Expansion of the Court’s Power, 1801–1824.
In order to assure the Court’s position as a coequal partner with Congress and the president in the tripartite structure of the federal government, it was necessary for Marshall to establish the power of judicial review: the authority to determine that an act of Congress or the executive branch was a violation of the Constitution. Alexander *Hamilton had claimed this power for the federal courts in The *Federalist no. 78, but the power was not conceded by the American legislatures as the new century dawned.
Drawing extensively on Federalist 78, Marshall conjured up the doctrine of judicial review in *Marbury v. Madison (1803). Adroitly criticizing the new administration of President Thomas *Jefferson yet leaving the Court invulnerable to political attack, Marshall reprimanded Secretary of State James Madison for refusing to deliver a justice of the peace commission to William Marbury. He went on to hold that the Supreme Court lacked power to provide the relief that Marbury sought, a writ of *mandamus, because the Judiciary Act of 1789, which authorized it, unconstitutionally granted to the Court a power not authorized by the Constitution.
Marshall justified this result by holding that when the Court is asked to determine whether a statute is unconstitutional, it merely determines which of two laws, statute and Constitution, is of controlling authority. Implicit in this reasoning was the crucial assumption that the Constitution is a law, to be administered by courts like any other law. But that idea produced Marbury’s central ambiguity: When exercising the power of judicial review, does the Court perform a unique function of monitoring the conformity of the other branches to the constitutional mandate, or is it merely doing what courts normally do—that is, applying a law to resolve a dispute? That ambiguity persists to the present day. Marshall also suggested a (p. 435) distinction that assumed great significance in the twentieth century between the “ministerial” responsibilities of the other branches, which courts could force them to perform, and “political” or discretionary powers, which courts cannot compel (see political questions).
The political implications of Marshall’s assertion of power were not lost on Jefferson. They confirmed for him the suspicion he had borne since his election that a Federalist-dominated judiciary would deprive him of the fruits of the Republican victory in what he called “the Revolution of 1800.” Repeal of the Judiciary Act of 1801 was one response; another was the powerful threat of impeaching obnoxious federal judges. Jeffersonian Republicans began their political assault on the federal judiciary with the successful but meaningless *impeachment of District Judge John Pickering, who at his trial in the Senate was found to be insane. Jefferson’s party then impeached Samuel Chase of the Supreme Court, who on circuit had presided over prosecutions under the *Sedition Act of 1798 with unbecoming zeal and severity. Later, in some *grand jury charges, Chase had delivered intemperate and antidemocratic political harangues about the “mobocracy” that would be grossly improper by modern standards. But Jeffersonians could not muster the necessary two-thirds vote in the Senate to convict Chase, thus leaving the judiciary immune from impeachment used exclusively as a political weapon by a dominant party determined to purge the federal bench of its opponents.
The president was further frustrated by the failure of the treason prosecution of his erstwhile vice president, Aaron *Burr, in 1807. The motives behind Burr’s mysterious 1806 military expedition on the Ohio River remain obscure. But Jefferson zealously pursued his political enemy by an indictment for treason, only to be frustrated by Marshall, sitting as chief judge on circuit in Virginia. In United States v. Burr (1807), Marshall construed the treason clause of Article III in a way that erected a high threshold for all treason prosecutions, preventing resort to such prosecutions used as a political device and burying Jefferson’s attempt to import the doctrine of “constructive treason” into American law.
The Marshall Court exerted a major influence on economic development in the United States. In *Fletcher v. Peck (1810), it gave a broad reading to the *Contracts Clause of Article I, which for most of the century provided the doctrinal basis for the courts’ supervision of legislative regulation. Fletcher involved a state conveyance of lands that the Georgia legislature subsequently rescinded on the grounds that the grant was contaminated by bribery. Marshall construed the original grant to be a *contract, thus extending the reach of the clause to contracts in which the state itself was a party and to contracts already executed. It is questionable whether the framers anticipated either reading of the clause. Nevertheless, Fletcher was the first in a line of cases that made the Contracts Clause an inhibition on state legislative power.
Marshall expanded the clause in *Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819) to protect corporate charters from rescission or modification by the state. In Terrett v. Taylor (1815), Justice Joseph *Story had devised a major new concept in American law, that of the *private corporation. Before the nineteenth century, the corporation served chiefly as a vehicle for public enterprises such as municipalities, charitable institutions, transportation facilities (roads, bridges, ferries), and trading companies. Purely private, profit-oriented enterprise was carried on under other forms, such as partnerships. But on the eve of the Industrial Revolution, a new legal entity was needed to permit entrepreneurs to amass capital without the double risk imposed by the partnership form—unlimited individual liability for enterprise debts and the termination of the enterprise by the death or withdrawal of a partner. The corporation avoided those risks, but investors sought assurances that the legislature would not subsequently modify corporate charters to their disadvantage. Story attempted to provide that guarantee in Terrett, but he did so only on the vague higher-law principles of Calder v. Bull.
In the Dartmouth College case, Marshall shifted the protection for corporations to a more certain textual base, the Contracts Clause, holding that the clause prohibited states from subsequently modifying the terms of the “contract” between them and investors, namely, the corporate charter. Dartmouth College has been hailed, somewhat extravagantly, as the midwife of corporate *capitalism in the United States. The case was also significant in that Marshall dropped Calder’s higher-law concepts completely from the Court’s jurisprudence, henceforth relying solely on some specific clause of the Constitution. This approach gave the Court’s expanding role in supervising legislatures a more secure and legitimate foundation.
A different kind of corporation—a bank—provided the subject of one of the Marshall’s Court’s most influential decisions, *McCulloch v. Maryland (1819). Marshall again relied on arguments originally made by Alexander Hamilton and elevated them to the status of constitutional doctrine. When Congress originally chartered the Bank of the United States in 1791, President George Washington sought his Cabinet’s advice as to whether Congress had constitutional authority to do so. Thomas Jefferson, Washington’s secretary of state, argued that it did not, articulating for the first time the strict constructionist arguments (p. 436) that have assumed such a prominent place in present-day constitutional debate. Hamilton, the secretary of the treasury, confidently claimed the authority for Congress, holding it to be implied from other express powers granted Congress in Article I, such as the power to raise armies, which necessarily implied a power to pay them and to handle the funds in any way not explicitly prohibited by the Constitution.
After Congress chartered the second Bank of the United States in 1816, southern and western states reacted to it with vociferous hostility because they believed that the bank inhibited the growth of capital in their regions and that it engaged in fraudulent and speculative fiscal practices. Accordingly, they either forbade its operations in their jurisdictions or taxed it prohibitively. The bank appealed a Maryland tax to the Supreme Court, raising again the question that Jefferson and Hamilton had debated in 1791. In McCulloch, Marshall adopted Hamilton’s arguments, upholding Congress’s power to charter a bank despite the absence of express warrant in the Constitution. The power could be implied, Marshall held, and Congress had wide latitude under the “necessary and proper” clause of Article I to effect its enumerated powers. He did concede, though, that Congress could not enact legislation on the mere “pretext” of exercising its enumerated powers (see implied powers).
Marshall then went on to hold that the states could not constitutionally levy a tax on an instrumentality of the federal government, observing that “the power to tax involves the power to destroy” (p. 431). This holding, subordinating state regulatory power to the supervision of the federal courts, provoked a vigorous denunciation from Virginia political and judicial leaders. The reaction demonstrated to thoughtful observers such as Madison how widely the North and South were diverging from each other in their constitutional theory.
The Constitution of 1787 was a sheaf of compromises, the most fundamental involving the nature of the Union it created. One view, later expressed by Jefferson and Madison in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 and 1799, held that the states remained substantially sovereign, creating a national government of limited and delegated powers while reserving to themselves all residual powers of sovereignty. The textual basis of this position was the *Tenth Amendment. The contrasting position maintained that, as Marshall put it in McCulloch, “the government of the Union, though limited in its powers, is supreme within its sphere of action” (p. 405). The textual source for this view was the Supremacy Clause of Article VI.
These differing emphases clashed before the Court in at least two other major decisions besides McCulloch: *Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee (1816) and *Cohens v. Virginia (1821). Arguments before the Court were supplemented by anonymous newspaper polemics written by Marshall and Chief Judge Spencer Roane of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, tracing in prolix argument the implications of the Constitution’s basic ambiguity concerning federalism. In Martin, Justice Story held that section 25 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 was constitutional and that therefore decisions of state supreme courts could be appealed to the United States Supreme Court. Because the case involved lands in Virginia’s Northern Neck and was appealed from Roane’s court, Virginians condemned the Supreme Court, Story’s reasoning, and section 25. Three years later, McCulloch, with its assertion of federal supremacy, inflamed their resentments further. So when Marshall, in Cohens, reaffirmed Story’s highly nationalist position, the Virginians, defending the state-sovereignty position of 1798–1799, demanded repeal of section 25 or a constitutional amendment that would subordinate the Court’s authority to state power.
A related conflict over national power came before the Court in the last great case of the Marshall Court’s expansive phase, *Gibbons v. Ogden (1824). Marshall there relied on a strained and expansive reading of a federal coastal licensing statute to strike down a New York statute that granted monopoly of an interstate ferry route. The constitutional basis of his position was the Commerce Clause of Article I, here given its earliest—and an extremely broad—interpretation. Gibbons is the origin of the pervasive federal regulatory power under the Commerce Clause that dominated the Court’s assumptions about federalism after 1937 (see commerce power).
In addition to its implications for federalism, Gibbons and its state-court antecedents (e.g., Livingston v. Van Ingen, 1812) also reflected a controversy about the future of American economic development. On one side were protagonists of monopoly, like New York’s Chief Justice James Kent (later joined by Story), who believed that the law had to encourage investors with exclusive and monopolistic grants to entice their risk capital into promoting development. Other jurists, like New York’s Chancellor John Lansing, took the opposing view, believing that competition and not monopoly was the surest guarantor of economic advance. Although it struck down a monopoly, Marshall’s Gibbons opinion did not really endorse the latter view.
The Marshall Court’s Retreat, 1824–1835.
Even during the expansive phase of his tenure, Marshall had respected the constraints that political realities (p. 437) imposed on the scope of the Court’s action. For example, he went along with Justice William *Johnson’s opinion in United States v. *Hudson and Goodwin (1812) denying federal courts common-law criminal jurisdiction, a prudent approach given the sensitivity of this issue. In line with this view, the Court held in *Wheaton v. Peters (1834) that there was no general *federal common law. But a number of events that occurred after the War of 1812 forced on Marshall a more inhibited approach to questions involving federal judicial power. The depression of 1819 coincided with the Missouri Controversy, which brought in its train a series of crises to the internal security of the slave states. The southern states’ affirmation of the postulates announced in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions and their hostility to federal jurisdiction forced on Marshall the concessions to state authority that characterized his later years.
Insolvency legislation provides a good example of the Court’s retreat in the 1820s. Article I of the Constitution empowers Congress to enact *bankruptcy legislation, and it prohibits states from impairing the obligation of contracts. These clauses came together in *Sturges v. Crowninshield (1819), when Marshall held that the Bankruptcy Clause did not imply an exclusive federal power. It did not prevent the states from enacting bankruptcy laws, but the Contracts Clause did prohibit insolvency laws that applied to contracts made before their passage. This left a question open: Could state insolvency laws apply to debts contracted after their enactment? In *Ogden v. Saunders (1827), the Court held that such application of insolvency laws to future contracts did not impair the obligation of contracts, a necessary concession to state power. Marshall, for almost the only time in his tenure of thirty-four years, dissented.
And so it went throughout his last decade. Dogged by the movement to repeal section 25, Marshall prudently threw concession after concession to his political enemies. In *Willson v. Blackbird Creek Marsh Co. (1829), a mere five years after Gibbons, Marshall held that state legislation that authorized the damming of a navigable waterway was not invalid, even though it impinged on a route of interstate commerce. And when Marshall’s prudence lapsed, political retaliation reminded him of the limits of the Court’s power. The *Cherokee Cases (Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 1831, and Worcester v. Georgia, 1832) demonstrated that when the states enjoyed the sympathetic support of the political branches of the federal government, the Supreme Court was impotent in its isolation. Marshall had attempted to extend some measure of protection to *Native Americans from the hostility and rapacious land-hunger of Georgia whites, to no avail. President Andrew *Jackson may never have uttered the perhaps apocryphal remark attributed to him—“The Chief Justice has made his decision; now let him enforce it”—but the president’s sentiment expressed the wisdom of Hamilton’s observation in Federalist 78 that the Court would always require the support of the political branches because it controlled neither army nor treasury. The most significant Marshall concession to state power came in *Barron v. Baltimore (1833), in which Marshall held that the *Bill of Rights was a limitation only on the federal government, not on the states.