Description:

Writ of Execution to Seize Property of Butcher Job Bull of Boston in 1716 for Slave Owner Robert Jolls

Bristol County clerk Ebenezer Brenton issued this writ of execution to the sheriff or deputy of Suffolk County to attach property worth nearly £10 of butcher Job Bull to satisfy a judgment against him by Robert Jolls.

On the verso, Deputy Sheriff James Scolbey reported five weeks later that he served the writ on Job Bull and "for want of goods or Chatls to Satisfie the Ordr I have committed him to his maj's gall in Boston."

[MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY.] Ebenezer Brenton, Autograph Document Signed, Writ of Execution to Sheriff of Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay, May 4, 1716. 2 pp., 8.5" x 12". Expected folds; embossed paper and wax seal intact; some edge tears not affecting text.

Excerpt
"Whereas Robert Jolls of Bristoll within our sd. County of Bristoll yeoman by the consideration of our Justices of our inferior Court of Common pleas holden at Bristoll for & within our County of Bristoll aforesd on the second Tuesday of April last past Recovered Judgment against Job Bull of Boston in the County of Suffolk Butcher for Seven pounds Twelve Shillings Debt or Damages; and two Pounds seven & ten pence Cost of Suit as to us appears of Record whereof Execution Remains to be Done: We Command you therefore that of the goods Chattels or Lands of the sd Job Bull within your precinct you cause to be payed & satisfied to the sd Robert Jolls at the Value thereof in money the aforesd sums being Nine Pounds Nineteen Shillings & ten pence in the whole with two shillings more for this writ & thereof also to satisfy your selfe for your own fees & for want of goods Chattels or Lands of the sd Job Bull...."

Ebenezer Brenton (1687-ca. 1766) was born in Massachusetts. He was the judge of the Bristol County Court of Common Pleas from 1702 to 1708. He also served as Register of Probate from 1715 to 1721.

Robert Jolls (1677-1739) was born in the Massachusetts Bay colony and married Experience Holbrook in 1703 in Scituate, Massachusetts Bay. He died in Bristol, Rhode Island, and his will of January 14, 1739/40 listed enslaved black woman Carsh, girl Late, and boy Gad (whom he bequeathed to his daughter), and enslaved black woman Dimme and boy Cesar (whom he left to his wife during her life and then to his son).

Job Bull was a butcher in Boston. He served as one of the town's four hog reeves in 1715. Hog reeves were responsible for the prevention or appraising of damages by stray swine. He frequently appeared before the local justice of the peace John Clark (1667-1728) between 1700 and 1726 for such causes as to pay a debt, to return a ring or pay its value, and to give a recognizance of £100 for good behavior after an altercation with his wife, whom he married in 1711.

William Payne (1669-1735) was the sheriff of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, from 1715 to 1728. James Scolbey was one of his deputies in 1716.

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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