<h2 align="center">CHAPTER II</h2>
<p align="center">THE LIMITATIONS OF THE JUDICIAL FUNCTION</p>
<br/>
<p>Taking the human race collectively, its ideal of a court of justice has been
the omniscient and inexorable judgment seat of God. Individually, on the
contrary, they have dearly loved favor. Hence the doctrine of the Intercession
of the Saints, which many devout persons have sincerely believed could be bought
by them for money. The whole development of civilization may be followed in the
oscillation of any given society between these two extremes, the many always
striving to so restrain the judiciary that it shall be unable to work the will
of the favored few. On the whole, success in attaining to ideal justice has not
been quite commensurate with the time and effort devoted to solving the problem,
but, until our constitutional experiment was tried in America, I think it had
been pretty generally admitted that the first prerequisite to success was that
judges should be removed from political influences. For the main difficulty has
been that every dominant class, as it has arisen, has done its best to use the
machinery of justice for its own benefit.</p>
<p>No argument ever has convinced like a parable, and a very famous story in the
Bible will illustrate the great truth, which is the first lesson that a
primitive people learns, that unless the judge can be separated from the
sovereign, and be strictly limited in the performance of his functions by a
recognized code of procedure, the public, as against the dominant class, has, in
substance, no civil rights. The kings of Israel were judges of last resort.
Solomon earned his reputation for wisdom in the cause in which two mothers
claimed the same child. They were indeed both judge and jury. Also they were
prosecuting officers. Also they were sheriffs. In fine they exercised unlimited
judicial power, save in so far as they were checked by the divine interference
usually signified through some prophet.</p>
<p>Now David was, admittedly, one of the best sovereigns and judges who ever
held office in Jerusalem, and, in the days of David, Nathan was the leading
prophet of the dominant political party. "And it came to pass in an
eveningtide, that David arose from off his bed, and walked upon the roof of the
king's house: and from the roof he saw a woman washing herself; and the woman
was very beautiful to look upon. And David sent and enquired after the woman.
And one said, Is not this Bath-sheba, the daughter of Eliam, the wife of Uriah
the Hittite? And David sent messengers, and took her; and she came in unto him,
and he lay with her; ... and she returned unto her house."</p>
<p>Uriah was serving in the army under Joab. David sent for Uriah, and told him
to go home to his wife, but Uriah refused. Then David wrote a letter to Joab and
dismissed Uriah, ordering him to give the letter to Joab. And David "wrote
in the letter, saying, Set ye Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle, and
retire ye from him, that he may be smitten and die....</p>
<p>"And the men of the city went out and fought with Joab; and there fell
some of the people of the servants of David; and Uriah the Hittite died also....
But the thing that David had done displeased the Lord.</p>
<p>"And the Lord sent Nathan unto David. And he came unto him, and said
unto him, There were two men in one city; the one rich and the other poor. The
rich man had exceeding many flocks and herds:</p>
<p>"But the poor man had nothing, save one little ewe lamb, which he had
bought and nourished up: and it grew up together with him, and with his
children; it did eat of his own meat and drank of his own cup, and lay in his
bosom, and was unto him as a daughter.</p>
<p>"And there came a traveller unto the rich man, and he spared to take of
his own flock, ... but took the poor man's lamb, and dressed it for the man that
was come to him.</p>
<p>"And David's anger was greatly kindled against the man; and he said to
Nathan, As the Lord liveth, the man that hath done this thing shall surely die:
...</p>
<p>"And Nathan said to David, Thou art the man. Thus saith the Lord God of
Israel ... Now therefore the sword shall never depart from thine house; because
thou has despised me ... Behold, I will raise up evil against thee out of thine
own house, and I will take thy wives before thine eyes, and give them unto thy
neighbor." Here, as the heading to the Twelfth Chapter of Second Book of
Samuel says, "Nathan's parable of the ewe lamb causeth David to be his own
judge," but the significant part of the story is that Nathan, with all his
influence, could not force David to surrender his prey. David begged very hard
to have his sentence remitted, but, for all that, "David sent and fetched [Bathsheba]
to his house, and she became his wife, and bare him a son." Indeed, she
bore him Solomon. As against David or David's important supporters men like
Uriah had no civil rights that could be enforced.</p>
<p>Even after the judicial function is nominally severed from the executive
function, so that the sovereign himself does not, like David and Solomon,
personally administer justice, the same result is reached through agents, as
long as the judge holds his office at the will of the chief of a political
party.</p>
<p>To go no farther afield, every page of English history blazons this record.
Long after the law had taken an almost modern shape, Alice Perrers, the mistress
of Edward III, sat on the bench at Westminster and intimidated the judges into
deciding for suitors who had secured her services. The chief revenue of the
rival factions during the War of the Roses was derived from attainders,
indictments for treason, and forfeitures, avowedly partisan. Henry VII used the
Star Chamber to ruin the remnants of the feudal aristocracy. Henry VIII
exterminated as vagrants the wretched monks whom he had evicted. The
prosecutions under Charles I largely induced the Great Rebellion; and finally
the limit of endurance was reached when Charles II made Jeffreys Chief Justice
of England in order to kill those who were prominent in opposition. Charles knew
what he was doing. "That man," said he of Jeffreys, "has no
learning, no sense, no manners, and more impudence than ten carted
street-walkers." The first object was to convict Algernon Sidney of
treason. Jeffreys used simple means. Usually drunk, his court resembled the den
of a wild beast. He poured forth on "plaintiffs and defendants, barristers
and attorneys, witnesses and jurymen, torrents of frantic abuse, intermixed with
oaths and curses." The law required proof of an <i>overt act</i> of
treason. Many years before Sidney had written a philosophical treatise touching
resistance by the subject to the sovereign, as a constitutional principle. But,
though the fragment contained nothing more than the doctrines of Locke, Sidney
had cautiously shown it to no one, and it had only been found by searching his
study. Jeffreys told the jury that if they believed the book to be Sidney's
book, written by him, they must convict for <i>scribere est agere</i>, to write
is to commit an overt act.</p>
<p>A revolution followed upon this and other like convictions, as revolutions
have usually followed such uses of the judicial power. In that revolution the
principle of the limitation of the judicial function was recognized, and the
English people seriously addressed themselves to the task of separating their
courts from political influences, of protecting their judges by making their
tenure and their pay permanent, and of punishing them by removal if they behaved
corruptly, or with prejudice, or transcended the limits within which their duty
confined them. Jeffreys had legislated when he ruled it to be the law that, to
write words secretly in one's closet, is to commit an overt act of treason, and
he did it to kill a man whom the king who employed him wished to destroy. This
was to transcend the duty of a judge, which is to expound and not to legislate.
The judge may develop a principle, he may admit evidence of a custom in order to
explain the intentions of the parties to a suit, as Lord Mansfield admitted
evidence of the customs of merchants, but he should not legislate. To do so, as
Jeffreys did in Sidney's case, is tantamount to murder. Jeffreys never was duly
punished for his crimes. He died the year after the Revolution, in the Tower,
maintaining to the last that he was innocent in the sight of God and man because
"all the blood he had shed fell short of the King's command."</p>
<p>And Jeffreys was perfectly logical and consistent in his attitude. A
judiciary is either an end in itself or a means to an end. If it be designed to
protect the civil rights of citizens indifferently, it must be free from
pressure which will deflect it from this path, and it can only be protected from
the severest possible pressure by being removed from politics, because politics
is the struggle for ascendancy of a class or a majority. If, on the other hand,
the judiciary is to serve as an instrument for advancing the fortunes of a
majority or a dominant class, as David used the Jewish judiciary, or as the
Stuarts used the English judiciary, then the judicial power must be embodied
either in a military or political leader, like David, who does the work himself,
or in an agent, more or less like Jeffreys, who will obey his orders. In the
colonies the subserviency of the judges to the Crown had been a standing
grievance, and the result of this long and terrible experience, stretching
through centuries both in Europe and America, had been to inspire Americans with
a fear of intrusting power to any man or body of men. They sought to limit
everything by written restrictions. Setting aside the objection that such a
system is mechanically vicious because it involves excessive friction and
therefore waste of energy, it is obviously futile unless the written
restrictions can be enforced, and enforced in the spirit in which they are
drawn. Hamilton, whose instinct for law resembled genius, saw the difficulty and
pointed out in the <i>Federalist</i> that it is not a writing which can give
protection, but only the intelligence and the sense of justice of the community
itself.</p>
<p>"The truth is, that the general genius of a Government is all that can
be substantially relied upon for permanent effects. Particular provisions,
though not altogether useless, have far less virtue and efficiency than are
commonly ascribed to them; and the want of them will never be, with men of sound
discernment, a decisive objection to any plan which exhibits the leading
characters of a good Government." After an experience of nearly a century
and a quarter we must admit, I think, that Hamilton was right. In the United
States we have carried bills of right and constitutional limitations to an
extreme, and yet, I suppose that few would care to maintain that, during the
nineteenth century, life and property were safer in America, or crime better
dealt with, than in England, France, or Germany. The contrary, indeed, I take to
be the truth, and I think one chief cause of this imperfection in the
administration of justice will be found to have been the operation of the
written Constitution. For, under the American system, the Constitution, or
fundamental law, is expounded by judges, and this function, which, in essence,
is political, has brought precisely that quality of pressure on the bench which
it has been the labor of a hundred generations of our ancestors to remove. On
the whole the result has been not to elevate politics, but to lower the courts
toward the political level, a result which conforms to the <i>a priori</i>
theory.</p>
<p>The abstract virtue of the written Constitution was not, however, a question
in issue when Washington and his contemporaries set themselves to reorganize the
Confederation. Those men had no choice but to draft some kind of a platform on
which the states could agree to unite, if they were to unite peacefully at all,
and accordingly they met in convention and drew the best form of agreement they
could; but I more than suspect that a good many very able Federalists were quite
alive to the defects in the plan which they adopted.</p>
<p>Hamilton was outspoken in preferring the English model, and I am not aware
that Washington ever expressed a preference for the theory that, because of a
written fundamental law, the court should nullify legislation. Nor is it
unworthy of remark that all foreigners, after a prolonged and attentive
observation of our experiment, have avoided it. Since 1789, every highly
civilized Western people have readjusted their institutions at least once, yet
not one has in this respect imitated us, though all have borrowed freely from
the parliamentary system of England.<SPAN name="FNanchor6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_6"><sup>[6]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>Even our neighbor, Canada, with no adverse traditions and a population
similar to ours, has been no exception to the rule. The Canadian courts indeed
define the limits of provincial and federal jurisdiction as fixed under an act
of Parliament, but they do not pretend to limit the exercise of power when the
seat of power has been established. I take the cause of this distrust to be
obvious. Although our written Constitution was successful in its primary purpose
of facilitating the consolidation of the Confederation, it has not otherwise
inspired confidence as a practical administrative device. Not only has constant
judicial interference dislocated scientific legislation, but casting the
judiciary into the vortex of civil faction has degraded it in the popular
esteem. In fine, from the outset, the American bench, because it deals with the
most fiercely contested of political issues, has been an instrument necessary to
political success. Consequently, political parties have striven to control it,
and therefore the bench has always had an avowed partisan bias. This avowed
political or social bias has, I infer, bred among the American people the
conviction that justice is not administered indifferently to all men, wherefore
the bench is not respected with us as, for instance, it is in Great Britain,
where law and politics are sundered. Nor has the dissatisfaction engendered by
these causes been concealed. On the contrary, it has found expression through a
series of famous popular leaders from Thomas Jefferson to Theodore Roosevelt.</p>
<p>The Constitution could hardly have been adopted or the government organized
but for the personal influence of Washington, whose power lay in his genius for
dealing with men. He lost no time or strength in speculation, but, taking the
Constitution as the best implement at hand, he went to the work of
administration by including the representatives of the antagonistic extremes in
his Cabinet. He might as well have expected fire and water to mingle as
Jefferson and Hamilton to harmonize. Probably he had no delusions on that head
when he chose them for his ministers, and he accomplished his object. He
paralyzed opposition until the new mechanism began to operate pretty regularly,
but he had not an hour to spare. Soon the French Revolution heated passions so
hot that long before Washington's successor was elected the United States was
rent by faction.</p>
<p>The question which underlay all other questions, down to the Civil War, was
the determination of the seat of sovereignty. Hamilton and the Federalists held
it to be axiomatic that, if the federal government were to be more than a
shadow, it must interpret the meaning of the instrument which created it, and,
if so, that it must signify its decisions through the courts. Only in this way,
they argued, could written limitations on legislative power be made effective.
Only in this way could statutes which contravened the Constitution be set aside.<SPAN name="FNanchor7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_7"><sup>[7]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>Jefferson was abroad when Hamilton wrote <i>The Federalist</i>, but his views
have since been so universally accepted as embodying the opposition to Hamilton,
that they may be conveniently taken as if they had been published while the
Constitution was under discussion. Substantially the same arguments were
advanced by others during the actual debate, if not quite so lucidly or
connectedly then, as afterward by him.</p>
<p>Very well, said Jefferson, in answer to Hamilton, admitting, for the moment,
that the central government shall define its own powers, and that the courts
shall be the organ through which the exposition shall be made, both of which
propositions I vehemently deny, you have this result: The judges who will be
called upon to pass upon the validity of national and state legislation will be
plunged in the most heated of controversies, and in those controversies they
cannot fail to be influenced by the same passions and prejudices which sway
other men. In a word they must decide like legislators, though they will be
exempt from the responsibility to the public which controls other legislators.
Such conditions you can only meet by making the judicial tenure of office
ephemeral, as all legislative tenure is ephemeral.</p>
<p>It is vain to pretend, continued he, in support of fixity of tenure, that the
greater the pressure on the judge is likely to be, the more need there is to
make him secure. This may be true of judges clothed with ordinary attributes,
like English judges, for, should these try to nullify the popular will by
construing away statutes, Parliament can instantly correct them, or if
Parliament fail in its duty, the constituencies, at the next election, can
intervene. But no one will be able to correct the American judge who may decline
to recognize the law which would constrain him. Nothing can shake him save
impeachment for what is tantamount to crime, or being overruled by a
constitutional amendment which you have purposely made too hard to obtain to be
a remedy. He is to be judge in his own case without an appeal.</p>
<p>Nowhere in all his long and masterly defence of the Constitution did Hamilton
show so much embarrassment as here, and because, probably, he did not himself
believe in his own brief. He really had faith in the English principle of an
absolute parliament, restrained, if needful, by a conservative chamber, like the
House of Lords, but not in the total suspension of sovereignty subject to
judicial illumination. Consequently he fell back on platitudes about judicial
high-mindedness, and how judges could be trusted not to allow political
influences to weigh with them when deciding political questions. Pushed to its
logical end, concluded he, the Jeffersonian argument would prove that there
should be no judges distinct from legislatures.<SPAN name="FNanchor8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_8"><sup>[8]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>Now, at length, exclaimed the Jeffersonian in triumph, you admit our thesis.
You propose to clothe judges with the highest legislative functions, since you
give them an absolute negative on legislation, and yet you decline to impose on
them the responsibility to a constituency, which constrains other legislators.
Clearly you thus make them autocratic, and in the worst sense, for you permit
small bodies of irresponsible men under pretence of dispensing justice, but
really in a spirit of hypocrisy, to annul the will of the majority of the
people, even though the right of the people to exercise their will, in the
matters at issue, be clearly granted them in the Constitution.</p>
<p>No, rejoined Hamilton, thus driven to the wall, judges never will so abuse
their trust. The duty of the judge requires him to suppress his <i>will</i>, and
exercise his <i>judgment</i> only. The Constitution will be before him, and he
will have only to say whether authority to legislate on a given subject is
granted in that instrument. If it be, the character of the legislation must
remain a matter of legislative discretion. Besides, you must repose confidence
somewhere, and judges, on the whole, are more trustworthy than legislators. How
can you say that, retorted the opposition, when you, better than most men, know
the line of despotic legal precedents from the Ship Money down to the Writs of
Assistance?</p>
<p>Looking back upon this initial controversy touching judicial functions under
the Constitution, we can hardly suppose that Hamilton did not perceive that, in
substance, Jefferson was right, and that a bench purposely constructed to pass
upon political questions must be politically partisan. He knew very well that,
if the Federalists prevailed in the elections, a Federalist President would only
appoint magistrates who could be relied on to favor consolidation. And so the
event proved. General Washington chose John Jay for the first Chief Justice, who
in some important respects was more Federalist than Hamilton, while John Adams
selected John Marshall, who, though one of the greatest jurists who ever lived,
was hated by Jefferson with a bitter hatred, because of his political bias. As
time went on matters grew worse. Before Marshall died slavery had become a
burning issue, and the slave-owners controlled the appointing power. General
Jackson appointed Taney to sustain the expansion of slavery, and when the
anti-slavery party carried the country with Lincoln, Lincoln supplanted Taney
with Chase, in order that Chase might stand by him in his struggle to destroy
slavery. And as it has been, so must it always be. As long as the power to enact
laws shall hinge on the complexion of benches of judges, so long will the
ability to control a majority of the bench be as crucial a political necessity
as the ability to control a majority in avowedly representative assemblies.</p>
<p>Hamilton was one of the few great jurists and administrators whom America has
ever produced, and it is inconceivable that he did not understand what he was
doing. He knew perfectly well that, other things being equal, the simplest
administrative mechanism is the best, and he knew also that he was helping to
make an extremely complicated mechanism. Not only so, but at the heart of this
complexity lay the gigantic cog of the judiciary, which was obviously devised to
stop movement. He must have had a reason, beyond the reason he gave, for not
only insisting on clothing the judiciary with these unusual political and
legislative attributes, but for giving the judiciary an unprecedented fixity of
tenure. I suspect that he was actuated by some such considerations as these:</p>
<p>The Federalists, having pretty good cause to suppose themselves in a popular
minority, purposed to consolidate the thirteen states under a new sovereign.
There were but two methods by which they could prevail; they could use force,
or, to secure assent, they could propose some system of arbitration. To escape
war the Federalists convened the constitutional convention, and by so doing
pledged themselves to arbitration. But if their plan of consolidation were to
succeed, it was plain that the arbitrator must arbitrate in their favor, for if
he arbitrated as Mr. Jefferson would have wished, the United States under the
Constitution would have differed little from the United States under the
Confederation. The Federalists, therefore, must control the arbitrator. If the
Constitution were to be adopted, Hamilton and every one else knew that
Washington would be the first President, and Washington could be relied on to
appoint a strong Federalist bench. Hence, whatever might happen subsequently,
when the new plan first should go into operation, and when the danger from
insubordination among the states would probably be most acute, the judiciary
would be made to throw its weight in favor of consolidation, and against
disintegration, and, if it did so, it was essential that it should be protected
against anything short of a revolutionary attack.</p>
<p>In the convention, indeed, Charles Pinckney of South Carolina suggested that
Congress should be empowered to negative state legislation, but such an
alternative, for obvious reasons, would have been less palatable to Hamilton,
since Congress would be only too likely to fall under the control of the
Jeffersonian party, while a bench of judges, if once well chosen, might prove to
be for many years an "excellent barrier to the encroachments and
oppressions of the representative body."<SPAN name="FNanchor9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_9"><sup>[9]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>I infer that Hamilton and many other Federalists reasoned somewhat thus, not
only from what they wrote, but from the temper of their minds, and, if they did,
events largely justified them. John Jay, Oliver Ellsworth, and John Marshall
were successively appointed to the office of Chief Justice, nor did the
complexion of the Supreme Court change until after 1830.</p>
<p>What interests us, however, is not so much what the Federalists thought, or
the motives which actuated them, as the effect which the clothing of the
judiciary with political functions has had upon the development of the American
republic, more especially as that extreme measure might have been avoided, had
Pinckney's plan been adopted. Nor, looking back upon the actual course of
events, can I perceive that, so far as the movement toward consolidation was
concerned, the final result would have varied materially whether Congress or the
Supreme Court had exercised control over state legislation. Marshall might just
as well, in the one case as the other, have formulated his theory of a
semi-centralized administration. He would only have had uniformly to sustain
Congress, as an English judge sustains Parliament. Nor could either Congress or
the Court have reached a definite result without an appeal to force. Either
chamber might expound a theory, but nothing save an army could establish it.</p>
<p>For two generations statesmen and jurists debated the relation of the central
to the local sovereignties with no result, for words alone could decide no such
issue. In America, as elsewhere, sovereignty is determined by physical force.
Marshall could not conquer Jefferson, he could at most controvert Jefferson's
theory. This he did, but, in doing so, I doubt if he were quite true to himself.
Jefferson contended that every state might nullify national legislation, as
conversely Pinckney wished Congress to be given explicitly the power to nullify
state legislation; and Marshall, very sensibly, pointed out that, were
Jefferson's claim carried into practice, it would create "a hydra in
government,"<SPAN name="FNanchor10"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_10"><sup>[10]</sup></SPAN>
yet I am confident that Marshall did not appreciate whither his own assertion of
authority must lead. In view of the victory of centralization in the Civil War,
I will agree that the Supreme Court might have successfully maintained a
position as arbitrator touching conflicting jurisdictions, as between the nation
and the states, but that is a different matter from assuming to examine into the
wisdom of the legislation itself. The one function might, possibly, pass by
courtesy as judicial; the other is clearly legislative.</p>
<p>This distinction only developed after Marshall's death, but the resentment
which impelled Marshall to annul an act of Congress was roused by the political
conflict which preceded the election of 1800, in which Marshall took a chief
part. Apparently he could not resist the temptation of measuring himself with
his old adversary, especially as he seems to have thought that he could
discredit that adversary without giving him an opportunity to retaliate.</p>
<p>In 1798 a Federalist Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts, whose
constitutionality no Federalist judge ever doubted, but which Jefferson
considered as clearly a violation of the fundamental compact, since they tended
to drive certain states, as he thought, into "revolution and blood."
Under this provocation Jefferson proclaimed that it was both the right and the
duty of any state, which felt itself aggrieved, to intervene to arrest "the
progress of the evil," within her territory, by declining to execute, or by
"nullifying," the objectionable statutes. As Jefferson wrote the
Kentucky Resolutions in 1798 and was elected President in 1800, the people at
least appeared to have sustained him in his exposition of the Constitution,
before he entered into office.</p>
<p>At this distance of time we find it hard to realize what the election of 1800
seemed to portend to those who participated therein. Mr. Jefferson always
described it as amounting to a revolution as profound as, if less bloody than,
the revolution of 1776, and though we maybe disposed to imagine that Jefferson
valued his own advent to power at its full worth, it must be admitted that his
enemies regarded it almost as seriously. Nor were they without some
justification, for Jefferson certainly represented the party of disintegration.
"Nullification" would have been tantamount to a return to the
condition of the Confederation. Besides, Jefferson not so many years before had
written, in defence of Shays's rebellion, that the tree of Liberty could never
flourish unless refreshed occasionally with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
To most Federalists Jefferson seemed a bloodthirsty demagogue. In 1796 Oliver
Ellsworth had been appointed Chief Justice by General Washington in the place of
Jay, who resigned, and in 1799 John Adams sent Ellsworth as an envoy to France
to try to negotiate a treaty which should re�stablish peace between the two
countries. Ellsworth succeeded in his mission, but the hardships of his journey
injured his health, and he, in turn, resigned in the autumn of 1800. Then Adams
offered the Chief Justiceship to Jay, but Jay would not return to office, and
after this the President selected his Secretary of State, John Marshall, one of
the greatest of the great Virginians, but one of Jefferson's most irreconcilable
enemies. Perhaps at no moment in his life did John Adams demonstrate his legal
genius more convincingly than in this remarkable nomination. Yet it must be
conceded that, in making John Marshall Chief Justice, John Adams deliberately
chose the man whom, of all his countrymen, he thought to be the most formidable
champion of those views which he himself entertained, and which he conceived
that he had been elected President to advance. Nor was John Adams deceived. For
thirty-four years John Marshall labored ceaselessly to counteract Jefferson's
constitutional principles, while Jefferson always denounced the political
partiality of the federal courts, and above all the "rancorous hatred which
Marshall bears to the government of his country, and ... the cunning and
sophistry within which he is able to enshroud himself."<SPAN name="FNanchor11"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_11"><sup>[11]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>No one, at this day, would be disposed to dispute that the Constitution, as a
device to postpone war among the states, at least for a period, was successful,
and that, as I have already pointed out, during the tentative interval which
extended until Appomattox, the Supreme Court served perhaps as well, in ordinary
times, as an arbiter between the states and the general government, as any which
could have been suggested. So much may be conceded, and yet it remains true, as
the record will show, that when it passed this point and entered into factional
strife, the Supreme Court somewhat lamentably failed, probably injuring itself
and popular respect for law, far more by its errors, than it aided the Union by
its political adjudications.</p>
<p>Although John Marshall, by common consent, ranks as one of the greatest and
purest of Americans, yet even Marshall had human weaknesses, one of which was a
really unreasonable antipathy to Thomas Jefferson; an antipathy which, I
surmise, must, when Jefferson was inaugurated, have verged upon contempt. At
least Marshall did what cautious men seldom do when they respect an adversary,
he took the first opportunity to pick a quarrel with a man who had the advantage
of him in position.</p>
<p>In the last days of his presidency John Adams appointed one William Marbury a
justice of the peace for the District of Columbia. The Senate confirmed the
appointment, and the President signed, and John Marshall, as Secretary of State,
sealed Marbury's commission; but in the hurry of surrendering office the
commission was not delivered, and Jefferson found it in the State Department
when he took possession. Resenting violently these "midnight"
appointments, as he called them, Jefferson directed Mr. Madison, his Secretary
of State, to withhold the commission; and, at the next December term of the
Supreme Court, Marbury moved for a rule to Madison to show cause why he should
not be commanded to deliver to the plaintiff the property to which Marbury
pretended to be entitled. Of course Jefferson declined to appear before
Marshall, through his Secretary of State, and finally, in February, 1803,
Marshall gave judgment, in what was, without any doubt, the most anomalous
opinion he ever delivered, in that it violated all judicial conventions, for,
apparently, no object, save to humiliate a political opponent.</p>
<p>Marshall had no intention of commanding Madison to surrender the commission
to Marbury. He was too adroit a politician for that. Marshall knew that he could
not compel Jefferson to obey such a writ against his will, and that in issuing
the order he would only bring himself and his court into contempt. What he seems
to have wished to do was to give Jefferson a lesson in deportment. Accordingly,
instead of dismissing Marbury's suit upon any convenient pretext, as, according
to legal etiquette, he should have done if he had made up his mind to decide
against the plaintiff, and yet thought it inexpedient to explain his view of the
law, he began his opinion with a long and extra-judicial homily, first on
Marbury's title to ownership in the commission, and then on civil liberty.
Having affirmed that Marbury's right to his office vested when the President had
signed, and the Secretary of State had sealed the instrument, he pointed out
that withholding the property thus vested was a violation of civil rights which
could be examined in a court of justice. Were it otherwise, the Chief Justice
insisted, the government of the United States could not be termed a government
of laws and not of men.</p>
<p>All this elaborate introduction was in the nature of a solemn lecture by the
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to the President of the United States upon
his faulty discharge of his official duties. Having eased his mind on this head,
Marshall went on, very dexterously indeed, but also very palpably, to elude the
consequences of his temerity. He continued: The right of property being
established, and the violation of that right clear, it is plain that a wrong has
been committed, and it only remains to determine whether that wrong can be
redressed under this form of procedure. We are of opinion that it cannot,
because Congress has no constitutional power to confer upon the Supreme Court
original jurisdiction in this class of litigation. In the lower courts alone can
the relief prayed for be obtained.</p>
<p>Of all the events of Marshall's life this controversy with Jefferson seems to
me the most equivocal, and it was a direct effect of a constitutional system
which has permitted the courts to become the censor of the political departments
of the government. Marshall, probably, felt exasperated by Jefferson's virulence
against these final appointments made by John Adams, while Marshall was
Secretary of State, and for which he may have felt himself, in part,
responsible. Possibly, even, he may have taken some of Jefferson's strictures as
aimed at himself. At all events he went to extreme lengths in retaliation. He
might have dismissed the litigation in a few words by stating that, whatever the
abstract rights of the parties might have been, the Supreme Court had no power
to constrain the President in his official functions; but he yielded to
political animosity. Then, having taken a position practically untenable, he had
to find an avenue of retreat, and he found it by asserting a supervisory
jurisdiction over Congress, a step which, even at that early period, was most
hazardous.<SPAN name="FNanchor12"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_12"><sup>[12]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>In reality Jefferson's temper, far from being vindictive and revolutionary,
as his enemies believed, was rather gentle and timid, but he would have been
more than mortal had he endured such an insult in silence. Nor could he,
perhaps, have done so without risking the respect of his followers. So he
decided on reprisals, and a scheme was matured among influential Virginians,
like John Randolph and Senator William Giles, to purge the Supreme Court of
Federalists. Among the associate justices of this court was Samuel Chase, a
signer of the Declaration of Independence and an able lawyer, but an arrogant
and indiscreet partisan. Chase had made himself obnoxious on various public
occasions and so was considered to be the best subject to impeach; but if they
succeeded with him the Jeffersonians proclaimed their intention of removing all
his brethren seriatim, including the chief offender of all, John Marshall. One
day in December, 1804, Senator Giles, of Virginia, in a conversation which John
Quincy Adams has reported in his diary, discussed the issue at large, and that
conversation is most apposite now, since it shows how early the inevitable
tendency was developed to make judges who participate in political and social
controversies responsible to the popular will. The conversation is too long to
extract in full, but a few sentences will convey its purport:--</p>
<p>"He treated with the utmost contempt the idea of an <i>independent</i>
judiciary.... And if the judges of the Supreme Court should dare, <i>as they had
done</i>, to declare an act of Congress unconstitutional, or to send a mandamus
to the Secretary of State, <i>as they had done</i>, it was the undoubted right
of the: House of Representatives to impeach them, and of the Senate to remove
them, for giving such opinions, however honest or sincere they may have been in
entertaining them. * * * And a removal by impeachment was nothing more than a
declaration by Congress to this effect: You hold dangerous opinions, and if you
are suffered to carry them into effect you will work the destruction of the
nation. <i>We want your offices</i>, for the purpose of giving them to men who
will fill them better."<SPAN name="FNanchor13"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_13"><sup>[13]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>Jefferson, though he controlled a majority in the Senate, failed by a narrow
margin to obtain the two-thirds vote necessary to convict Chase. Nevertheless,
he accomplished his object. Chase never recovered his old assurance, and
Marshall never again committed a solecism in judicial manners. On his side,
after the impeachment, Jefferson showed moderation. He might, if he had been
malevolent, without doubt, have obtained an act of Congress increasing the
membership of the Supreme Court enough to have put Marshall in a minority. Then
by appointing men like Giles he could have compelled Marshall to resign. He did
nothing of the kind. He spared the Supreme Court, which he might have
overthrown, and contented himself with waiting until time should give him the
opportunity to correct the political tendencies of a body of men whom he
sincerely regarded as a menace to, what he considered, popular institutions.
Thus the ebullition caused by Marshall's acrimony toward Jefferson, because of
Jefferson's strictures on the appointments made by his predecessor subsided,
leaving no very serious immediate mischief behind, save the precedent of the
nullification of an act of Congress by the Supreme Court. That precedent,
however, was followed by Marshall's Democratic successor. And nothing can better
illustrate the inherent vice of the American constitutional system than that it
should have been possible, in 1853, to devise and afterward present to a
tribunal, whose primary purpose was to administer the municipal law, a set of
facts for adjudication, on purpose to force it to pass upon the validity of such
a statute as the Missouri Compromise, which had been enacted by Congress in
1820, as a sort of treaty of peace between the North and South, and whose object
was the limitation of the spread of slavery. Whichever way the Court decided, it
must have fallen into opprobrium with one-half the country. In fact, having been
organized by the slaveholders to sustain slavery, it decided against the North,
and therefore lost repute with the party destined to be victorious. I need not
pause to criticise the animus of the Court, nor yet the quality of the law which
the Chief Justice there laid down. It suffices that in the decade which preceded
hostilities no event, in all probability, so exasperated passions, and so shook
the faith of the people of the northern states in the judiciary, as this
decision. Faith, whether in the priest or the magistrate, is of slow growth, and
if once impaired is seldom fully restored. I doubt whether the Supreme Court has
ever recovered from the shock it then received, and, considered from this point
of view, the careless attitude of the American people toward General Grant's
administration, when in 1871 it obtained the reversal of Hepburn <i>v</i>.
Griswold by appointments to the bench, assumes a sombre aspect.</p>
<p>Of late some sensitiveness has been shown in regard to this transaction, and
a disposition has appeared to defend General Grant and his Attorney-General
against the charge of manipulating the membership of the bench to suit their own
views. At the outset, therefore, I wish to disclaim any intention of entering
into this discussion. To me it is immaterial whether General Grant and Mr. Hoar
did or did not nominate judges with a view to obtaining a particular judgment. I
am concerned not with what men thought, but with what they did, and with the
effect of their acts at the moment, upon their fellow-citizens.</p>
<p>Hepburn <i>v</i>. Griswold was decided in conference on November 27, 1869,
when eight justices were on the bench. On February 1, following, Justice Grier
resigned, and, on February 7, judgment was entered, the court then being divided
four to three, but Grier having been with the majority, the vote in reality
stood five to three. Two vacancies therefore existed on February 7, one caused
by the resignation of Grier, the other by an act of Congress which had enlarged
the court by one member, and which had taken effect in the previous December.</p>
<p>Chief Justice Chase held that the clause of the currency laws of 1862 and
1863 which made depreciated paper a legal tender for pre�xisting debts was
unconstitutional. No sooner had the judgment been recorded than all the world
perceived that, if both vacancies should be filled with men who would uphold the
acts, Hepburn <i>v</i>. Griswold might be reversed by a majority of one.</p>
<p>The Republican party had full control of the government and was united in
vehement support of the laws. On March 21, the second of the two new judges
received his commission, and precisely ten days afterward the Attorney-General
moved for a rehearing, taunting the Chief Justice with having changed his
opinion on this point, and intimating that the issue was in reality political,
and not judicial at all.</p>
<p>In the December Term following Knox <i>v</i>. Lee was argued by the
Attorney-General, and, on May 1, 1871, judgment was entered reversing Hepburn <i>v</i>.
Griswold, both the new judges voting with the former minority, thus creating the
necessary majority of one. No one has ever doubted that what General Grant did
coincided with the drift of opinion, and that the Republican party supported him
without inquiring how he had achieved success.<SPAN name="FNanchor14"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_14"><sup>[14]</sup></SPAN>
After this it is difficult to suppose that much respect could remain among the
American people for the sanctity of judicial political decisions, or that a
President, at the head of a popular majority, would incur much odium for
intervening to correct them, as a party measure.</p>
<p>The last example of judicial interference which I shall mention was the
nullification, in 1895, of a statute of Congress which imposed an income tax.
The states have since set this decision aside by constitutional amendment, and I
should suppose that few would now dispute that the Court when it so decided made
a serious political and social error. As Mr. Justice White pointed out, the
judges undertook to deprive the people, in their corporate capacity, of a power
conceded to Congress "by universal consensus for one hundred years."<SPAN name="FNanchor15"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_15"><sup>[15]</sup></SPAN>
These words were used in the first argument, but on the rehearing the present
Chief Justice waxed warm in remonstrating against the unfortunate position in
which his brethren placed the Court before the nation, protesting with almost
passionate earnestness against the reversal by half-a-dozen judges of what had
been the universally accepted legal, political, and economic policy of the
country solely in order that "invested wealth" might be read
"into the constitution" as a favored and protected class of property.
Mr. Justice White closed by saying that by this act the Supreme Court had
"deprived [the Government] of an inherent attribute of its being."<SPAN name="FNanchor16"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_16"><sup>[16]</sup></SPAN>
I might go on into endless detail, but I apprehend that these cases, which are
the most important which have ever arisen on this issue, suffice for my purpose.<SPAN name="FNanchor17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_17"><sup>[17]</sup></SPAN>
I contend that no court can, because of the nature of its being, effectively
check a popular majority acting through a coordinate legislative assembly, and I
submit that the precedents which I have cited prove this contention. The only
result of an attempt and failure is to bring courts of justice into odium or
contempt, and, in any event, to make them objects of attack by a dominant social
force in order to use them as an instrument, much as Charles II used Jeffreys.</p>
<p>The moment we consider the situation philosophically we perceive why using a
court to control a coordinate legislature must, nearly inevitably, be sooner or
later fatal to the court, if it asserts its prerogative. A court to be a fit
tribunal to administer the municipal law impartially, or even relatively
impartially, must be a small body of men, holding by a permanent and secure
tenure, guarded from all pressure which may unduly influence them. Also they
should be men of much experience and learned in the precedents which should make
the rules which they apply stable and consistent. In short, a court should be
rigid and emotionless. It follows that it must be conservative, for its members
should long have passed that period of youth when the mind is sensitive to new
impressions. Were it otherwise, law would cease to be cohesive. A legislature is
nearly the antithesis of a court. It is designed to reflect the passions of the
voters, and the majority of voters are apt to be young. Hence in periods of
change, when alone serious clashes between legislatures and courts are likely to
occur, as the social equilibrium shifts the legislature almost certainly will
reflect the rising, the court the sinking power. I take the Dred Scott Case as
an illustration. In 1857 the slaveholding interest had passed the zenith of high
fortune, and was hastening toward its decline. In the elections of 1858 the
Democratic party, which represented slavery, was defeated. But the Supreme Court
had been organized by Democrats who had been dominant for many years, and it
adhered, on the principle laid down by Jeffreys, to the master which created it.</p>
<p>Occasionally, it is true, a court has been constructed by a rising energy, as
was the Supreme Court in 1789, but then it is equally tenacious to the instinct
which created it. The history of the Supreme Court is, in this point of view,
eminently suggestive. The Federalist instinct was constructive, not destructive,
and accordingly Marshall's fame rests on a series of constructive decisions like
M'Culloch <i>v</i>. Maryland, Cohens <i>v</i>. Virginia, and Gibbons <i>v</i>.
Odgen. In these decisions he either upheld actual national legislation, or else
the power of the nation to legislate. Conversely, whenever Marshall or his
successors have sought to obstruct social movement they have not prospered.
Marbury <i>v</i>. Madison is not an episode on which any admirer of Marshall can
linger with satisfaction. In theory it may be true, as Hamilton contended, that,
given the fact that a written constitution is inevitable, a bench of judges is
the best tribunal to interpret its meaning, since the duty of the judge has ever
been and is now to interpret the meaning of written instruments; but it does not
follow from this premise that the judges who should exercise this office should
be the judges who administer the municipal law. In point of fact experience has
proved that, so far as Congress is concerned, the results of judicial
interference have been negative. And it would be well if in other spheres of
American constitutional development, judicial activity had been always negative.
Unfortunately, as I believe, it has extended into the domain of legislation. I
will take the Dred Scott Case once more to illustrate my meaning. The North
found it bad enough for the Supreme Court to hold that, under the Constitution,
Congress could not exclude slavery from the national territory beyond a certain
boundary which had been fixed by compromise between the North and South. But the
North would have found it intolerable if the Court, while fully conceding that
Congress might so legislate, if the character of the legislation commended
itself to the judges, had held the Missouri Compromise to be unconstitutional
because they thought it <i>unreasonable</i>. Yet this, in substance, is what our
courts have done. And this brings me to the consideration of American courts as
legislative chambers.
<br/></p>
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