Marbury v. Madison (1803)
Just as George Washington helped shape the actual form
that the executive branch would take, so the fourth chief justice, John
Marshall, shaped the role that the courts would play.
Under the administrations of Washington and his successor,
John Adams, only members of the ruling Federalist Party were appointed to the
bench, and under the terms of the Constitution, they held office for life
during "good behavior." Thus, when the opposing Republicans won the
election of 1800, the Jeffersonians found that while they controlled the
presidency and Congress, the Federalists still dominated the judiciary. One of
the first acts of the new administration was to repeal the Judiciary Act of
1800, which had created a number of new judgeships. Although President Adams
had attempted to fill the vacancies prior to the end of his term, a number of
commissions had not been delivered, and one of the appointees, William Marbury,
sued Secretary of State James Madison to force him to deliver his commission as
a justice of the peace.
The new chief justice, John Marshall, understood that
if the Court awarded Marbury a writ of mandamus (an order to force Madison to
deliver the commission) the Jefferson administration would ignore it, and thus
significantly weaken the authority of the courts. On the other hand, if the
Court denied the writ, it might well appear that the justices had acted out of
fear. Either case would be a denial of the basic principle of the supremacy of
the law.
Marshall's decision in this case has been hailed as a
judicial tour de force. In essence, he declared that Madison should have
delivered the commission to Marbury, but then held that the section of the
Judiciary Act of 1789 that gave the Supreme Court the power to issue writs of
mandamus exceeded the authority allotted the Court under Article III of the
Constitution, and was therefore null and void. Thus he was able to chastise the
Jeffersonians and yet not create a situation in which a court order would be
flouted.
The critical importance of Marbury is the assumption
of several powers by the Supreme Court. One was the authority to declare acts
of Congress, and by implication acts of the president, unconstitutional if they
exceeded the powers granted by the Constitution. But even more important, the
Court became the arbiter of the Constitution, the final authority on what the
document meant. As such, the Supreme Court became in fact as well as in theory
an equal partner in government, and it has played that role ever since.
The Court would not declare another act of Congress
unconstitutional until 1857, and it has used that power sparingly. But through
its role as arbiter of the Constitution, it has, especially in the twentieth
century, been the chief agency for the expansion of individual rights.
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