The True Story of Marbury v. Madison
The True Story of Marbury v. Madison
The True Story of Marbury v. Madison
Madison
Of all the excuses for the abuse of judicial power offered by leftist judges and their
defenders, none is more disingenuous than, "John Marshall made me do it."
Though normally not friends of original intent or legal tradition, today's judicial
"activists" like to trace their lineage back to the (purported) original judicial activist, to
the great Chief Justice who was the first to persuade the Supreme Court to strike down a
law of Congress.
According to this conceit, which is now the standard interpretation enshrined in countless
histories and hornbooks, Marbury v. Madison was the breakthrough that demonstrated
how truly powerful the judiciary could be. In this famous case, decided 200 years ago,
Marshall supposedly showed that the Constitution is an elastic document or at least could
be turned into one. Therefore, the "living Constitution" is nothing new: John Marshall's
own example and authority prove that judicial activisim is as American as apple pie.
Strangely, many conservatives accept this strained interpretation, though for different
reasons. They agree that judicial activism is an exaggerated form of judicial review and
that the problem is endemic to the Constitution. Reluctantly, they conclude that judicial
review is an undemocratic flaw in the constitutional order that needs to be excised or
constrained, perhaps by a constitutional amendment that would empower Congress to
overrule the Court.
When Thomas Jefferson learned in December 1800 of his narrow electoral victory over
John Adams, he fully intended to accomplish what he would later call "The Revolution of
1800." He wanted to purge Federalists from the bureaucracy and went so far as to claim
that any appointments that John Adams made after December 1800 were "mere nullities."
As the lame duck session of Congress developed, Jefferson made up his mind to have the
Judiciary Act of 1801 repealed, to reverse support for constructing a national road, and to
jettison the navy yards and ship construction John Adams had put in place.
But political reality set in. Though the electoral college had voted Adams out of office, it
had not voted Jefferson in. He and Aaron Burr were tied in the electoral count, throwing
the decision to the House of Representatives, which itself deadlocked. Jefferson sent
letters (which he almost certainly knew would be leaked) darkly hinting at a civil war if
the will of the people were frustrated. At the same time, Alexander Hamilton asked the
Federalists in the House to allow Jefferson, not Burr, to ascend to the presidency. But it
was James Bayard, a leading Federalist Congressman from Delaware, who may have
broken the deadlock. Bayard approached an aide of Jefferson and asked whether
Jefferson would consider allowing current Federalist holders of office, particularly the
lucrative posts of Collectors of the Ports, to remain in place until they resigned
voluntarily. The aide reported that Jefferson was amenable to the idea. Shortly
afterwards, Federalists in the House withheld their votes from Burr, allowing Jefferson to
be elected.
Although Jefferson always denied making such a deal, he didn't, in fact, fire any of the
Collectors of the Ports, and he kept most of Adams's other appointments. The only ones
he did let go were the last-minute marshals and U.S. Attorneys, who serve at the
president's pleasure. When he discovered serendipitously that commissions for justices of
the peace had not been delivered, he thought he could withhold them as well—without
seeming to engage in a wholesale firing.
The Federalists in Congress presumed that Jefferson had made such a deal. To them it
was confirmed by his surprisingly conciliatory inauguration speech, and his hiring of a
vehement Federalist, Jacob Wagner, as his temporary secretary until the arrival of
Meriwether Lewis. The Federalists, therefore, were willing to let go the firings of
marshals, U.S. attorneys, and even the justices of the peace. Only James Marshall, John
Marshall's brother and a judge on the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, thought
the last action by Jefferson hypocritical, and contrary to the District of Columbia bill
passed by Congress that had provided five-year terms for justices of the peace.
The honeymoon unraveled, however, in the spring of 1801. At that time, the Federalist
governor of Connecticut began firing Republican state office-holders. In response to
desperate pleas from Connecticut Republicans, Jefferson in retaliation fired the Federalist
collector of the port of New Haven and replaced him with someone who was anathema to
the New Haven merchants. The Federalists regarded Jefferson's action as a betrayal of the
deal that had brought him to the presidency, and began a broad counterattack against
Jefferson's patronage policy.
The Federalists turned to the Federalist judiciary to assist them in their battle. One
possible vulnerability of Jefferson's was his failure to deliver the justice of the peace
commissions. Unlike federal attorneys and marshals and collectors of the ports, all of
whom clearly served at the president's discretion, the office of justice of the peace was a
five-year appointment under federal law. If the Federalists could show that Jefferson was
acting illegally here—especially if he were to refuse a Supreme Court order to deliver the
commissions—it would politically undermine his patronage policy across the board.
Thus, William Marbury brought suit, with three other complainants, represented by John
Adams's former Attorney General, Charles Lee. There is no evidence that Marbury had
any burning interest in whether he got his commission back. He already held a
presitigous position in Georgetown society and was financially well off. Rather, it is
evident that with some of his Federalist colleagues, he was out to discredit the President
politically.
***
In December 1801, when John Marshall first issued the show cause order in the case of
Marbury v. Madison, he found the Court at the center of an ideological battle between the
two parties. The Federalists wished to enlist the Court in their plan to embarrass
Jefferson, and the Jeffersonians wanted to reduce the power of the federal courts and
eventually replace Federalist judges with Republican judges, even if it took an
impeachment to do so.
Neither side any longer wanted a balanced constitution, the kind that John Adams had
written about and which had influenced the framers in Philadelphia in 1787. By 1800,
each of the two parties sought a kind of one party state with all branches allied in
accomplishing the ideological program of the party.
In 1802, the partisan battle continued around two major issues. The Republicans
succeeded in replacing the Judiciary Act of 1801 and sent packing the Federalist circuit
judges appointed under it. But was the repeal constitutional? The question was debated in
letters among members of the Supreme Court, as well as in the press. Congress had
arranged the calendar of the Supreme Court so that it could not meet in 1802, thus
preventing it from possibly declaring the repeal unconstitutional. Of course, everyone
understood the mechanism of judicial review. It was not an invention of John Marshall to
be revealed in Marbury a year later.
The second issue roiling the country was Louisiana. During 1802, it became clear that the
Spanish were handing back Louisiana to the French. It was also clear that the new leader
of France, Napoleon, had ambitions. Though the Federalists called for a military buildup
and some even called for a preemptive military action, the Jefferson Administration held
back and hoped that diplomacy would solve the problem.
Thus when Marbury v. Madison reached the Supreme Court in February 1803, the
Federalists thought they were closing in on Jefferson. The decision on the
constitutionality of the repeal of the Judiciary Act of 1801 was still pending. Meanwhile,
the threat that a French army in Louisiana would pose was becoming palpable; and the
Jefferson Administration had taken few military precautions to face it.
The Federalists had little to lose in being narrowly partisan on these issues. They had lost
badly in the 1802 Congressional elections. The Senate was now 25-9 in favor of the
Republicans, and the House was 102-39. There were serious murmurs of secession by
Federalist New England. A decision by the Supreme Court ordering Jefferson to deliver
commissions illegally withheld and a subsequent refusal to deliver them would fit very
nicely into the Federalist strategy to rebuke and delegitimize Jefferson.
The Trial
The standard story of Marbury v. Madison is that John Marshall cleverly demonstrated
how lawless and improper Jefferson's actions had been in ordering Marbury's commission
withheld; yet avoided a confrontation by denying the Court's jurisdiction in the case; all
the while adroitly grabbing for power by asserting the right of judicial review over acts of
Congress. Neat trick, eh? But this account only makes sense if one assumes that Marshall
was acting in the same partisan fashion as were Jefferson and the Federalists.
The big loser in the case was not Jefferson. The big loser was the Federalist Party's
program of enlisting the judiciary in its partisan ideological cause. The Federalists hoped
Marshall would be an ally.
In fact, Marshall's opportunity to embarrass Jefferson came during the trial when
Marbury's attorney, Charles Lee, subpoenaed Levi Lincoln. Lincoln, then acting
Secretary of State, had been present with Jefferson in the State Department when the two
had come upon the pile of undelivered commissions.
In reading the sparse report of the dialogue at the trial, one senses an enormous respect
between Lincoln and Marshall. Like Marshall, and unlike so many other Federalists and
Republicans, Lincoln was wedded to the rule of law. On the other hand, Marshall had no
respect for the Secretary of State's chief clerk, Jacob Wagner, who had testified earlier. It
was Wagner whom Jefferson had asked to be his temporary secretary pending the arrival
of Meriwether Lewis. It was Wagner who should have recorded the commissions in the
department's record book. As Marshall made clear in his opinion, the commissions were
only evidence of the underlying appointment. If they were missing, one would simply
check the department's record book for the notation of the commission, and, if necessary,
a new one could be issued. But Wagner had not recorded the commission, as he should
have. It was Wagner who waited upon Jefferson at Jefferson's lodgings when the new
president returned from taking the oath of office. And almost certainly, it was Wagner
who informed Jefferson of the existence of the undelivered commissions. This caused
Jefferson to relieve the then acting Secretary of State John Marshall and place Levi
Lincoln in his stead. The day after the Inaugural, Jefferson paid a visit with Lincoln to the
offices of the Secretary of State. Wagner, formerly one of the most vigorously partisan
Federalists, would keep his job under Jefferson and Madison as chief clerk for seven
years. At the trial, as he testified about his lack of knowledge of the commissions,
Marshall knew he was lying, and he knew why he was lying; and Marshall was silent.
The questions being written were then read and handed to him. He repeated the ideas he
had before suggested, and said his objections were of two kinds.
1st. He did not think himself bound to disclose his official transactions while acting as
secretary of state; and
2d. He ought not to be compelled to answer any thing which might tend to criminate
himself.
Mr. Lincoln thought it was going a great way to say that every secretary of state should at
all times be liable to be called upon to appear as a witness in a court of justice, and testify
to facts which came to his knowledge officially. He felt himself delicately situated
between his duty to this court, and the duty he conceived he owed to an executive
department; and hoped the court would give him time to consider of the subject.
The court said, that if Mr. Lincoln wished time to consider what answers he should make,
they would give him time; but they had no doubt he ought to answer. There was nothing
confidential required to be disclosed. If there had been he was not obliged to answer it;
and if he thought that any thing was communicated to him in confidence he was not
bound to disclose it; nor was he obliged to state any thing which would criminate
himself; but that the fact whether such commissions had been in the office or not, could
not be a confidential fact; it is a fact which all the world have a right to know. If he
thought any of the questions improper, he might state his objections.
Mr. Lincoln then prayed time till the next day to consider of his answers under this
opinion of the court.
The court granted it and postponed further consideration of the cause till the next day.
At the opening of the court on the next morning, Mr. Lincoln said he had no objection to
answering the questions proposed, excepting the last which he did not think himself
obliged to answer fully. The question was, what had been done with the commissions. He
had no hesitation in saying that he did not know that they ever came to the possession of
Mr. Madison [Jefferson's Secretary of State], nor did he know that they were in the office
when Mr. Madison took possession of it. He prayed the opinion of the court whether he
was obliged to disclose what had been done with the commissions.
Everyone in the Court knew the answer to that question. It would be, "The president
ordered me to destroy the commissions." It would have been the same as saying, "The
president ordered me to commit an illegal act." It was just what the Federalists were
waiting for.
The reporter does not give us a sense of the timing of Marshall's answer, but I suspect it
came after a pause.
The court were of opinion that he was not bound to say what had become of them; if they
never came to the possession of Mr. Madison, it was immaterial to the present cause,
what had been done with them by others.
John Marshall not only saved Jefferson from embarrassment, but he did not flinch in
pursuit of his legal duty as an officer of the law. Since this was a suit to recover a
commission that supposedly had come into the hands of Madison, then all the Court
needed was testimony respecting that fact, not how the documents had been deflected or
disposed of.
The Opinion
Chief Justice Marshall was not making a grab for power. That is the greatest historical
calumny to be placed upon the man, a libel that continues to this day. Rather, his point in
Marbury v. Madison was to demonstrate the constitutional obligations of those in power
to be restrained in the exercise of their office.
Look at the facts. Marshall didn't invent judicial review. The framers presumed it would
exist, the Court practiced it in the 1790s (even though they hadn't yet struck down a law
of Congress), and the Jeffersonians accepted it. That is why the Republicans delayed the
Court's session throughout 1802 so that the justices would not have a chance to review
the 1802 Judiciary Act before it had gone into effect.
What did the unanimous Court's act of judicial review accomplish? In substance, it said
to Congress that you cannot add to our original jurisdiction (which is a miniscule part of
its jurisdiction anyway), but you can remove appellate jurisdiction from us as you wish.
In other words, it left all the power with Congress to determine what cases the Court
could hear under the federal jurisdiction provisions of Article III of the Constitution. It
was precisely the opposite of a grab for power.
Marbury declared that the Court had no business in interfering with the discretionary
powers of the President, and established what we call the political question doctrine in a
far greater sweep than the modern court has accepted.
Marshall left the court solely in the position of deciding the content of the positive law—
that is, the common law, the law of the statute, and the law of the Constitution. He plied
his craft with exactitude. Recall in the opinion his analysis of the Judiciary Act and its
meaning, his discussion of the question of legal remedies, the analysis of the equitable
writ of mandamus, and his textual analysis of Article III of the Constitution. He was
practicing the rule of law.
When Marshall finally came to declare that the grant of original jurisdiction was
improper in this case, he did not state that his view of the Constitution was superior to
Congress's. Instead, he stated that as a moral matter, he could not enforce a law that was
not a law. His guide was the Constitution and the oath he made to God to support it.
It is apparent, that the framers of the constitution contemplated that instrument, as a rule
for the government of courts, as well as of the legislature.
Why otherwise does it direct the judges to take an oath to support it? This oath certainly
applies, in an especial manner, to their conduct in their official character. How immoral
to impose it on them, if they were to be used as the instruments, and the knowing
instruments, for violating what they swear to support!
Whether they realize it or not, the Federalists, the Jeffersonians, and many modern
politicians want the justices to be the knowing instruments for violating what they swear
to support.
Marshall concludes:
Why does a judge swear to discharge his duties agreeably to the constitution of the
United States, if that constitution forms no rule for his government? if it is closed upon
him, and cannot be inspected by him?
If such be the real state of things, this is worse than solemn mockery. To prescribe, or to
take this oath, becomes equally a crime.
With these words, Marshall shows himself to be the worthy follower of his mentor,
George Washington.
In this opinion we see the tremendous gulf between the historical John Marshall and the
prevailing caricature of him. Today, many liberal lawyers, law professors, and judges
seek to employ judicial review in order to effectuate a partisan ideological program in
place of the rule of law. In Marbury v. Madison, Chief Justice John Marshall employed
judicial review to remove the Court from ideological contest and to establish the rule of
law.