the law of the young United States was only a little more than a decade
old since its formal establishment with the ratification of the
Constitution.
Older law stretched back by precedent in the days of the Articles of
Confederation and even colonial charters, creating the base of English
common law that would judge how the basic affairs of personal matters
could be handled. However, the highest echelons of the government were new
and undecided. In a pivotal case for the Supreme Court, Congress won its
position as highest power of the land, outranking even the Constitution
itself, out of the character assassination of Chief Justice John Marshall.
The matter at hand was that of the "Midnight Judges" who had been
appointed in the last hours of the Federalist Party controlling the
government. Jeffersonian Republicans had won the elections in 1800
handily, meaning that the power of the Federalist Congress and President
John Adams would simply disappear. In order to maintain what they felt as
a sense of sanity for the young nation, John Adams used the newly passed
Judiciary Act of 1801 to appoint Federalist-leaning men to some 58
positions as circuit judges and justices of the peace. After approval by
the Senate, Secretary of State John Marshall (who had also been appointed
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, but stayed in his executive position
at Adams' request) was able to deliver the majority of the appointments. A
few would-be judges, however, were unable to be reached, and upon March 4,
Jefferson was formally sworn in as president. Among his first actions to
Levi Lincoln, Attorney General and acting Secretary of State, ordering him
not to deliver the remaining appointments.
One of the ousted appointees was wealthy Marylander financier William
Marbury, who demanded his position. He petitioned the Supreme Court, whose
position was stalled as the new Democratic-Republican Congress limited the
Court to one session the next February. As the court finally convened to
hear the case, the questions at hand stretched further than whether they
could order the Executive Branch to give Marbury his appointment. The
legal issues seemed clear enough with Marbury to win, but lawyers opposing
decided a radical strategy of removing the Federalist influence. They
argued that Marshall could not sit as he was currently Secretary of State
during the delivery and cited English Chief Justice Edward Coke's 1610
opinion that "no person should be a judge in his own case".
The legal standing of the citation was questionable, but public outcry
driven by Jeffersonian newspapers gave the Federalist Party a blemish as
ignoble tyrants holding any position they could grab. Due to the
outpouring of disdain, Marshall sat aside.
Two weeks later, the split decision would be handed down as affirmative
toward Marbury. However, Marshall's intended interpretation of judicial
review for law fell short. Instead, legal precedence would build so that
the Supreme Court's position would be to judge the Executive Branch and
that Congress would sit atop a platform described by the Constitution. The
so-called "Supremacy Clause" of the Constitution would be interpreted more
to support the position of the federal government over those of states in
the judicial system, a point that would be used to solve the Nullification
Crisis in 1832 and deem secession only legal if approved by Congress. The
federal government would be a "living government" rather than one
restrained by an unchanging piece of paper.
Marshall, though upset, would continue as Chief Justice and do his best to
support Federalist ideals. He challenged Jefferson in declaring Aaron Burr
free from any overt act of treason in 1807. In 1810's Fletcher v. Peck, he
judged that the Georgia government must support its dealings of its former
legislature (unless authorized by the US Congress, now seen as equivalent
to the Constitution). He also affirmed the position of the Executive
Branch in international dealings, especially with those of the Native
Americans.
Decades later, the matter of Congressional Supremacy would be key to the
1857 Dred Scott case proving that Congress had the right to prohibit
slavery in US territories. With the substantial legal victory, the matter
of slavery came to congressional attention, spurring the Emancipation Act
of 1859 that prescribed the methods for a slave to free himself while
paying his worth to his master, thus preventing any deprivation of
property. The act is widely believed to have headed off a war as it was
widely known Congress held the right to abolish slavery. Societies
throughout the North (and South) collected money to be given to slaves,
many of whom returned to work for former masters for wages.
Through the latter course of the nineteenth century, however, rampant
corruption would bring about the Progressive Revolution led by, among
others, General Theodore Roosevelt as renewed State Militias defending the
Constitution, especially its Second Amendment, clashed with Federal
troops.