Title: The Significance of the Marshall Court (1801-1835)
1The Significance of the Marshall Court
(1801-1835)
2The Changing Role of the Judiciary
- Colonial courts were not an independent entity or
separate branch of government (e.g., Thomas
Hutchinson in Massachusetts had simultaneously
been chief justice of the superior court,
lieutenant governor, a member of the council, and
judge probate of Suffolk County) - Judges were appointed because of social and
political rank, not due to legal expertise - Court performed administrative and executive
tasks - In the 1780s, the modern idea of judiciary as a
equal and independent branch of government took
root.
3The federal judiciary
- Article III creates a Supreme Court and allows
for the creation of such inferior courts as the
Congress may from time to time ordain and
establish.
- The Judiciary Act of 1789 creates the
hierarchical three tiered federal court system
4Establishing Judicial Independence
- Life terms during good behavior
- Guaranteed Salary
- Removal only by impeachment
5The Significance of Jurisdiction
- Original
- Exclusive versus Concurrent
- Appellate
- District Courts had jurisdiction over admiralty
cases, petty crimes, and revenue collection - Circuit Courts served as major trial courts for
cases involving out-of-state or foreign citizens,
and over appeals from the district courts in
admiralty cases also had concurrent jurisdiction
with state courts in cases with more than 500
hundred dollars at stake and in those with
diversity of citizenship (i.e., citizens from
different states) - Supreme Courtjustices rode circuit and initially
heard few cases (only 87) before the 1801 term.
Also had a rule that the justices would drink
wine only on rainy days.
6Do federal courts have jurisdiction over common
law crimes?
- For example, can you punish seditious libel
without Congress passing a sedition act? - Federalists and Republicans provided different
answers to this question in the 1790s. - The Supreme Court finally resolved this issue in
United States v. Hudson (1812)
7The Retirement of Oliver Ellsworth
- Whats a President to do?
- The Political Environment in mid December 1800
- How does John Adams decide?
8Overview
- The most important achievement of the Marshall
Court (1801-1835) was not particular landmark
rulings but rather its elevation of the Courts
stature. Had the justices not begun aggressively
exercising the power of judicial review when they
did, the Court might never have become a
coordinate branch of the national government. In
1801, it certainly was not. That year, John Jay
declined President John Adamss offer to
reappoint him chief justice, observing that the
federal judicial system was so defective that
it could never obtain the energy, weight, and
dignity which are essential to its affording due
support to the national government. - Michael Klarman
9The Final Days of the Adams Administration
- Interregnum
- The Judiciary Act of 1801 16 new circuit court
judges blanket power to appoint justices of the
peace for the District of Columbia and changing
the number of Supreme Court Justices - Secretary of State John Marshall, a moderate
Federalist who had opposed the Alien and Sedition
Acts, becomes Chief Justice John Marshall.
10The Republicans Respond
- President Jefferson and Secretary of State James
Madison Refuse to Send Commissions - The Republican Congress passes the Repeal Act of
1802 and abolishes the 1802 term of the Supreme
Court
11The Fragile State of Judicial Independence
- The Threat of Impeachment
- How to use this power?
- Impeaching Judge John Pickering
- The Impeachment of Justice Samuel Chase
12Marshalls Dilemma
- Although Jefferson and Marshall are cousins, they
intensely dislike one another. - If the Supreme Court declares the 1802 repeal of
the Judiciary Act of 1801 unconstitutional, then
the Republicans in Congress might destroy the
judiciary. - What would happen if the Supreme Court ordered
President Jefferson to issue Marburys
commission, but he refused?
13The Eloquence of Marshall
- All of his eloquence consists in the apparently
deep self conviction and emphatick earnestness of
his manner the correspondent simplicity and
energy of his style the close and logical
connexion of his thoughts and the easy
gradations by which he opens his lights on the
attentive minds of his hearers. - The audience is never permitted to pause for a
moment. There is no stopping to weave garlands
of flowers, to hang in festoons, around a
favourite argument. On the contrary, every
sentence is progressive every idea sheds new
light on the subject the listener is kept
perpetually in that sweetly pleasurable
vibration, with which the mind of man always
receives new truths the dawn advances in easy
but unremitting pace the subject opens gradually
on the view until, rising, in high relief, in
all its native colours and proportions, the
argument is consummated, by the conviction of the
delighted hearer. . . . - William Writ
14The Sophistry of Marshall
- When conversing with Marshall, I never admit
anything. So sure as you admit any position to be
good, no matter how remote from the conclusion he
seeks to establish, you are gone. So great is
his sophistry you must never give him an
affirmative answer, or you will be forced to
grant his conclusion. Why, if he were to ask me
whether it were daylight or not, Id reply, Sir,
I dont know, I cant tell. - Thomas Jefferson
15Marshall and Order
- In the order in which the court has viewed this
subject, the following questions have been
considered and decided. - 1. Has the applicant a right to the commission
he demands? - 2. If he has a right, and that right has been
violated, do the laws of his country afford him a
remedy? - 3. If they do afford him a remedy, is it a
mandamus issuing from this court?
16A Political Interpretation
- The decision is an ingenious way to criticize
President Jefferson, while simultaneously
preventing him from retaliating. - By posing the questions in this unusual order
Marshall was able to make his point without
having to suffer the consequences. As Jefferson
and other Republicans pointed out, the Court in
its final question disclaimed all cognizance of
the case, but in the first two questions declared
what its opinion would have been if it had
cognizance of it. - Gordon Wood, Empire of Liberty, 441.
17The Immediate Aftermath
- Jefferson angered by Marshalls twistifications
- Six days later, the Court hands down its opinion
in Stuart v. Laird - The Marshall Court never again declares an act of
Congress unconstitutional
18The Marshall Court before the War of 1812
- The Role of the Chief Justice
- From seriatim opinions to the Court speaking with
an unitary voice (During the first four years of
his tenure, the Court handed down forty-six
written opinions. They were all unanimous.
Moreover, Marshall participated in 42 of them and
wrote the opinion in all 42 between 1801 and
1815 Marshall, in fact, wrote 209 of the Courts
378 opinions!) - Avoiding a confrontation with the Republicans,
while simultaneously establishing the right to
review and reverse state court decisions - Separating Law from Politics
- Making questions of vested property rights into
exclusively judicial issues
19American Nationalism
- The War of 1812
- The Rise of Nationalism
- Martin v. Hunters Lessee (1816) The Court
rejected the claim that Virginia and the national
government were equal sovereigns. Reasoning from
the Constitution, Justice Story affirmed the
Court's power to override state courts to secure
a uniform system of law and to fulfill the
mandate of the Supremacy Clause.
20Looking Forward
- Never was there a more glorious opportunity for
the Republican party to place themselves
permanently in power. . . .Let us extend the
national authority over the whole extent of power
given by the Constitution. Let us have great
military and naval schools an adequate regular
army the broad foundation laid of a permanent
navy a National bank a national system of
bankruptcy a great Navigation act a general
survey of our ports, an appointment of port
wardens and pilots Judicial Courts which shall
embrace the whole Constitutional powers national
notaries public and national justices of the
peace, for the commercial and national concerns
of the United States. - Associate Justice Joseph Story, 1815
21The Marshall Court and Constitutional Nationalism
- Who made the Constitution?
- How should the Constitution be interpreted?
- Who should interpret the Constitution?
- What powers does the Federal Government have?
- The People
- Broadly
- Federal Courts
- Necessary Proper Enumerated Implied
22The Bank Question Revisited in 1819
Chief Justice John Marshall and Associate Justice
Joseph Story
Washingtons Cabinet in 1791
23The McCulloch Questions
- The first question made in the cause is -- has
Congress power to incorporate a bank?
- The power now contested was exercised by the
first Congress elected under the present
Constitution. The bill for incorporating the
Bank of the United States did not steal upon an
unsuspecting legislature and pass unobserved. Its
principle was completely understood, and was
opposed with equal zeal and ability. After being
resisted first in the fair and open field of
debate, and afterwards in the executive cabinet,
with as much persevering talent as any measure
has ever experienced, and being supported by
arguments which convinced minds as pure and as
intelligent as this country can boast, it became
a law. The original act was permitted to expire,
but a short experience of the embarrassments to
which the refusal to revive it exposed the
Government convinced those who were most
prejudiced against the measure of its necessity,
and induced the passage of the present law. It
would require no ordinary share of intrepidity to
assert that a measure adopted under these
circumstances was a bold and plain usurpation to
which the Constitution gave no countenance. These
observations belong to the cause but they are
not made under the impression that, were the
question entirely new, the law would be found
irreconcilable with the Constitution.
24Who made the Constitution?
- In discussing this question, the counsel for the
State of Maryland have deemed it of some
importance, in the construction of the
Constitution, to consider that instrument not as
emanating from the people, but as the act of
sovereign and independent States. The powers of
the General Government, it has been said, are
delegated by the States, who alone are truly
sovereign, and must be exercised in subordination
to the States, who alone possess supreme dominion.
- It would be difficult to sustain this
proposition. The convention which framed the
Constitution was indeed elected by the State
legislatures. But the instrument, when it came
from their hands, was a mere proposal, without
obligation or pretensions to it. It was reported
to the then existing Congress of the United
States with a request that it might be submitted
to a convention of delegates, chosen in each
State by the people thereof, under the
recommendation of its legislature, for their
assent and ratification. - This mode of proceeding was adopted, and by the
convention, by Congress, and by the State
legislatures, the instrument was submitted to the
people. They acted upon it in the only manner in
which they can act safely, effectively and
wisely, on such a subject -- by assembling in
convention. It is true, they assembled in their
several States -- and where else should they have
assembled? No political dreamer was ever wild
enough to think of breaking down the lines which
separate the States, and of compounding the
American people into one common mass. Of
consequence, when they act, they act in their
States. But the measures they adopt do not, on
that account, cease to be the measures of the
people themselves, or become the measures of the
State governments.
25Marshalls Broad Reading of Necessary and Proper
Clause
- 1st. The clause is placed among the powers of
Congress, not among the limitations on those
powers. - 2d. Its terms purport to enlarge, not to
diminish, the powers vested in the Government. It
purports to be an additional power, not a
restriction on those already granted. No reason
has been or can be assigned for thus concealing
an intention to narrow the discretion of the
National Legislature under words which purport to
enlarge it. The framers of the Constitution
wished its adoption, and well knew that it would
be endangered by its strength, not by its
weakness. Had they been capable of using language
which would convey to the eye one idea and, after
deep reflection, impress on the mind another,
they would rather have disguised the grant of
power than its limitation. If, then, their
intention had been, by this clause, to restrain
the free use of means which might otherwise have
been implied, that intention would have been
inserted in another place, and would have been
expressed in terms resembling these. "In carrying
into execution the foregoing powers, and all
others, c., "no laws shall be passed but such
as are necessary and proper." Had the intention
been to make this clause restrictive, it would
unquestionably have been so in form, as well as
in effect.
26The McCulloch Test
- We admit, as all must admit, that the powers of
the Government are limited, and that its limits
are not to be transcended. But we think the sound
construction of the Constitution must allow to
the national legislature that discretion with
respect to the means by which the powers it
confers are to be carried into execution which
will enable that body to perform the high duties
assigned to it in the manner most beneficial to
the people. Let the end be legitimate, let it be
within the scope of the Constitution, and all
means which are appropriate, which are plainly
adapted to that end, which are not prohibited,
but consist with the letter and spirit of the
Constitution, are Constitutional.
27The Rejoinder Compact Constitutionalism
- Who made the Constitution?
- How should the Constitution be interpreted?
- Who should interpret the Constitution?
- What powers does the Federal Government have?
- The States
- Strictly
- The States
- Enumerated only (10th Amendment)
28The Marshall Court and the Legacy of Federalism
- By the end of Marshalls tenure, the situation
was very different. The Court had established
its authority to invalidate state and
congressional legislation and to review state
court decisions involving federal law issues. It
had rejected compact theory, authorized a vast
increase in the power of the national government,
and imposed significant constraints on the
ability of states to interfere with national
markets and with contract rights. In 1830 the
astute French observer Alexis de Tocqueville
noted, The peace, the prosperity, and the very
existence of the Union are vested in the hands of
the seven Federal judges of the Supreme Court.
Twenty years later, unable to resolve the
nations most contentious political issue,
congressional leaders invited the Court to
determine the fate of slavery in the federal
territories. One cannot imagine Congress in 1800
entrusting the justices with such
responsibility. - Michael Klarman
29Further Readings
- Richard E. Ellis, Aggressive Nationalism
McCulloch versus Maryland and the Foundation of
Federal Authority in the Young Republic (Oxford
University Press, 2007). The most comprehensive
history of this landmark decision. - George Lee Haskins and Herbert A. Johnson,
History of the Supreme Court of the United
States. Vol. 2 Foundations of Power John
Marshall, 1801-1815 (MacMillan, 1981). This
volume is part of the Oliver Wendell Holmes
Devise History of the Supreme Court of the United
States. - G. Edward White, The Marshall Court and Cultural
Change, 1815-1835 (MacMillan, 1988). This volume
places the Marshall Court into a larger cultural
context.