College and Research Libraries


JAMES E. O'NEILL 

Replevin: A Public Archivist's 

Perspective 

This article suggests that the times are not propitious for measures that 
would sanction the removal of public documents from public control, that 
the integrity-or completeness-of a body of records is a fundamental prin-
ciple of the archival profession , that nothing should be done that would 
even seem to condone or encourage the theft of records , and that the Na-
tional Archives, at least , would be disinclined to seek the return of alienated 
records that are publicly accessible and professionally preserved. 

REPLEVIN WAS one of those remarkable 
contrivances of England's medieval court 
system, a writ that enabled subjects to gain 
access to the king' s ·court in their search for 
justice. Armed with a writ of replevin, the 
subjects could, in effect, ask the court to re-
turn to them personal property that had 
been wrongfully taken and detained, or 
wrongfully held in custody by another per-
son, and could obtain damages for their 
temporary loss of the property. . 

In our own day the term has taken on a 
more general meaning-the recovery of 
alienated personal property through a legal 
proceeding, usually modern rules of civil 
procedure rather than a writ. It is still 
primarily used by private parties. 1 How-
ever, when the property involved consists of 
manuscripts with significant historical or 
monetary value, and certainly when such an 
action is brought by a government, replevin 
can become a matter of concern for librar-
ians and archivists. 

Twenty-odd years ago the discoverY- of 
field notes of the Lewis and Clark expedi-
tion and the subsequent litigation over their 
ownership disturbed the otherwise calm re-
lations among those who work with rare or 

]a11'1es E . O'Neill is the deputy archivist of the 
United States. His article is based on a paper 
presented on June 25 , 1978, in a session on re-
plevin at the Annual Conference of the American 
Library Association in Chicago. 

26 I 

unique documents . In that instance the 
court ultimately decided against the gov-
ernment's claim, and the notes came to rest 
in the Yale University library. 2 

Recently another case-North Carolina 
versus B. C. West , Jr. , an autograph 
dealer-has troubled the waters once again . 
Perhaps before the ripples it has occasioned 
become waves, the perspectives of the dif-
ferent specialists involved in the field could 
be more thoroughly aired. The present 
paper is a brief attempt by a public archivist 
to present his point of view (and that of his 
institution) on the replevin issue. 

RECENT DEVELOPMENTS 

The last few years have witnessed a re- , 
markable change both in the public aware-
ness of the importance of archives and in 
the questions of the ownership of, and ac-
cess to, the records and papers created by 
public officials. In 1977 three events took 
place that reflected the new public aware-
ness and the growing belief that the public 
interest in records created by government 
officials is paramount to private interests. 

The B. C. West case is, of course, the 
most noted of those events. Its details, in-
volving the ownership of several pre-
Revolutionary court documents, need not 
be narrated here. 3 What is important is that 
the North Carolina Supreme Court con-
cluded that the public sovereignty over the 
records in question had not lapsed since the 



eighteenth century. No disposal authority 
had been give':! by the legislature, and thus 
the records rightfully belonged to the state. 

The second event revolves around the 
telephone transcripts Henry Kissinger 
created while he was secretary of state. 
Early in 1977, after Kissinger donated his 
papers to the Library of Congress, a group 
of scholars, journalists, and others sued in 
the federal district court to have the tele-
phone transcripts returned to the custody of 
the federal government. They argued that 
the transcripts were records produced by 
government officials and that most of the 
transcripts involved the public business 
being done by Kissinger. 

In his decision of December 8 , 1977, 
Judge John Lewis Smith, Jr., agreed· with 
the plaintiffs: "The records in dispute here," 
he wrote, "were produced not only in ac- · 
cordance with department regulations, but 
also on Government time and with the aid 
of department employees, equipment, ma-
terials and other public resources. Having 
been prepared and transcribed in the dis-
charge of his official duties, the notes are 
the property of the United States."4 That 
decision has been appealed to the U.S. 
Court of Appeals. For the present, how-
ever, it represents a judicial view that is very 
decidedly on the side of the public's interest. 

The report of the "Public Documents 
Commission," completed in March 1977, 
also directed its study and recommendations 
to the public's right to know as a primary 
consideration for new· legislation to control 

• the disposition of the papers of members of 
Congress, the president, and the federal 
judiciary. Although the members of the 
commission did not agree in all matters, 
there was basic agreement that (as the 
majority report put it) "all documentary ma-
terials made or received by Federal officials 
in connection with their constitutional and 
statutory duties should be the property of 
the United States."5 

Since Watergate and the Nixon papers 
cases, most of the publicity and interest has 
been directed to presidential papers, but 

· the trend toward the public ownership of 
papers created by all public officials in car-
rying out their official duties is . widely ac-
cepted as improving the operation of the 
government and assuring the fullest possible 

Replevin I 21 

reconstruction of our 'national history. 
In short, the last several years have wit-

nessed a significant thrust in the direction of 
enlarging the area of public records and 
public control over the documentary evi-
dence of doing the public's business. 

THE NATURE OF ARCHIVES 

This was not always the case. The 
nineteenth century did not have the same 
concern for the preservation of public rec-
ords, and the private collectors and pub-
lishers of federal and state government rec-
ords were, in many cases, vital to the ulti-
mate preservation of many public docu-
ments. That role was the consequence of a 
number of factors. Some people in the 
nineteenth century, including Thomas Jef-
ferson, thought all important records, those 
that were historically valuable, could be 
printed in multiple sets of volumes. 

Moreover, the United States was very 
slow in establishing archival repositories to 
preserve. government records. Not until the 
twentieth century did states and the federal 
government pass adequate laws for archival 
authorities and provide sufficient funds for 
the safe retention of permanently valuable 
records in public archives. 

The disregard for necessary archival agen-
cies in the nineteenth century has now been 
reversed. State archival authorities were 
begun in the first decade of this century, 
the National Archives was established in 
1934, and now all fifty states have a state 
archives, even if a few are still less than 
completely effective. 6 

The expansion in numbers and services of 
archival institutions in recent years includes 
many municipalities, businesses, and uni-
versity archives, as well as manuscript col-
lections located in university and college li-
braries or in historical societies. These in-
stitutions are now responsible for preserving 
the public records and making those records 
available for public . use, and availability in-
cludes not only scholars but the many 
people now se~~ing evidence of their own 
families' and their own localities' histories. 
. The archives and institutional collections 

that are now established have taken the 
place of the private collector as the major 
agent for the preservation of our documen-
tary heritage. Operating with adequate se-



28 I College & Research Libraries • january 1979 

curity measures, these institutions collect, 
describe, and make available the documen-
tation of our past. 

As public awareness of and insistence on 
the preservation and access to all types of 
records has grown, the role of the private 
collector has diminished, and the role of 
what we might term the institutional collec-
tor has greatly increased. In this process 
public archivists, librarians, and manuscript 
curators have joined forces to preserve the 
heritage of the past. But it would be 
dangerous to ignore differences between 
professional perspectives of public archivists 
on the one hand and those of manuscript 
curators and perhaps librarians on the other. 

The public archives movement was the 
child of what the historian Robert Palmer 
has aptly called the "age of democratic revo-
lution. " 7 The pioneer in America was 
Charles Thomson, secretary of the Conti-
nental Congress and careful preserver of its 
records (which are now in the National Ar-
chives). But it was, in fact, the French Rev-
olution that created the pioneer of modern 
public archival institutions. 

The Archives Nationales was established 
in 1790 as the first national archival institu-
tion and was given broad authority to pre-
serve the records of the Old Regime and 
the new society being built in France. From 
the experience of the French archivists in 
the next decades came the principle of re-
spect des fonds, or (as it is usually put in 
English) the principle of provenance. This is 
the guiding principle for the organization 
and handling of archives, be they public ar-
chives or the formal archives of a business, 
a church, or a university. 8 

Put quite simply, the principle of prove-
nance means that the original order and in-
tegrity of records should be retained, since 
that order provides information about the 
men and women who created the records 
and their activities that goes well beyond 
the informational content of the individual 
documents. The relationships between the 
records can, thus, tell us something that the 
individual records cannot. They can, for 
example, reflect the decision-making proc-
ess and not just the decisions themselves. 
Archives, then, have an organic character, 
and like anything organic they suffer when 
their integrity is disturbed. 

The map carefully preserved in the rec-
ords of an exploring expedition has greater 
meaning than the same map separated from 
those records and made part of a collection 
of maps, and the records of the expedition 
would be the poorer for its loss. The 
lawyer's letter seeking more time to develop 
a brief might have some autograph value to 
a collector. In its proper place among the 
official records of Muller v. Oregon, it is 
part of the fascinating story of Louis Bran-
deis' famous and influential sociological l?rief 
of 1908. The story is incomplete without it. 
If that letter became an archival estray, 
separated from the Supreme Court file , a 
small but important part of Supreme Court 
history would be lost. 

Researchers look to the archival bodies 
they know should have materials for their 
research. The organic nature of the file is 
destroyed , and the historical record is in 
fact smaller, if the researcher does not know 
or cannot find the entire documentation. 

ARCHIVAL SECURITY 

The organic character of archival materials 
and the loss to our national heritage are also 
concerns of archivists when they encounter 
thefts from manuscript collections and ar-
chives. Greater security measures and the 
increasing public awareness of the impor-
tance of historical materials has not yet les-
sened the number of thefts in recent years. 
The Society of American Archivists began a 
security program to document thefts and 
publicize means of preventing them through 
a newsletter and handbook. 8 

But the thefts are continuing. The most 
recent cases in California, Texas, and 
Virginia do not give reason to believe that 
collections are yet safe. And the overwhelm-
ing number of thieves who are caught ac-
knowledge that their actions were taken 
simply to make money-not to preserve 
documents or to personally own historic 
manuscripts. Such thefts cannot be con-
doned, even by the passage of time or the 
fact that documents known or strongly be-
lieved to have been purloined have come to 
rest in a reputable repository. 

Replevin provides us with one small, btit 
necessary, tool to discourage such archival 
thefts. It allows those who have been 
wrongfully deprived of their property to 



seek its return. In our profession that prop-
erty is archival materials and manuscripts, 
and all of us retain the simple right to re-
plevin alienated property in the courts. Re-
plevin actions have been used since the ear-
liest English courts and are today part of 
the common law. 

Statutory laws in many states and in the 
federal government on the alienation of 
government property are more important in 
the prosecution and recovery of thefts, 
whether they are manuscripts or jeeps. 
However, private citizens as well as gov-
ernments retain the common law right to 
replevin property. The public interest 
would not be served by the elimination of 
that right. 

Replevin actions for public archival es-
trays sustain a historical view and belief that 
official records belong to the people as rep-
resented by their governments. Archives 
are universally recognized as an essential 
part of the heritage of every community. 
They are indispensable in the development 
of national and. local awareness and identity, 
and they constitute a basic part of the cul-
tural property of governments and peoples 
throughout the world . At the same time it 
must be recognized that archives have an 
official and legal status different from that of 
most cultural properties. 

Archives that were originally created to 
accomplish administrative transactions also 
serve as evidence of those transactions . 
Both as evidence and because of the infor-
mation they contain, they are indispensable 
for the continuing administration within 
governments. They not only document the 
experience of the people , but they also 
record and safeguard the rights and inter-
ests of governments and individual citizens. 

Archives thus constitute evidence that is 
essential to the continuing functions incum-
bent on public authorities, and they should, 
consequently, be in the public domain. As 
public property they should not be a part of 
private commerce and enrichment. The 
concern voiced by some Americans over the 
profits made by former government officials 
in writing and publishing their experiences 
strongly suggests the belief that public activ-
ities and the documents that record them, 
belo~g to the public and should not be used 
indiscriminately for private gain. 

Replevin I 29 

THE PUBLIC ARCHIVIST AND REPLEVIN 

With these many considerations in mind, 
perhaps a public archivist's observations on 
the current replevin debate are in order. 

Replevin has rarely been used in the past 
to recover records , and there is no evidence 
that replevin actions are going to flood the 
courts in the wake of the B. C. West case. 
Litigation is expensive and terribly time-
consuming, and the National Archives , at 
least, does not eagerly seek actions in the 
courts. In recent years the cases surround-
ing the Nixon papers, the Warren Commis-
sion records , and other matters have kept 
federal archivists busy enough with the law 
and the courts. The National Archives 
would attempt recovery actions in court 
only under the most critical circumstances. 

But the National Archives and other pub-
lic archives should not be asked to surren-
der the basic right to have public govern-
ment records returned to the rightful re-
pository. If they are in fact public records, 
they belong to the public, and public ar-
chivists have a responsibility to ensure the 
preservation and availability of those public 
records . Nor should public archivists and 
archival institutions be asked to proclaim 
they will not exercise the right of replevin. 
They may promise restraint and use reple-
vin only in the most important cases, but 
the statutory missions of most public ar-
chives . require them to preserve the public 
record ; and if public archives were to re-
nounce all discretion in the use of replevin, 
they would be negligent in their respon-
sibilities. 

In practice, what would the National Ar-
chives position be when faced with the de-
cision on recovery of federal records? 

First, it would approach recovery actions 
on a case-by-case basis. There is no blanket 
policy that affects all replevin actions. The 
archives of the United States is a vast and 
varied body of records, and to attempt to 
establish a single policy for replevin of fed-
eral records would be impracticable. 

In addition , decisions on a replevin action 
would include a number of considerations 
about the state of the records at that time. 
If the material is in a good location and 
likely to stay there, under professional ar-
chival control and adequately protected 



30 I College & Research Libraries • January 1979 

from the hazards of time, disaster, and 
theft , the National Archives would be in-
clined to leave the records in place. 

The consideration for professional archival 
control would necessarily have to include 
the description and availability of the rec-
ords. The materials should be available to 
the public and to scholarly researchers on 
approximately the same basis as they would 
be if they were in the National Archives. 
The National Archives is adamantly opposed 
to privileged access, and a decision to allow 
records to remain in their present status 
would surely include consideration of that 
issue. Public records must be available on 
an equal basis. 

Two other aspects of the access question 
that are important to the National Archives 
are the description and publication of the 
fact that the records do exist. If the mate-
rials are unknown to the public and the 
scholarly community, they are in fact lost, 
or unavailable for use . Institutional guides 
and finding aids are essential to all re-
positories and their users. The National Ar-
chives expects public records outside its 
custody to be described and made known. 
Access should include making a reasonable 
number of copies at reasonable costs for re-

searchers, as is done at the National Archives. 
A final circumstance in a decision to 

begin recovery actions would be the impor-
tance of the document or documents as evi-
dence of the activities, decisions, and 
policies in the federal government. The Na-
tional Archives is not likely to replevin 
routine documentation whose only value is 
an autograph. The informational content 
must be of consequence and value to the 
historical record of our past. The copy of 
the Declaration of Independence used by 
the printer Dunlap on the night of July 4, 
1776, would be in that category, and the 
National Archives would probably try to ob-
tain it. A bill of lading signed by General 
Grant will not engender the same interest. 

The importance of the material, its 
availability, and its security-these are the 
three basic criteria that the National Ar-
chives would use in making a decision on 
whether or not to seek legal action to re-
cover estrays from the corpus of federal ar-
chives. They are to some degree subjective 
criteria, of course, but they are also the 
criteria set forth by the National Archives at 
the time of the Lewis and Clark case. No~ 
thing that has happene.d in recent years 
suggests that there is any need for change. 

REFERENCES 

1. 77 C.J . S~ (Corpus Juris Secundum) , " Reple-
vin ," par. 4 (1952). 

2. The best summary of the Lewis and Clark case 
is Calvin Tompkins, "Annals of the Law: The 
Lewis and Clark Case," The New Yorker 
42:105--48 (Oct. 29, 1966). 

3. William S . Price, Jr. , "N.C. v B.C. West, 
Jr. ," The American Archivist 41:21-24 (Jan. 
1978), supplies a succinct summary of the 
case . See also Mattie Russell, " N . C. Ruling 
Menaces Manuscript Collections," American 
Libraries 8:471-72 (Oct. 1977). 

4. Reporters' Committee for the Freedom of the 
Press, et al. v. Vance , et al.; Military Audit 
Project v . Department of State , et al. 442 F . 
Supp . 383 (D.D.C. 1977). 

5. Final Report of the National Study Commis-
sion on Records and Documents of Federal 
Officials , March 31, 1977, p.l. The "alternate" 
(or minority) report concluded that "it is time 
to end the fiction that the public's records be-
long to presidents or other federal officials and 
therefore recognize and declare the fact that 
governmental records and documents belong 

to the people of the United States ." (Ibid., 
p.65) 

6. Basic information about the state archives can 
be found in John M. Kinney, comp. , Direc-
tory of State and Provincial Archives, 1975 
(Austin: Society of American Archivists and 
Texas State Archives, 1975) . 

7. Robert R . Palmer, The Age of Democratic 
Revolution , 2v. (Princeton : Princeton Univ. 
Pr., 1959-64). 

8. A good (though slightly dated) introduction to 
archival theory and practice is Theodore R. 
Schellenberg, Modern Archives: Principles 
and Techniques (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago 
Pr., 1956). Frank B . Evans, comp., Modern 
Archives and Manuscripts : A Select Bibliogra-
phy (Chicago: Society of American Archivists, 
1975), provides an extensive organized listing 
of archival literature. 

9. The Archival Security Newsletter is published 
as a part of the SAA Newsletter. See also 
Timothy Walch, Archives & Manuscripts : Se-
curity (Chicago: Society of American Ar-
chivists, 1977).