Johns was elected to the 20th Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the appointment of Louis McLane to the U.S. Senate and McLane's consequent resignation. He was reelected to the 21st Congress and served from October 2, 1827, to March 3, 1831.[1][a]
After the death of his father, he was appointed to take his place as Chancellor of Delaware in 1832. He served in this capacity for 25 years, until his own death in 1857.[2] He also served as Presiding Judge of the Orphan's Court and Court of Errors and Appeals.
Personal life
His wife was Maria Johns and his mother was Nancy Ann Van Dyke Johns, the daughter of former Delaware PresidentNicholas Van Dyke. They were members of the Presbyterian Church at New Castle. He was a slaveholder.[3]
Death and legacy
Johns died unexpectedly in New Castle, Delaware, while in office. He was buried in the Presbyterian Cemetery in New Castle.
He is said to have been "painstaking and laborious to a degree in his careful examination of questions, but was also notably prompt in making his decisions." He was known to have been a lawyer who would be "referring every case to some well-settled principle of law, rather than seeking to support it upon mere case authority. He not only laboriously, but conscientiously, sought to adjudge every case thus submitted, but also to draw upon therefrom well defined principles and rules of equity." Nevertheless, he was "notably prompt in making his decisions, seldom permitting the term to pass in making his determination."[4]
Almanac
Elections were held the first Tuesday of October. U.S. Representatives took office March 4 and have a two-year term.
^The Sunday Morning Star erroneously claims that Johns "had served the state in both houses of Congress", but there is no record of his supposed service in the United States Senate.