.

Sir, I have not time to go into the testimony in this case. I had intended to have done so. But you will find, on looking over the whole of it, that the case was shrewdly anticipated by Dr. Gardiner and his coadjutors. He saw the various con

Government; he saw the difficulties thickening; that war would be the result; that a peace would be made, and that the Government would have to indemnify our citizens; and he commenced, with Mrs. Chase, Mr. Larned, and others, making up a basis upon which to rest this spurious claim. He carried on the case shrewdly, until he succeeded in getting it before the Commissioners. It is a fraud, and a fraud by which a large amount of money has been extracted from the Treasury of the country; and the recipients of the money thus fraudulently extracted, should restore it back to the coffers of the Treasury, if they are honest men and men of sound morals.

The gentleman from Ohio presented one or two other really strange ideas. He set out with saying that he should vote for the bill, thereby admit-ventions, and the claims against the Mexican ing that this thing should be made an offense legally as it was morally, because we proceed upon the idea in this, and most other countries, that to have anything like a perfect system of jurisprudence, law must be the perfection of reason, and, I will add, of sound morals. The morals must precede the law, and the law should be made to sustain the morals. If it is not morally wrong to do this thing, I tell the House and the country, that it is wrong to pass a law making it a legal offense. If it is morally wrong, pass the law and make it legally wrong. If it is not morally wrong, pass no such law; for if you do, you at once make law and morals antagonists; you have them running counter to each other. The gentleman from Ohio [Mr. BARRERE] seems to argue morals on the one hand, and law on the other that what is right in law is wrong in morals, and that what is right in morals, is wrong in law. He seems willing to

But, upon a further examination of this case, we find the witnesses differing with each other in their statements of facts. Mr. Payne, who was one of the Commissioners, says that they suspected it was a fraudulent case from the beginning,

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and that it excited the closest scrutiny. What does Mr. E. W. Johnson, who was Secretary to the Board, say? He says that the Commissioners suspected the case, and that Dr. Gardiner was called in again and again, and that his counsel were called upon to explain time after time. Who were his counsel? Why Robert G. Corwin and Thomas Corwin. The Board suspected that it was a fraudulent case; the Secretary of the Board suspected it; but these gentlemen did not find it out; and R. G. Corwin swears he never knew of it being suspected till suit had been brought against Dr. Gardiner. The inference is, that they either did find it out, or that Mr. Corwin has more credit for sagacity and talent than he is entitled to. The gentleman from Ohio pronounced a splendid eulogy upon Mr. Corwin yesterday, and spoke of him as being a man of great and shining talents, and of gigantic intellect; and yet with all his sagacity and experience and knowledge of men, he failed to find out that this was a fraudulent claim. The committee by saying that he had no knowledge of its being a fraudulent claim, say that he is a man of extraordinary obtuseness, and is not entitled to credit for sagacity. He either knew that it was a fraudulent claim, or else was too obtuse a man to find it out. If Dr. Gardiner's counsel failed to discern that the claim was a sheer fabrication from beginning to end, it argues but little for their heads and detracts much from their reputation for talents and sagacity; and if they had reason to believe that the claim was spurious, and was sustained by forgery and perjury, it makes them parties to the whole transaction-equally criminal with Gardiner himself, and deserving the withering condemnation of an outraged and betrayed people. The gentleman may take either horn of the dilemma. W. E. Johnson says that the counsel were sent for again and again to explain the claim. So far as the other witnesses are concerned, you might go on still further. Mrs. Chase and General Waddy Thompson seem to be at issue in their testimony. Mrs. Chase says that General Thompson is mistaken in attributing certain expressions to her in relation to Dr. Gardiner; that she never made use of them.

I find that my hour is within a few minutes of being out, which will prevent me from a more minute examination of this case; but I cannot conclude without making an earnest appeal to the House to come forward and sustain this bill, as one step towards arresting and condemning this system of high-handed plundering and swindling, which has been and is being carried on, about Congress and the various departments of Government. Sound morality, common honesty, justice, an eviscerated Treasury, all demand that something should be done to separate these vampires from the body politic. There must be something done to restore public confidence, for it is going very fast, if not already gone. The Government and the functionaries of Government are beginning to stink in the very nostrils of the nation; it is now dead and rotten in many of its parts, while the disease is rapidly making its way into the others less accessible. Its putrid stench is sent forth upon every wind and is arresting the attention of the voracious vultures throughout the land, and they have gathered, and are still gathering, around the carcass, ready to begin their foul work. They come "from the mountain tops, with hideous cry And clattering wings; the filthy harpies fly: Monsters more fierce offended Heav'n ne'er sent, From Hell's abyss for human punishment,"

THE GARDINER CLAIM.

SPEECH OF HON. E. B. OLDS,
OF OHIO,

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,
January 6, 1853.

The report of the Select Committee to prevent frauds on the Treasury being under considerationMr. OLDS said:

Mr. SPEAKER: When I left my home in Ohio, to return to this capital, I had not the most distant idea that I should feel called upon to trespass upon the time of this House by again adverting to the Gardiner claim. I felt, sir, that in calling for the Committee of Investigation, I had but dis

The Gardiner Claim-Mr. Olds.

charged a duty which I owed my constituents and the country; and even though the committee might acquit Mr. Corwin of the real charges alleged against him, still I felt that I had but discharged my duty, and that I might rather rejoice, than feel mortified at such acquittal. And even now, sir, I regret exceedingly that a sense of duty to myself, and duty to the constituency that I have the honor to represent in this Congress, compels me, in consequence of a remark made the other day, during my temporary absence from the Hall, by the honorable gentleman from New York, [Mr. BROOKS,] to ask the kind indulgence of the House, whilst review, somewhat in detail, this most extraordinary transaction.

I was aware, sir, that an effort had. been made, by pensioned dependents, by hired letter-writers, and by paid telegraphers, to forestall public opinion upon the report of the investigating committee; but knowing that sooner or later, the real facts of the case would be spread before the public, I was willing to wait for, and abide by the verdict that should be given upon that report by the American people.

I had supposed that the thousand and one false reports respecting the action of the committee, and the honorable acquittal of Mr. Corwin, which were scattered broadcast over the country, were designed to operate upon the elections then pending over the United States, and more especially upon my own election; for in my Congressional district, these false reports, with all manner of unfair and unjust comments, in handbill form, just upon the morning of the election, came upon us as did the frogs upon the Egyptians, and it might literally be said that they "came into our houses, into our bedchambers, and into our very kneading-troughs!" But I had no idea that even the men who gave them circulation, and carried them from door to door, and distributed them from hand to hand, supposed for a moment that they contained one word of truth. I had thought, sir, that when the occasion which gave them circulation, the election, had passed, an American representative would no longer be assailed for having boldly, fearlessly discharged his duty. But I find, sir, from the indication given by the gentleman from New York, that this false impression, this impression produced by these pensioned dependents and hired letter-writters, is to be seconded and continued by the efforts of honorable gentlemen upon this floor; and that, by such a course, if possible, the tables are to be turned upon

me.

Ho. OF REPS.

Gardiner committee. I am told, sir, that few or none of the Whig papers have published it in full. I should like very much to know whether the honorable gentleman, when he used the language referred to, had ever seen the report published in any form, other than the garbled extracts, scattered broadcast over the country just prior to the Ohio and Pennsylvania elections. Has the honorable gentleman, himself the publisher of a Whig newspaper, ever given that report publicity in his own paper? Mr. Speaker, I will venture the prediction, that even now, notwithstanding the gentleman would have the country believe that the Gardiner committee have honorably acquitted Mr. Corwin, he dare not publish, without note or comment, the report of that committee, with the accompanying testimony, in the New York Express.

Sir, until he has the manliness to do this, let him not attempt to tell this House and the country that I "attempted to throw odium upon the Administration, but that it was turned back upon me by my own party."

Mr. ORR, (interrupting.) I rise to a question of order. I submit, Mr. Speaker, that the remarks of my friend from Ohio [Mr. OLDS] are not in order when the House is considering the bill now before it.

Mr. OLDS. My remarks apply to the opinion of the committee in reference to this transaction. Mr. ORR. The House is now considering specifically a bill, and the remarks of the gentleman are not applicable to that bill.

Mr. OLDS. This bill is to prevent similar transactions in future.

Mr. ORR. My reason for making the point of order is, that if the gentleman from Ohio goes on with his remarks, some other gentleman upon the other side of the House must be heard upon the other side, and the merits of the particular bill before the House will not be at all enlightened by the discussion.

Mr. OLDS. I trust they will, before I get through.

The SPEAKER. The Chair understands that the bill before the House is reported from a committee appointed to investigate the very transaction to which the gentleman from Ohio refers.

Mr. ORR. What is the bill before the House? The SPEAKER. It is a bill to punish offenses such as the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. OLDS] is now discussing; and the Chair thinks the gentleman is not exceeding the limits generally allowed in debate.

Mr. ORR. I do not perceive the pertinency of the gentleman's remarks to the bill under consid

If gentlemen are not satisfied with their efforts to forestall public sentiment, and with their spuri-eration. ous acquittal of Mr. Corwin, but are desirious of turning the war upon me, I am ready and willing for the conflict.

The gentleman from New York, [Mr. BROOKS,] in reply to my colleague, [Mr. SWEETSER,] is reported in the Daily Globe as using the following language:

"The gentleman from Ohio, in order to evade or avoid these unanswerable facts and conclusions, attempted to abuse the present Adminstration for its extravagant expenditures, as if their doing wrong would justify him for refusing to do right. Now, if that gentleman will look back and observe the history of this Administration, he will see that in no one single instance, though a large majority in both Houses of Congress are nominally opposed to it, yet has there been no one instance in which they have reversed or condemned its action. The gentleman himself, or rather a colleague of his, did, indeed, in connection with the Gardiner claim, attempt to throw odium upon this Administration; but it was turned back upon him by his own party." Mr. Speaker, the honorable gentleman from New York, when he gave utterance to the language just quoted, should have known that it was unfounded in fact, and unwarranted by the report of the committee. He is himself the editor of a public newspaper; and if his duty as Congressman did not require him to read the report of the Gardiner committee, certainly his duty as the publisher of such newspaper demanded that he should inform himself of the facts, that thereby he might be able to enlighten and not mislead the public.

I wish, sir, that I could believe that the honorable gentleman had spoken in ignorance, rather than with a desire to pervert and misrepresent the facts connected with the Gardiner fraud. I say, Mr. Speaker, that I hope the gentleman has really spoken in ignorance, and that it may prove true that he has never seen or read the report of the

The SPEAKER. The Chair thinks the gentleman is arguing the necessity of the bill, and that his remarks are pertinent.

Mr. OLDS. Mr. Speaker, that the gentleman from New York [Mr. BROOKS] may see his error, and that the country may know in what manner the Committee of Investigation have acquitted Mr. Corwin, and turned back upon me the odium of Gardinerism, I shall direct the attention of the House to the phraseology of the resolution under which the committee was raised. It is as follows:

"Resolved, That a committee, consisting of five members of this House, be appointed by the Speaker to investigate all the facts touching the connection of the said Thomas Corwin, the present Secretary of the Treasury, with the said Gardiner claim; what fee, if any, he was to receive for his services us agent or counsel for said Gardiner; what interest, if any, other than his fee, he purchased and hold, either directly or indirectly, in said claim, and the amount paid or stipulated to be paid therefor; at what time he ceased to act as the counsel or agent of the said Gardiner; to whom and for what consideration he disposed of his fee interest; to whom and for what consideration he disposed of his one fourth interest in said claim."

This, sir, is the language of the resolution. It constituted the committee, and it pointed out distinctly and specifically the duty required by the House to be performed by the committee.

First. The committee was required to investigate Corwin's connection with the Gardiner claim generally.

Second. The committee was to ascertain his (Corwin's) fee interest in the claim.

Third. The committee was to ascertain what interest he (Corwin) had in the claim, other than

his fee interest.

Fourth. The committee was to ascertain the

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amount paid, or stipulated to be paid, for such interest.

Fifth. The committee was to ascertain at what time he (Corwin) ceased to act as the agent or counsel for Gardiner.

Sixth. The committee was to ascertain to whom and for what consideration he (Corwin) disposed of his fee interest, and to whom and for what consideration he had disposed of his one fourth interest in said claim.

These, sir, were the specific duties referred by the House to the committee; all the facts touching these specifications the committee were required to investigate and report to the House.

If, as the gentleman from New York charges, the committee have exonerated Mr. Corwin, "and turned back upon me the odium" of Gardinerism, it must be found in their action and report upon these specifications.

Pardon me, then, Mr. Speaker, for trespassing upon the time of the House, in applying to each inquiry and specification the finding of the committee; for by this course, without the intervention of pensioned letter-writers, we shall be able to understand who has been exonerated, and upon whom the committee "have turned back the odium."

First. The committee was required “to investigate Corwin's connection with the Gardiner claim" generally.

That duty, sir, the committee performed; that investigation the committee made. But do they exonerate Mr. Corwin from all connection with the claim, and thus roll back upon me the odium of being Mr. Corwin's slanderer? No, sir; on the contrary, the committee say, that

"In May, 1849, the Hon. Thomas Corwin, then a member of the United States Senate, was employed as counsel in the Gardiner claim by General Waddy Thompson, the original counsel of Gardiner, upon an agreement that Mr. Corwin should have for his fee five per cent. on whatever sum should be awarded to Gardiner by the commissioners. In February, 1850, Thomas Corwin, in company with Robert G. Corwin, Esq., purchased one fourth part of the claim of Gardiner, and this fourth part of said claim was assigned on the 13th of that month to W. W. Corcoran, Esq., who loaned money to the Messrs. Corwin to purchase it, and held the claim for Messrs. Thomas and Robert G. Corwin, in equal shares, as collateral security for the payment of the loan. The Messrs. Corwin paid $22,000, and relinquished their fees on the one fourth of the claim purchased by them, and paid a part of Edward Curtis's fees-what amount does not appear-as the consideration for the purchase."

Call you this, sir, exonerating Mr. Corwin from all connection with the Gardiner claim? Call

you this "turning back upon me the odium" of

Gardinerism?

Secondly. The committee was "to ascertain his (Corwin's) fee interest in the claim.”

On this specification the committee say, "that 'Mr. Corwin was employed as counsel in the case by General Waddy Thompson, upon an agreement that he (Corwin) should have for his fee five per cent. upon whatever sum should be 'awarded to Gardiner by the commissioners." Is this exonerating Mr. Corwin from having a fee interest, and "turning back upon me the odium?”

Third. The committee was "to ascertain what rest he (Corwin) held in the claim other than his fee interest."

The committee say, that "in February, 1850, Thomas Corwin, in company with Robert G. Corwin, purchased one fourth part of the Gardiner claim."

Call you this, sir, exonerating Corwin from being a part owner of this most fraudulent claim? Call you this turning back upon me the odium?

Fourth. The committee was directed "to ascertain the amount paid, or stipulated to be paid therefor, and the conditions of said purchase." The committee say: "The Messrs. Corwin paid $22,000, and relinquished their fees on the one fourth of the claim purchased by them, and paid a part of Edward Curtis's fees."

The committee; in speaking of the final distribution of the claim, further states, that "the sum of $94,582 was paid to counsel, and $107,187 50 was paid to the assignees of the one fourth of the claim originally sold to Thomas Corwin and Robert G. Corwin."

Call you this, sir, exonerating Mr. Corwin, "and turning back upon me the odium" of Gardinerism?

Fifth. The committee was directed" to ascertain at what time he (Corwin) ceased to act as the counsel or agent of the said Gardner, and to whom and for

The Gardiner Claim-Mr. Olds.

what consideration he disposed of his fee interest, and to whom and for what consideration he disposed of his one fourth interest in said claim ?"

In reply to this specification, the committee say: "The Hon.Thomas Corwin resigned his seat in the Senate, and accepted the appointment of Secretary of the Treasury, in the month of July, 1850. In the same month and previous to his going into the Cabinet of President Fillmore as Secretary of the Treasury, a sale of his fee interest in, and also of his half of the one fourth part of the Gardiner claim, was negotiated through the intervention of Governor John Young, of New York, to George Law, Esq., of New York."

Inasmuch, sir, as Mr. Corwin and his friends claim his acquittal upon the score of this pretended I am sale, it merits a more extended comment. unable to perceive, even admitting the sale to be genuine, how this makes his acquittal. The resolution of inquiry implies, just what Corwin claims, that a sale of his interest in these Mexican claims was really consummated. This is what public rumor charged, and this was my own belief at the time I called for the investigation. But, sir, let us examine this pretended sale, and see what it really amounts to.

In July, 1850, Mr. Corwin accepted a seat in Mr. Fillmore's Cabinet; prior to which a verbal contract or sale was made of his interest in this, as well as his other Mexican claims; but, sir, appears from the report of the committee, that this sale made in July, 1850, was not consummated until November, 1850-full four months after Mr. Corwin had entered the Cabinet of President Fillmore. The committee say:

"The assignment of his fee interest and bis interest in the one fourth part of the Gardiner claim, and all his interest in all other claims before the Board of Commissioners, (thirty-seven in number,) was executed by Thomas Corwin to Jacob Little, of New York, in November, 1850, and the money for the purchase was then paid by George Law, to whom the assignment to Jacob Little was at that time transferred. The money for the sale, $80,357, was received by Thomas Corwin, and on the 23d of November was deposited by him to his credit with Messrs. Corcoran & Riggs."

Mr. BROOKS. I do not desire to interrupt the gentleman further than to request that he will extend the quotation he has just made.

Mr. OLDS. I wish, Mr. Speaker, that my time would permit me to read the whole of the report of the committee, and every word of the evidence upon which that report is predicated. It should be read, sir, not only by every member of this House, but by every citizen of the United States. The gentleman can do much towards ac

complishing this object by giving the report and testimony a publication in his newspaper. Dare he do it?

Why, sir, wasthe consummation of this bargain, made in July, the consideration of which amounted to more than $80,000, delayed until November, a period of full four months? Does not this transaction, sir, carry upon its very face the evidence that the bargain made in July was a pretense, a mere farce? Why, sir, this sale covered Corwin's half of the one fourth interest, and his half of the

fee interest. For these two interests he had only paid a little over $11,000; and yet, with all the uncertainty that hung over this claim at the time that pretended that Jacob Little, a cunning, crafty Corwin purchased it, still hanging over it, it is Wall street broker, and George Law, one of the shrewdest speculators in all the country, stipulated to pay the enormous sum of more than $80,000.

Why, sir, if anything more were necessary to show that this pretended sale was a mere farce, it will be found in the following extract from the Mr. Corwin's own town, and published in the speech of Robert Corwin, made in Lebanon, Ohio, Cincinnati Gazette, and other Whig journals in Ohio. Robert Corwin says that:

"In July General Taylor died, and the administration of the Government devolved on Millard Fillmore, who, in looking about him for his constitutional advisers, solicited Thomas Corwin to accept a post in his Cabinet as Secretary of the Treasury.

"In this request he was joined by Daniel Webster, but Mr. Corwin replied that he was interested in a private claim against the United States Treasury; that Crawford had been charged with committing a wrong in being interested in a claim while a member of the Cabinet, and he would not place himself in a situation which would subject him to a similar charge. Several days elapsed, during which he was urged to accept the post, but peremptorily refused, until Governor Young, of New York-now in his gravecame forward and proposed to take Mr. Corwin's interest in all the claims before the Board. Mr. Corwin did not know what was their value, and he proposed to take for his interest whatever sum Governor Young and myself should

HO. OF REPS.

agree upon, but I found the Governor unprepared to pay so much as I considered the interest worth. I proposed myself to purchase Mr. Corwin's claim at the estimate I had proposed to Young, but to this he would not listen, stating that he still should be morally involved in the matter, for if I profited by the purchase he knew I would share it with him, and if there was a loss upon it he would be unwilling that I should bear the loss."

Mr. Speaker, is not this really a very pretty little farce? Why, sir, analyze it, and see its various parts.

Corwin felt that he would be liable to censure, if he accepted the Treasury Department under Fillmore, still holding an interest in claims against that Treasury. The verdict of the people upon Crawford's conduct, flashed vividly across his mind. Sir, it could not well be otherwise; for he had just witnessed the inauguration of President Fillmore. He had just seen Fillmore enter this Hall to receive the oath of office, followed by the Cabinet of the deceased Taylor; and the murmur from yonder gallery of "there come the Galphins," which reached every part of this Hall, was still ringing in his ears. The suspicions of the people must be quieted by at least the semblance of a sale.

He felt, too, that a sham sale to his nephew and partner would evoke rather than quiet the suspicions of the public. In this extremity, through Governor Young, George Law is made to play the part of "dummy." Bob Corwin would convey the impression that Governor Young was himsel the purchaser, though the committee assign him the position of negotiator, or rather that of a "go-be

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"But I found the Governor," says Bob Corwin, "unprepared to pay as much as I considered the claim worth. No doubt, sir, that Governor Young, seeing this claim enveloped in all the doubts and difficulties that hung over it at the time the Corwins purchased it, was unprepared to raise its value from $11,000 to $80,000. Consequently, by their own showing, this pretended sale remained incomplete and inoperative until these doubts and difficulties were removed. Messrs. Little and Law were too shrewd operators to place their signatures to an instrument binding themselves to pay any stipulated sum, much less the enormous sum of $80,000, until they had some reliable basis upon which to estimate the value of the purchase.

Why, Mr. Speaker, no man can peruse the testimony of George Law and Robert G. Corwin, witnesses sworn at the instance, and to give evidence for, Mr. Corwin, without a settled conviction upon his mind, that the sale in July was a mere pretense, made expressly to deceive and mislead the public mind.

Corwin, though he sold the claim unconditionally, had no knowledge of the amount he was to receive for it; and George Law, the pretended purchaser, though he bought the claim unconditionally, had no knowledge of the amount he was to pay for it; and yet we are told that Corwin had before entering the Cabinet of President Fillmore. "washed his hands of all interest in these claims" True, sir, Mr. Corwin had nominally sold his claims; but I ask every candid unprejudiced mind to tell me whether or not Corwin's real interest in these claims was not precisely the same after, that it was before this pretended sale,-ay, sir, up to the time that Governor Young and Co. fixed and reported to the parties the price to be paid as the purchase money for these claims?

Suffer me, sir, to call the attention of the House to a few extracts from the testimony of the witness referred to. George Law says:

"Soon after General Taylor's death, in the month of July, 1850, I was here in Washington. Governor Young, of New York, called at my room at the National Hotel. He said he had a friend who was offered a seat in Mr. Fillmore's Cabinet, and who had some interest in claims that were then known as 'Mexican claims,' and that were to be settled by a commission; and that this friend, from feelings of delicacy, would not take a seat in the Cabinet whilst he was interested in such claims. Governor Young was desirous to relieve him from that objection. I asked him if he thought that was the only obstacle in the way. Governor Young said that it was. I told him that if he (Governor Young) desired, I would purchase those claims. He said that he did, but that the purchase must be unconditional; because he was satisfied that if there was any understanding about the claims if not realized, his friend would not take the place. I told him that there was no necessity for any contingency about them, and that I would leave it to him (Governor Young) to say what the value of the claims was, and I would purchase them at his valuation. Governor Young said he presumed that would be satisfactory;

32D CONG.....2D Sess.

that the friend to whom he had reference was Mr. Thomas Corwin, and that he would go and see him. Governor Young went away. I am not sure whether it was the same day or the next morning that he returned and said that it was satisfactory to Mr. Corwin to leave it to him (Governor Young) to determine what the value of the claims was; and Governor Young said, if I was satisfied, it should be the understanding. I told him I was satisfied. Governor Young afterwards brought me a valuation of the claims, (this was along that season,) and I paid about $80,000 for them. I recollect that there was an interest in the Gardiner claim included. I think it was in all a little over $80,000 (but not much) that I paid; but I cannot say how much I paid for the Gardiner claim in particular. I gave my check for the amount for all the claims, or Mr. Corwin's interest in them."

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Now, Mr. Speaker, what is the only true inference to be drawn from such testimony? Why simply this, sir: Governor Young, the sub-treasurer of New York, the custodian of the Government money in that city, was the personal friend of Mr. Corwin. Perhaps, sir, his continuance in the office of sub-treasurer depended upon Corwin's assuming the control of the Treasury Department. Perhaps, too, sir, the fact of Governor Young's being the sub-treasurer, and controlling the enormous revenues of the Government in New York, will explain George Law's great confidence in, and extreme willingness to oblige him. Perhaps, sir, Governor Young's control of the Government money made it necessary, to save appearances, to use George Law, or some other third person, lest it might be said that the Government money, in the hands of Governor Young, had been used in this transaction. Perhaps the fact that George Law was one of Governor Young's sureties, his name being upon his official bond for $400,000, will account for his great confidence in the Governor, and the loose and unbusiness-like manner in which, by his own showing, he seems to have conducted this whole transaction.

Be all these conjectures as they may, there can be no doubt but that Governor Young was extremely anxious to have Mr. Corwin enter the Cabinet of President Fillmore; and in order to relieve his "feelings of delicacy," undertakes to negotiate a sale of Corwin's interest in these various Mexican claims. And to oblige Governor Young, without any investigation or examination, the sagacious George Law agrees to purchase those claims. This he does without the least anxiety or hesitation, as Governor Young is to assess their value. This, too, is satisfactory to Mr. Corwin, inasmuch as the claims are to remain untransferred, and his partner and nephew is also to assess their value. Mr. Corwin's "feelings of delicacy" are relieved, and he takes his position in the Cabinet. Governor Young and Bob Corwin wait until the award of the claims commission is known, or as Mr. Law says, until "some time along that season,' and then they assess the value; and then, and not till then, the contract is consummated and the bargain reduced to writing. The precise time, the committee inform us, was in November, more than four months after Mr. Corwin had entered the Cabinet of President Fillmore.

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Mr. Speaker, a careful reading of this testimony has satisfied me that Governor Young, Mr. Corwin's sub-treasurer in New York, and not George Law, was the real purchaser of Corwin's interest in these Mexican claims, if such a loose unbusiness-like transaction as this could be dignified with the name of a sale. The extracts already read from Mr. Law's testimony lead the mind imperceptibly to this conclusion; and the following extract from the testimony of Robert G. Corwin, taken before the committee, confirms the impression:

"Robert G. Corwin appeared as a witness, and was

sworn.

"Question by Hon. Thomas Corwin. Were you concerned with me, as counsel, in prosecuting claims before

The Gardiner Claim-Mr. Olds.

he late commission under the treaty with Mexico? If so, state whether I sold out all my interest in those claims, and when, and to whom.

"Answer. I was concerned with you in the prosecution of claims up to the time when you went into the Cabinet of Mr. Fillmore. Your interes was sold prior to your going into the Cabinet, and your interest was represented afterwards by Governor John Young, of New York. I don't know exactly by whom the whole arrangement was made with Governor Young. The assignment of his interest was made to Jacob Little; he afterwards transferred his interest in these claims to George Law. I understood that Young was the negotiator, and that the assignment was made to Little to enable Young to get the money from him fairly; then it was transferred to Law, from whom the money was received. The sale was made prior to the organization of Mr. Fillmore's Cabinet, which was some time in July, 1850; but it was agreed that Governor Young and myself should estimate the value of your interest in all the claims you were concerned in. We were concerned in thirty-seven claims in all. We, Governor Young and myself, concluded the examination of all the papers, and made out the estimate a short time prior to the next regular session of the board in November, 1850."

Now, Mr. Speaker, I ask, in all fairness, does not this case really assume this one aspect? Corwin must sell his interest in these claims before entering the Cabinet of President Fillmore. Consequently, he sells to Governor Young at such price as Governor Young himself, and Robert G. Corwin should fix upon them; giving them time to wait until the award of the commissioners should be known, before fixing the value. And then, as Governor Young was Mr. Corwin's sub-treasurer in the city of New York, George Law, the intimate friend and surety of Governor Young, is used to throw an obscurity over the transaction, and give it the semblance of a sale.

Why, sir, when you have exposed and set aside George Law's connection with this transaction, you have taken from it the veil of obscurity, and it stands, like Moore's Prophet when the veil was lifted, exposed in all its "hideous deformity.' And yet, sir, this is what the gentleman from New York calls exonerating Mr. Corwin, "and turning back upon me the odium!"

These five specifications, Mr. Speaker, in the very order in which I have named them, embrace all the duties imposed by the resolution of the House upon the Committee of Investigation. That resolution, sir, nowhere charged the committee with the duty of inquiring into Corwin's knowledge of the fraudulent character of Dr. Gardiner's evidence. No such specification is made in the resolution, and as a matter of course no testimony was adduced before the committee to establish any such inference or implication. If any such thing had been attempted, Mr. Corwin, if he chose, could at once have objected to the jurisdiction of the committee, and have told them that they were going beyond the duty assigned them by the House.

Mr. BROOKS. Will the gentleman from Ohio allow me to read the preamble to the resolution? Mr. OLDS. Certainly, sir.

Mr. BROOKS. It is as follows: "Whereas, a strong suspicion rests upon the public mind that fraudulent claims have been allowed by the late Mexican Claim Commissioners, with one of which it is suspected Thomas Corwin, Secretary of the Treasury, has been improperly connected; therefore," &c.

Will the gentleman from Ohio incorporate it in his speech?

er,

Mr. OLDS. Certainly I will. But, Mr. Speakit does not in the least change the interpretation of the resolution, neither does it in the least change the character of the specifications against Mr. Corwin.

Why, sir, the committee do not hesitate to say that the commissioners allowed fraudulent Mexican claims. The suspicions of the public then, as affirmed in this preamble, were well founded. Is it not, sir, equally as clear, that the connection of Mr. Corwin with one of them, as affirmed in the preamble, was improper? If not, sir, why do the committee, as they have done in the bill now under consideration, seek to make, in future, precisely such a connection, a misdemeanor, even though the claim may not be a fraudulent one? Mr. Corwin, sir, is welcome to the full benefit of all his friends can make out of this preamble.

Now, sir, with these facts before us, will the honorable gentleman from New York, or any honorable gentleman, rise in his place and say, that the committee have not fully sustained every specification made in the resolution of the House? I may, perhaps, be told that, in the remarks which

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HO. OF REPS.

I had the honor to submit to the House, at the time I introduced the resolution calling for this committee of investigation, I made certain charges against Mr. Corwin, which the committee felt itself called upon to investigate; and that upon those charges they have acquitted Mr. Corwin, and . "turned back upon me the odium" of being an "infamous slanderer.'

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On the 5th of March last, in my remarks in this House upon the land bill, I charged that Corwin had been employed in this case, that it might receive the aid, not of his legal abilities, not of his great eloquence, but of his political position, and the influence of his great name. He is not charged with being a party in the fraud, but the charge is, that he sold his political position and political influence in aid of a claim, fraudulent in itself, and sustained by perjured testimony. I repeated the same language, showing my precise meaning in the remarks I submitted at the time of calling for the committee of investigation. That I may place myself right, and be correctly understood, I will read from the remarks then made, as reported in the Congressional Globe, page 2303, part 3d of the 24th volume, and repeated in the Appendix to the same volume, page 266:

"Sir, let me divert the attention of this committee for a single moment to charges that common rumor fasten upon the present Secretary of the Treasury, and which the country demand to have investigated by this Congress. I refer, sir, to his connection with the Gardiner claim.

Public ru

or charges, sir, that Mr. Corwin received $79,000 as the

agent of this Gardiner claim. Now, sir, the inquiry naturally arises, Why did Mr. Gardiner stipulate to pay Mr. Corwin this enormous fee? Was Mr. Gardiner so dumb that he could not act as the agent of his own claim? Not so, sir; he is a man belonging to one of the liberal professions, and cannot be supposed to be devoid of common sense; and, sir, if his claim was a just one, he could himself present it before the proper tribunal and ask a decision upon its merits. But if his claim was bad, he would naturally desire to bring the stronger influence to its support. He could not have selected Mr. Corwin because of his great eloquence; for, sir, a plain, simple statement of facts was all that was allowed before the tribunal. He could not have selected him on account of his legal acumen in taking and arranging testimony, for, sir, this case was prepared and the testimony taken in Mexico; and every one knows that Mr. Corwin, though a great favorite in Mexico in consequence of his bloody hand and hospitable grave' sentiments, was never in Mexico. Nay, more, sir; a grand inquest of the country, upon their oaths, have said that this whole case is a forgery. Why, then, sir, was Mr. Corwin selected? The answer is obvious: Mr. Corwin is a great man with his party. He has been made so, sir, by the Whigs of Ohio. They made him their Representative first in this House; then, sir, they made him their standardbearer of the party in Ohio, by selecting him as their candidate for Governor; then, sir, they sent him to the Senate of the United States. But this is not all; he was at one time the favorite of his party in Ohio, as a candidate for the Presidency. His name, in connection with that office, was at the mast-head of his party press. Sir, Mr. Gardiner, as a shrewd man, knew all this. He knew that this man must be possessed of great influence with a Whig Administration; and for the exercise of this influence, for the power of this position, Mr. Gardiner could afford to give Mr. Corwin $100,000, if thereby he could get allowed his claim of $480,000. But, sir, in what light does it present Mr. Corwin before the country? The people had sent him here to guard their interests; they were paying him eight dollars per day to watch the National Treasury; they supposed, sir, that with the vigilant and ever-watchful eye of Mr. Corwin upon the Treasury, all would be safe. But, sir, rumor says that they were mistaken in their man; for whilst receiving pay from the people to watch and guard their Treasury, this Mr. Gardiner, knowing his man, feed him on the other side -he outbid the people. Gardiner's $100,000 was as omnipotent over your National Treasury as was the Open sesame' of Ali Baba over the cavern of the Forty Thieves.""

Mr. Speaker, the evidence of General Thompson himself, as well as that of Edward M. Johnson, the secretary of the board of Mexican claims commission, fully demonstrate it was political influence that Gardiner desired to aid and strengthen his claim, and not forensic eloquence or legal ac

cumen.

Johnson, in his testimony, says:

"After the first instances, the board became satisfied that Dr. Gardiner himself understood his own case better than anybody else, and that the best means of arriving at the truth would be to receive his own statements, and cross-examine him on all these points."

Gardiner, then, was fully competent to the management of his own case; and in the selection of his counsel and agents, his object was to secure the aid of such persons as had power and influence with the commissioners.

This is shown in the testimony of Waddy Thompson, who, in speaking of the employment of Major Lally, a near connexion of one of the commissioners, says:

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