The son of Joseph and Maria Yates, Robert Yates was born in Schenectady, NY,
on January 27, 1738. He received a classical education in New York City and
later studied law with William Livingston. Yates was admitted to the New York
bar in 1760 and thereafter resided in Albany.
Between 1771 and 1775 Yates sat on the Albany board of aldermen. During the
pre-Revolution years Yates counted himself among the Radical Whigs, whose
vigilance against corruption and emphasis on the protection of liberty in
England appealed to many in the colonies. Once the Revolution broke out, Yates
served on the Albany committee of safety and represented his county in four
provincial congresses and in the convention of 1775-77. At the convention he sat
on various committees, including the one that drafted the first constitution for
New York State.
On May 8, 1777, Yates was appointed to New York's supreme court and presided
as its chief justice from 1790 through 1798. While on the bench he attracted
criticism for his fair treatment of Loyalists. Other duties included serving on
commissions that were called to settle boundary disputes with Massachusetts and
Vermont.
In the 1780s Robert Yates stood as a recognized leader of the Antifederalists.
He opposed any concessions to the federal congress, such as the right to collect
impost duties, that might diminish the sovereignty of the states. When he
travelled to Philadelphia in May 1787 for the federal convention, he expected
that the delegates would simply discuss revising the existing Articles. Yates
was on the committee that debated the question of representation in the
legislature, and it soon became apparent that the convention intended much more
than modification of the current plan of union. On July 5, the day the committee
presented its report, Yates and John Lansing (to whom Yates was related by
marriage) left the proceedings. In a joint letter to Gov. George Clinton of New
York, they spelled out the reasons for their early departure. They warned
against the dangers of centralizing power and urged opposition to adopting the
Constitution. Yates continued to attack the Constitution in a series of letters
signed "Brutus" and "Sydney" and voted against ratification at the Poughkeepsie
convention.
In 1789 Yates ran for governor of New York but lost the election. Three years
after his retirement from the state supreme court, on September 9, 1801, he
died, leaving his wife, Jannetje Van Ness Yates, and four of his six children.
Though he had enjoyed a comfortable income at the start of his career, his
capital had dwindled away until very little was left. In 1821 his notes from the
Constitutional Convention were published under the title Secret Proceedings and
Debates of the Convention Assembled . . . for the Purpose of Forming the
Constitution of the United States.