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Orleans Parish Sixth District Court records

 Collection
Identifier: CA-OP-6DC

Scope and Contents

The records are arranged in series as follows, all of which are records of the regular business of the court:

  • Suit Records
  • Minute Books
  • General Dockets (and indexes) and Special Dockets
  • Judicial Record Books
  • Deed Books
  • Naturalization Records
  • Additional Records

Dates

  • Creation: 1853-1880

Conditions Governing Access

Sixth District Court records are partially microfilmed and are available to registered researchers by appointment. Unfilmed records should be requested by docket number.

The general docket and indexes to the general docket of the Sixth District Court have been digitized and are available on FamilySearch.

Conditions Governing Use

Reproduction or use of materials is prohibited without the permission of the City Archives & Special Collections. Please review the Archives' Permission to Publish note.

Biographical / Historical

The Louisiana Constitution of 1845 allowed the legislature to establish "as many district courts as the public interest may require" (Title IV, Article 75). These district courts were to have original jurisdiction in all civil cases, when the amount in dispute exceeded $50, exclusive of interest. Act 43 of 1846 further detailed the organization of the district courts in the parish and city of New Orleans. The Act provided for five District Courts: the First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Fifth District Courts of New Orleans.

Act 229 of 1853 further organized the Orleans Parish courts, giving exclusive jurisdiction over certain types of cases to the courts (criminal matters to First District Court, probate matters to Second District Court, for example). This act also added a new court, the Sixth District Court, to have jurisdiction over civil cases pending in the City of Lafayette, newly incorporated into New Orleans as the Fourth Municipal District. Any civil cases and formerly heard by the Third Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson were transferred to Sixth District Court (any pending criminal cases were transferred to the First District Court).

The remaining courts (Third, Fourth, and Fifth District Courts) were to have "concurrent jurisdiction of all civil cases whatever" that did not fall under the jurisdiction of the special courts.

The Consitution of 1868 retained and reinstituted the six numbered district courts in Orleans Parish and added a seventh court. It reiterated the exclusive jurisdiction of several of the courts (First District Court, exclusive criminal jurisdiction; Second District Court, exclusive probate jurisdiction; Third District Court, exclusive jurisdiction of appeals from justices of the peace). Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh District Courts were given exclusive jurisdiction in all civil cases, except probate, when the sum in contest was above one hundred dollars, exclusive of interest. In most courts, the docket numbering begins again at this time.

The consititution of 1879 consolidated all of the civil ourts into a single court, Civil District Court, still in existence today. All cases pending in Sixth District Court were transferred to the new court under new docket numbers.

Extent

1 Volumes (unknown; updates when resource record is complete)

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Deposited by Civil District Court, 1974

Title
Orleans Parish Sixth District Court records
Author
bsilva
Date
5/13/2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Edition statement
Based on finding aid previously created by City Archives staff; reformatted for ArchivesSpace by bsilva in 2023

Repository Details

Part of the City Archives Repository

Contact:
City Archives & Special Collections
219 Loyola Avenue
New Orleans LA 70112
504-596-2610