From 1849 to 1857, he was a reporter of the
Supreme Court of Georgia. He was an ardent
secessionist, and was a delegate to the Secession Convention. He is best known for his treatise on the law of slavery titled
An Inquiry into the Law of Negro Slavery in the United States of America (1858), published seventy-five years after the
Quock Walker case attempting to refute the proposition that slavery is antithetical to natural law: [T]his inquiry into the physical, mental, and moral development of the negro race seems to point them clearly, as peculiarly fitted for a laborious class. The physical frame is capable of great and long-continued exertion. Their mental capacity renders them incapable of successful self-development, and yet adapts them for the direction of the wiser race. Their moral character renders them happy, peaceful, contented and cheerful in a status that would break the spirit and destroy the energies of the Caucasian or the native American. Cobb's Inquiry represented the capstone of proslavery legal thought and has been called one of the most comprehensive American proslavery treatise. It drew together examples from world history of slavery, which he used to argue that slavery was close to ubiquitous in human history and thus natural. He also drew on evidence of slavery's economic necessity and on then popular ideas of "science," which supported
white supremacy and slavery. Cobb was also one of the founders of the
University of Georgia School of Law, and served on the first Georgia code commission of 1858 and drafted what became the private, penal, and civil law portions of the Georgia Code of 1861, which was the first successfully enacted attempt at a comprehensive codification of the common law anywhere in the United States. It is the ancestor of today's
Official Code of Georgia Annotated. Simultaneously, the Northern law reformer
David Dudley Field II was independently working in the same ambitious direction of trying to codify
all of the common law into a coherent
civil code, but Field's proposed civil code was not actually enacted until 1866 in Dakota Territory, was belatedly enacted in 1872 in California, and was repeatedly rejected several times by his home state of New York and never enacted in that state. Unlike Field's largely race-neutral code, the original Georgia Code was strongly biased in favor of slavery and white supremacy, and even contained a presumption that blacks were
prima facie slaves until proven otherwise. Georgia ultimately kept the Code after the Civil War but revised it in 1867 and many more times since, to purge the racism and pro-slavery bias inherent in the original text. A long-standing item in the code was the "
citizens' arrest law", which was added to the code in 1863 and remained unchanged until 2021 when the Georgia General Assembly curtailed the law Cobb served in the
Confederate Congress, where for a time he was
chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs. He was also on the committee that was responsible for the drafting of the Confederate constitution. ==American Civil War==