Ebenezer Tracy Wells (May 15, 1835 – April 20, 1923) was a jurist from Colorado. He served as an associate justice in both the territorial and state supreme courts.
Wells moved to Colorado in October 1865 and settled first in Gilpin County. In the territorial government, he served as a member of the lower house of the 5th general assembly. In 1871, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Wells associate justice of the territorial supreme court to fill out the term of Christian S. Eyster, who had resigned, and he served for four years until 1875. He was a member of the Colorado Constitutional Convention.[2]
When Colorado gained statehood in 1876, Wells was one of four successful candidates elected to the Colorado Supreme Court. However, he resigned at the end of the court's first term after serving only one year on the bench.[2][3] He practiced law with Edmond L. Smith and Thomas Mason in the firm Wells, Smith & Mason.[4]
Later life
Long after serving as a State Supreme Court Justice, Wells served for eleven years (1909-1920) as the Reporter of the Supreme Court.[5]
He also ran for mayor of Denver in 1901 but lost the election.[6]