The Life of John Marshall, Volume 4: The building of the nation, 1815-1835
CHAPTER VI
15599 words | Chapter 10
VITALIZING THE CONSTITUTION
The crisis is one which portends destruction to the liberties of
the American people. (Spencer Roane.)
The constitutional government of this republican empire cannot
be practically enforced but by a fair and liberal interpretation
of its powers. (William Pinkney.)
The Judiciary of the United States is the subtle corps of
sappers and miners constantly working under ground to undermine
the foundations of our confederated fabric. (Jefferson.)
The government of the Union is emphatically and truly a
government of the people. In form and substance it emanates from
them. Its powers are granted by them, and are to be exercised
directly on them and for their benefit. (Marshall.)
Although it was the third of the great causes to be decided by the
Supreme Court in the memorable year, 1819, M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland was
the first in importance and in the place it holds in the development of
the American Constitution. Furthermore, in his opinion in this case John
Marshall rose to the loftiest heights of judicial statesmanship. If his
fame rested solely on this one effort, it would be secure.
To comprehend the full import of Marshall's opinion in this case, the
reader must consider the state of the country as described in the fourth
chapter of this volume. While none of his expositions of our fundamental
law, delivered in the critical epoch from 1819 to 1824, can be entirely
understood without knowledge of the National conditions that produced
them, this fact must be especially borne in mind when reviewing the case
of M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland.
[Illustration: Associate Justices sitting with Marshall in the case of
M'Culloch _versus_ Maryland: STORY, JOHNSON, WASHINGTON, DUVAL,
LIVINGSTON, TODD]
Like most of the controversies in which Marshall's Constitutional
opinions were pronounced, M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland came before the
Supreme Court on an agreed case. The facts were that Congress had
authorized the incorporation of the second Bank of the United States;
that this institution had instituted a branch at Baltimore; that the
Legislature of Maryland had passed an act requiring all banks,
established "without authority from the state," to issue notes only on
stamped paper and only of certain denominations, or, in lieu of these
requirements, only upon the payment of an annual tax of fifteen thousand
dollars; that, in violation of this law, the Baltimore branch of the
National Bank continued to issue its notes on unstamped paper without
paying the tax; and that on May 8, 1818, John James, "Treasurer of the
Western Shore," had sued James William M'Culloch, the cashier of the
Baltimore branch, for the recovery of the penalties prescribed by the
Maryland statute.[784]
The immediate question was whether the Maryland law was Constitutional;
but the basic issue was the supremacy of the National Government as
against the dominance of State Governments. Indeed, the decision of this
case involved the very existence of the Constitution as an "ordinance of
Nationality," as Marshall so accurately termed it.
At no time in this notable session of the Supreme Court was the
basement room, where its sittings were now again held, so thronged with
auditors as it was when the argument in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland took
place. "We have had a crowded audience of ladies and gentlemen," writes
Story toward the close of the nine days of discussion. "The hall was
full almost to suffocation, and many went away for want of room."[785]
Webster opened the case for the Bank. His masterful argument in the
Dartmouth College case the year before had established his reputation as
a great Constitutional lawyer as well as an orator of the first class.
He was attired in the height of fashion, tight breeches, blue cloth
coat, cut away squarely at the waist, and adorned with large brass
buttons, waist-coat exposing a broad expanse of ruffled shirt with high
soft collar surrounded by an elaborate black stock.[786]
The senior counsel for the Bank was William Pinkney. He was dressed with
his accustomed foppish elegance, and, as usual, was nervous and
impatient. Notwithstanding his eccentricities, he was Webster's equal,
if not his superior, except in physical presence and the gift of
political management. With Webster and Pinkney was William Wirt, then
Attorney-General of the United States, who had arrived at the fullness
of his powers.
Maryland was represented by Luther Martin, still Attorney-General for
that State, then seventy-five years old, but a strong lawyer despite
his half-century, at least, of excessive drinking. By his side was
Joseph Hopkinson of Philadelphia, now fifty years of age, one of the
most learned men at the American bar. With Martin and Hopkinson was
Walter Jones of Washington, who appears to have been a legal genius, his
fame obliterated by devotion to his profession and unaided by any public
service, which so greatly helps to give permanency to the lawyer's
reputation. All told, the counsel for both sides in M'Culloch _vs._
Maryland were the most eminent and distinguished in the Republic.
Webster said in opening that Hamilton had "exhausted" the arguments for
the power of Congress to charter a bank and that Hamilton's principles
had long been acted upon. After thirty years of acquiescence it was too
late to deny that the National Legislature could establish a bank.[787]
With meticulous care Webster went over Hamilton's reasoning to prove
that Congress can "pass all laws 'necessary and proper' to carry into
execution powers conferred on it."[788]
Assuming the law which established the Bank to be Constitutional,
could Maryland tax a branch of that Bank? If the State could tax the
Bank at all, she could put it out of existence, since a "power to tax
involves ... a power to destroy"[789]--words that Marshall, in
delivering his opinion, repeated as his own. The truth was, said
Webster, that, in taxing the Baltimore branch of the National Bank,
Maryland taxed the National Government itself.[790]
Joseph Hopkinson, as usual, made a superb argument--a performance all
the more admirable as an intellectual feat in that, as an advocate for
Maryland, his convictions were opposed to his reasoning.[791] Walter
Jones was as thorough as he was lively, but he did little more than to
reinforce the well-nigh perfect argument of Hopkinson.[792] On the same
side the address of Luther Martin deserves notice as the last worthy of
remark which that great lawyer ever made. Old as he was, and wasted as
were his astonishing powers, his argument was not much inferior to those
of Webster, Hopkinson, and Pinkney. Martin showed by historical evidence
that the power now claimed for Congress was suspected by the opponents
of the Constitution, but denied by its supporters and called "a dream of
distempered jealousy." So came the Tenth Amendment; yet, said Martin,
now, "we are asked to engraft upon it [the Constitution] powers ...
which were disclaimed by them [the advocates of the Constitution], and
which, if they had been fairly avowed at the time, would have prevented
its adoption."[793]
Could powers of Congress be inferred as a necessary means to the desired
end? Why, then, did the Constitution _expressly_ confer powers which, of
necessity, must be implied? For instance, the power to declare war
surely implied the power to raise armies; and yet that very power was
granted in specific terms. But the power to create corporations "is not
expressly delegated, either as an end or a means of national
government."[794]
When Martin finished, William Pinkney, whom Marshall declared to be "the
greatest man he had ever seen in a Court of justice,"[795] rose to make
what proved to be the last but one of the great arguments of that
unrivaled leader of the American bar of his period. To reproduce his
address is to set out in advance the opinion of John Marshall stripped
of Pinkney's rhetoric which, in that day, was deemed to be the
perfection of eloquence.[796]
For three days Pinkney spoke. Few arguments ever made in the Supreme
Court affected so profoundly the members of that tribunal. Story
describes the argument thus: "Mr. Pinkney rose on Monday to conclude the
argument; he spoke all that day and yesterday, and will probably
conclude to-day. I never, in my whole life, heard a greater speech; it
was worth a journey from Salem to hear it; his elocution was excessively
vehement, but his eloquence was overwhelming. His language, his style,
his figures, his arguments, were most brilliant and sparkling. He spoke
like a great statesman and patriot, and a sound constitutional lawyer.
All the cobwebs of sophistry and metaphysics about State rights and
State sovereignty he brushed away with a mighty besom."[797]
Indeed, all the lawyers in this memorable contest appear to have
surpassed their previous efforts at the bar. Marshall, in his opinion,
pays this tribute to all their addresses: "Both in maintaining the
affirmative and the negative, a splendor of eloquence, and strength of
argument seldom, if ever, surpassed, have been displayed."[798]
After he had spoken, Webster, who at that moment was intent on the
decision of the Dartmouth College case,[799] became impatient. "Our Bank
argument goes on--& threatens to be long," he writes Jeremiah
Mason.[800] Four days later, while Martin was still talking, Webster
informs Jeremiah Smith: "We are not yet thro. the Bank question. Martin
has been _talking 3 ds_. Pinkney replies tomorrow & that finishes--I set
out for home next day."[801] The arguments in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland
occupied nine days.[802]
Four days before the Bank argument opened in the Supreme Court, the
House took up the resolution offered by James Johnson of Virginia to
repeal the Bank's charter.[803] The debate over this proposal continued
until February 25, the third day of the argument in M'Culloch _vs._
Maryland. How, asked Johnson, had the Bank fulfilled expectations and
promises? "What ... is our condition? Surrounded by one universal gloom.
We are met by the tears of the widow and the orphan."[804] Madison has
"cast a shade" on his reputation by signing the Bank Bill--that "act of
usurpation." Under the common law the charter "is forfeited."[805]
The Bank is a "mighty corporation," created "to overawe ... the local
institutions, that had dealt themselves almost out of breath in
supporting the Government in times of peril and adversity." The
financial part of the Virginia Republican Party organization thus spoke
through James Pindall of that State.[806]
William Lowndes of South Carolina brilliantly defended the Bank, but
admitted that its "early operation" had been "injudicious."[807] John
Tyler of Virginia assailed the Bank with notable force. "This charter
has been violated," he said; "if subjected to investigation before a
court of justice, it will be declared null and void."[808] David Walker
of Kentucky declared that the Bank "is an engine of favoritism--of stock
jobbing"--a machine for "binding in adamantine chains the blessed,
innocent lambs of America to accursed, corrupt European tigers."[809] In
spite of all this eloquence, Johnson's resolution was defeated, and the
fate of the Bank left in the hands of the Supreme Court.
On March 6, 1819, before a few spectators, mostly lawyers with business
before the court, Marshall read his opinion. It is the misfortune of the
biographer that only an abstract can be given of this epochal state
paper--among the very first of the greatest judicial utterances of all
time.[810] It was delivered only three days after Pinkney concluded his
superb address.
Since it is one of the longest of Marshall's opinions and, by general
agreement, is considered to be his ablest and most carefully prepared
exposition of the Constitution, it seems not unlikely that much of it
had been written before the argument. The court was very busy every day
of the session and there was little, if any, time for Marshall to write
this elaborate document. The suit against M'Culloch had been brought
nearly a year before the Supreme Court convened; Marshall undoubtedly
learned of it through the newspapers; he was intimately familiar with
the basic issue presented by the litigation; and he had ample time to
formulate and even to write out his views before the ensuing session of
the court. He had, in the opinions of Hamilton and Jefferson,[811] the
reasoning on both sides of this fundamental controversy. It appears to
be reasonably probable that at least the framework of the opinion in
M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland was prepared by Marshall when in Richmond
during the summer, autumn, and winter of 1818-19.
The opening words of Marshall are majestic: "A sovereign state denies
the obligation of a law ... of the Union.... The constitution of our
country, in its most ... vital parts, is to be considered; the
conflicting powers of the government of the Union and of its
members, ... are to be discussed; and an opinion given, which may
essentially influence the great operations of the government."[812] He
cannot "approach such a question without a deep sense of ... the awful
responsibility involved in its decision. But it must be decided
peacefully, or remain a source of hostile legislation, perhaps of
_hostility of a still more serious nature_."[813] In these solemn words
the Chief Justice reveals the fateful issue which M'Culloch _vs._
Maryland foreboded.
That Congress has power to charter a bank is not "an open question....
The principle ... was introduced at a very early period of our history,
has been recognized by many successive legislatures, and has been acted
upon by the judicial department ... as a law of undoubted obligation....
An exposition of the constitution, deliberately established by
legislative acts, on the faith of which an immense property has been
advanced, ought not to be lightly disregarded."
The first Congress passed the act to incorporate a National bank. The
whole subject was at the time debated exhaustively. "The bill for
incorporating the bank of the United States did not steal upon an
unsuspecting legislature, & pass unobserved," says Marshall. Moreover,
it had been carefully examined with "persevering talent" in Washington's
Cabinet. When that act expired, "a short experience of the
embarrassments" suffered by the country "induced the passage of the
present law." He must be intrepid, indeed, who asserts that "a measure
adopted under these circumstances was a bold and plain usurpation, to
which the constitution gave no countenance."[814]
But Marshall examines the question as though it were "entirely new"; and
gives an historical account of the Constitution which, for clearness and
brevity, never has been surpassed.[815] Thus he proves that "the
government proceeds directly from the people; ... their act was final.
It required not the affirmance, and could not be negatived, by the state
governments. The constitution when thus adopted ... bound the state
sovereignties." The States could and did establish "a league, such as
was the confederation.... But when, 'in order to form a more perfect
union,' it was deemed necessary to change this alliance into an
effective government, ... acting directly on the people," it was the
people themselves who acted and established a fundamental law for their
government.[816]
The Government of the American Nation is, then, "emphatically, and
truly, a government of the people. In form and in substance it emanates
from them. Its powers are granted by them, and are to be exercised
directly on them, and for their benefit"[817]--a statement, the grandeur
of which was to be enhanced forty-four years later, when, standing on
the battle-field of Gettysburg, Abraham Lincoln said that "a government
of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the
earth."[818]
To be sure, the States, as well as the Nation, have certain powers, and
therefore "the supremacy of their respective laws, when they are in
opposition, must be settled." Marshall proceeds to settle that basic
question. The National Government, he begins, "is supreme within its
sphere of action. This would seem to result necessarily from its
nature." For "it is the government of all; its powers are delegated by
all; it represents all, and acts for all. Though any one state may be
willing to control its operations, no state is willing to allow others
to control them. The nation, on those subjects on which it can act, must
necessarily bind its component parts." Plain as this truth is, the
people have not left the demonstration of it to "mere reason"--for they
have, "in express terms, decided it by saying" that the Constitution,
and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance
thereof, "shall be the supreme law of the land," and by requiring all
State officers and legislators to "take the oath of fidelity to
it."[819]
The fact that the powers of the National Government enumerated in the
Constitution do not include that of creating corporations does not
prevent Congress from doing so. "There is no phrase in the instrument
which, like the articles of confederation, _excludes_ incidental or
implied powers; and which requires that everything granted shall be
expressly and minutely described.... A constitution, to contain an
accurate detail of all the subdivisions of which its great powers will
admit, and of all the means by which they may be carried into execution,
would partake of a prolixity of a legal code, and could scarcely be
embraced by the human mind. It would probably never be understood by the
public."
The very "nature" of a constitution, "therefore requires, that only its
great outlines should be marked, its important objects designated, and
the minor ingredients which compose those _objects be deduced from the
nature of the objects themselves_." In deciding such questions "we must
never forget," reiterates Marshall, "that it is a _constitution_ we are
expounding."[820]
This being true, the power of Congress to establish a bank is
undeniable--it flows from "the great powers to lay and collect taxes; to
borrow money; to regulate commerce; to declare and conduct a war; and to
raise and support armies and navies." Consider, he continues, the scope
of the duties of the National Government: "The sword and the purse, all
the external relations, and no inconsiderable portion of the industry of
the nation, are entrusted to its government.... A government, entrusted
with such ample powers, on the due execution of which the happiness and
prosperity of the nation so vitally depends, must also be entrusted with
ample means for their execution. The power being given, it is the
interest of the nation to facilitate its execution. It can never be
their interest, and cannot be presumed to have been their intention, to
clog and embarrass its execution by withholding the most appropriate
means."[821]
At this point Marshall's language becomes as exalted as that of the
prophets: "Throughout this vast republic, from the St. Croix to the Gulf
of Mexico, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, revenue is to be collected
and expended, armies are to be marched and supported. The exigencies of
the nation may require that the treasure raised in the north should be
transported to the south, that raised in the east conveyed to the west,
or that this order should be reversed." Here Marshall the soldier is
speaking. There is in his words the blast of the bugle of Valley Forge.
Indeed, the pen with which Marshall wrote M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland was
fashioned in the army of the Revolution.[822]
The Chief Justice continues: "Is that construction of the constitution
to be preferred which would render these operations difficult,
hazardous, and expensive?" Did the framers of the Constitution "when
granting these powers for the public good" intend to impede "their
exercise by withholding a choice of means?" No! The Constitution "does
not profess to enumerate the means by which the powers it confers may be
executed; nor does it prohibit the creation of a corporation, if the
existence of such a being be essential to the beneficial exercise of
those powers."[823]
Resorting to his favorite method in argument, that of repetition,
Marshall again asserts that the fact that "the power of creating a
corporation is one appertaining to sovereignty and is not expressly
conferred on Congress," does not take that power from Congress. If it
does, Congress, by the same reasoning, would be denied the power to pass
most laws; since "all legislative powers appertain to sovereignty." They
who say that Congress may not select "any appropriate means" to carry
out its admitted powers, "take upon themselves the burden of
establishing that exception."[824]
The establishment of the National Bank was a means to an end; the power
to incorporate it is "as incidental" to the great, substantive, and
independent powers expressly conferred on Congress as that of making
war, levying taxes, or regulating commerce.[825] This is not only the
plain conclusion of reason, but the clear language of the Constitution
itself as expressed in the "necessary and proper" clause[826] of that
instrument. Marshall treats with something like contempt the argument
that this clause does not mean what it says, but is "really restrictive
of the general right, which might otherwise be implied, of selecting
means for executing the enumerated powers"--a denial, in short, that,
without this clause, Congress is authorized to make laws.[827] After
conferring on Congress all legislative power, "after allowing each house
to prescribe its own course of proceeding, after describing the manner
in which a bill should become a law, would it have entered into the
mind ... of the convention that an express power to make laws was
necessary to enable the legislature to make them?"[828]
In answering the old Jeffersonian argument that,[829] under the
"necessary and proper" clause, Congress can adopt only those means
absolutely "necessary" to the execution of express powers, Marshall
devotes an amount of space which now seems extravagant. But in 1819 the
question was unsettled and acute; indeed, the Republicans had again made
it a political issue. The Chief Justice repeats the arguments made by
Hamilton in his opinion to Washington on the first Bank Bill.[830]
Some words have various shades of meaning, of which courts must select
that justified by "common usage." "The word 'necessary' is of this
description.... It admits of all degrees of comparison.... A thing may
be necessary, very necessary, absolutely or indispensably necessary."
For instance, the Constitution itself prohibits a State from "laying
'imposts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be
_absolutely_ necessary for executing its inspection laws'"; whereas it
authorizes Congress to "'make all laws which shall be necessary and
proper'" for the execution of powers expressly conferred.[831]
Did the framers of the Constitution intend to forbid Congress to employ
"_any_" means "which might be appropriate, and which were conducive to
the end"? Most assuredly not! "The subject is the execution of those
great powers on which the welfare of a nation essentially depends." The
"necessary and proper" clause is found "in a constitution intended to
endure for ages to come, and, consequently, to be adapted to the various
crises of human affairs.... To have declared that the best means shall
not be used, but those alone without which the power given would be
nugatory, would have been to deprive the legislature of the capacity to
avail itself of experience, to exercise its reason, and to accommodate
its legislation to circumstances."[832]
The contrary conclusion is tinged with "insanity." Whence comes the
power of Congress to prescribe punishment for violations of National
laws? No such general power is expressly given by the Constitution. Yet
nobody denies that Congress has this general power, although "it is
expressly given in some cases," such as counterfeiting, piracy, and
"offenses against the law of nations." Nevertheless, the specific
authorization to provide for the punishment of these crimes does not
prevent Congress from doing the same as to crimes not specified.[833]
Now comes an example of Marshall's reasoning when at his best--and
briefest.
"Take, for example, the power 'to establish post-offices and
post-roads.' This power is executed by the single act of making the
establishment. But, from this has been inferred the power and duty of
carrying the mail along the post-road, from one post-office to another.
And, from this implied power, has again been inferred the right to
punish those who steal letters from the post-office, or rob the mail. It
may be said, with some plausibility, that the right to carry the mail,
and to punish those who rob it, is not indispensably necessary to the
establishment of a post-office and post-road. This right is indeed
essential to the beneficial exercise of the power, but not
indispensably necessary to its existence. So, of the punishment of the
crimes of stealing or falsifying a record or process of a court of the
United States, or of perjury in such court. To punish these offenses is
certainly conducive to the due administration of justice. But courts may
exist, and may decide the causes brought before them, though such crimes
escape punishment.
"The baneful influence of this narrow construction on all the operations
of the government, and the absolute impracticability of maintaining it
without rendering the government incompetent to its great objects, might
be illustrated by numerous examples drawn from the constitution, and
from our laws. The good sense of the public has pronounced, without
hesitation, that the power of punishment appertains to sovereignty, and
may be exercised whenever the sovereign has a right to act, as
incidental to his constitutional powers. It is a means for carrying into
execution all sovereign powers, and may be used, although not
indispensably necessary. It is a right incidental to the power, and
conducive to its beneficial exercise."[834]
To attempt to prove that Congress _might_ execute its powers without the
use of other means than those absolutely necessary would be "to waste
time and argument," and "not much less idle than to hold a lighted taper
to the sun." It is futile to speculate upon imaginary reasons for the
"necessary and proper" clause, since its purpose is obvious. It "is
placed among the powers of Congress, not among the limitations on those
powers. Its terms purport to enlarge, not to diminish the powers vested
in the government.... If no other motive for its insertion can be
suggested, a sufficient one is found in the desire to remove all doubts
respecting the right to legislate on the vast mass of incidental powers
which must be involved in the constitution, if that instrument be not a
splendid bauble."[835]
Marshall thus reaches the conclusion that Congress may "perform the high
duties assigned to it, in the manner most beneficial to the people."
Then comes that celebrated passage--one of the most famous ever
delivered by a jurist: "Let the end be legitimate, let it be within
the scope of the constitution, and all means which are appropriate,
which are plainly adapted to that end, which are not prohibited,
but consist with the letter and spirit of the constitution, are
constitutional."[836]
Further on the Chief Justice restates this fundamental principle,
without which the Constitution would be a lifeless thing: "Where the law
is not prohibited, and is really calculated to effect any of the objects
entrusted to the government, to undertake here to inquire into the
degree of its necessity, would be to pass the line which circumscribes
the judicial department, and to tread on legislative ground. The court
disclaims all pretensions to such a power."[837]
The fact that there were State banks with whose business the National
Bank might interfere, had nothing to do with the question of the power
of Congress to establish the latter. The National Government does not
depend on State Governments "for the execution of the great powers
assigned to it. Its means are adequate to its ends." It can choose a
National bank rather than State banks as an agency for the transaction
of its business; "and Congress alone can make the election."
It is, then, "the unanimous and decided opinion" of the court that the
Bank Act is Constitutional. So is the establishment of the branches of
the parent bank. Can States tax these branches, as Maryland has tried to
do? Of course the power of taxation "is retained by the states," and "is
not abridged by the grant of a similar power to the government of the
Union." These are "truths which have never been denied."
With sublime audacity Marshall then declares that "such is the paramount
character of the constitution that its capacity to withdraw any subject
from the action of even this power, is admitted."[838] This assertion
fairly overwhelms the student, since the States then attempting to tax
out of existence the branches of the National Bank did not admit, but
emphatically denied, that the National Government could withdraw from
State taxation any taxable subject whatever, except that which the
Constitution itself specifically withdraws.
"The States," argues Marshall, "are expressly forbidden" to tax imports
and exports. This being so, "the same paramount character would seem to
restrain, as it certainly may restrain, a state from such other
exercise of this [taxing] power, as is in its nature incompatible with,
and repugnant to, the constitutional laws of the Union. A law,
absolutely repugnant to another, as entirely repeals that other as if
express terms of repeal were used."
In this fashion Marshall holds, in effect, that Congress can restrain
the States from taxing certain subjects not mentioned in the
Constitution as fully as though those subjects were expressly named.
It is on this ground that the National Bank claims exemption "from the
power of a state to tax its operations." Marshall concedes that "there
is no express provision [in the Constitution] for the case, but the
claim has been sustained on a principle which so entirely pervades the
constitution, is so intermixed with the materials which compose it, so
interwoven with its web, so blended with its texture, as to be incapable
of being separated from it without rendering it into shreds."[839]
This was, indeed, going far--the powers of Congress placed on "a
principle" rather than on the language of the Constitution. When we
consider the period in which this opinion was given to the country, we
can understand--though only vaguely at this distance of time--the daring
of John Marshall. Yet he realizes the extreme radicalism of the theory
of Constitutional interpretation he is thus advancing, and explains it
with scrupulous care.
"This great principle is that the constitution and the laws made in
pursuance thereof are supreme; that they control the constitution and
laws of the respective states, and cannot be controlled by them. From
this, which may be almost termed an axiom, other propositions are
deduced as corollaries, on the truth or error of which ... the cause is
supposed to depend."[840]
That "cause" was not so much the one on the docket of the Supreme Court,
entitled M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, as it was that standing on the docket
of fate entitled Nationalism _vs._ Localism. And, although Marshall did
not actually address them, everybody knew that he was speaking to the
disunionists who were increasing in numbers and boldness. Everybody
knew, also, that the Chief Justice was, in particular, replying to the
challenge of the Virginia Republican organization as given through the
Court of Appeals of that State.[841]
The corollaries which Marshall deduced from the principle of National
supremacy were: "1st. That a power to create implies a power to
preserve. 2d. That a power to destroy, if wielded by a different hand,
is hostile to, and incompatible with these powers to create and to
preserve. 3d. That where this repugnancy exists, that authority which is
supreme must control, not yield to that over which it is supreme."[842]
It is "too obvious to be denied," continues Marshall that, if permitted
to exercise the power, the States can tax the Bank "so as to destroy
it." The power of taxation is admittedly "sovereign"; but the taxing
power of the States "is subordinate to, and may be controlled by the
constitution of the United States. How far it has been controlled by
that instrument must be a question of construction. In making this
construction, no principle not declared can be admissible, which would
defeat the legitimate operations of a supreme government. It is of the
very essence of supremacy to remove all obstacles to its action within
its own sphere, and so to modify every power vested in subordinate
governments as to exempt its own operations from their own influence.
This effect need not be stated in terms. It is so involved in the
declaration of supremacy, so necessarily implied in it, that the
expression of it could not make it more certain. We must, therefore,
keep it [the principle of National supremacy] in view while construing
the constitution."[843]
Unlimited as is the power of a State to tax objects within its
jurisdiction, that State power does not "extend to those means which are
employed by Congress to carry into execution powers conferred on that
body by the people of the United States ... powers ... given ... to a
government whose laws ... are declared to be supreme.... The right never
existed [in the States] ... to tax the means employed by the government
of the Union, for the execution of its powers."[844]
Regardless of this fact, however, can States tax instrumentalities of
the National Government? It cannot be denied, says Marshall, that "the
power to tax involves the power to destroy; that the power to destroy
may defeat ... the power to create; that there is a plain repugnance, in
conferring on one government a power to control the constitutional
measures of another, which other, with respect to those very measures,
is declared to be supreme over that which exerts the control."[845]
Here Marshall permits himself the use of sarcasm, which he dearly loved
but seldom employed. The State Rights advocates insisted that the States
can be trusted not to abuse their powers--confidence must be reposed in
State Legislatures and officials; they would not destroy needlessly,
recklessly. "All inconsistencies are to be reconciled by the magic of
the word CONFIDENCE," says Marshall. "But," he continues, "is this a
case of 'confidence'? Would the people of any one state trust those of
another with a power to control the most insignificant operations of
their state government? We know they would not."
By the same token the people of one State would never consent that the
Government of another State should control the National Government "to
which they have confided the most important and most valuable interests.
In the legislature of the Union alone, are all represented. The
legislature of the Union alone, therefore, can be trusted by the people
with the power of controlling measures which concern all, in the
confidence that it will not be abused. This, then, is not a case of
confidence."[846]
The State Rights theory is "capable of arresting all the measures of the
government, and of prostrating it at the foot of the states." Instead of
the National Government being "supreme," as the Constitution declares it
to be, "supremacy" would be transferred "in fact, to the states"; for,
"if the states may tax one instrument, employed by the government in the
execution of its powers, they may tax any and every other instrument.
They may tax the mail; they may tax the mint; they may tax
patent-rights; they may tax the papers of the custom-house; they may tax
judicial process; they may tax all the means employed by the government,
to an excess which would defeat all the ends of government. This was not
intended by the American people. They did not design to make their
government dependent on the states."
The whole question is, avows Marshall, "in truth, a question of
supremacy." If the anti-National principle that the States can tax the
instrumentalities of the National Government is to be sustained, then
the declaration in the Constitution that it and laws made under it
"shall be the supreme law of the land, is empty and unmeaning
declamation."[847]
Maryland had argued that, since the taxing power is, at least,
"concurrent" in the State and National Governments, the States can tax a
National bank as fully as the Nation can tax State banks. But, remarks
Marshall, "the two cases are not on the same reason." The whole American
people and all the States are represented in Congress; when they tax
State banks, "they tax their constituents; and these taxes must be
uniform. But, when a state taxes the operations of the government of the
United States, it acts upon institutions created, not by their own
constituents, but by people over whom they claim no control. It acts
upon the measures of a government created by others as well as
themselves, for the benefit of others in common with themselves.
"The difference is that which always exists, and always must exist,
between the action of the whole on a part, and the action of a part on
the whole--between the laws of a government declared to be supreme, and
those of a government which, when in opposition to those laws, is not
supreme.... The states have no power, by taxation or otherwise, to
retard, impede, burden, or in any manner control the operations of the
constitutional laws enacted by Congress to carry into execution the
powers vested in the general government."[848]
For these reasons, therefore, the judgment of the Supreme Court was that
the Maryland law taxing the Baltimore branch of the National Bank was
"contrary to the constitution ... and void"; that the judgment of the
Baltimore County Court against the branch bank "be reversed and
annulled," and that the judgment of the Maryland Court of Appeals
affirming the judgment of the County Court also "be reversed and
annulled."[849]
In effect John Marshall thus rewrote the fundamental law of the Nation;
or, perhaps it may be more accurate to say that he made a written
instrument a living thing, capable of growth, capable of keeping pace
with the advancement of the American people and ministering to their
changing necessities. This greatest of Marshall's treatises on
government may well be entitled the "Vitality of the Constitution."
Story records that Marshall's opinion aroused great political
excitement;[850] and no wonder, since the Chief Justice announced, in
principle, that Congress had sufficient power to "emancipate every slave
in the United States" as John Randolph declared five years later.[851]
Roane, Ritchie, Taylor, and the Republican organization of Virginia had
anticipated that the Chief Justice would render a Nationalist opinion;
but they were not prepared for the bold and crushing blows which he
rained upon their fanatically cherished theory of Localism. As soon as
they recovered from their surprise and dismay, they opened fire from
their heaviest batteries upon Marshall and the National Judiciary. The
way was prepared for them by a preliminary bombardment in the _Weekly
Register_ of Hezekiah Niles.
This periodical had now become the most widely read and influential
publication in the country; it had subscribers from Portland to New
Orleans, from Savannah to Fort Dearborn. Niles had won the confidence of
his far-flung constituency by his honesty, courage, and ability. He was
the prototype of Horace Greeley, and the _Register_ had much the same
hold on its readers that the _Tribune_ came to have thirty years later.
In the first issue of the _Register_, after Marshall's opinion was
delivered, Niles began an attack upon it that was to spread all over the
land. "A deadly blow has been struck at the _sovereignty of the states_,
and from a quarter so far removed from the people as to be hardly
accessible to public opinion," he wrote. "The welfare of the union has
received a more dangerous wound than fifty _Hartford_ conventions ...
could inflict." Parts of Marshall's opinion are "_incomprehensible_. But
perhaps, as some people tell us of what _they_ call the _mysteries_ of
religion, the _common people_ are not to understand them, such things
being reserved only for the _priests_!!"[852]
The opinion of the Chief Justice was published in full in Niles's
_Register_ two weeks after he delivered it,[853] and was thus given
wider publicity than any judicial utterance previously rendered in
America. Indeed, no pronouncement of any court, except, perhaps, that in
Gibbons _vs._ Ogden,[854] was read so generally as Marshall's opinion in
M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, until the publication of the Dred Scott
decision thirty-eight years later. Niles continues his attack in the
number of the _Register_ containing the Bank opinion:
It is "more important than any ever before pronounced by that exalted
tribunal--a tribunal so far removed from the people, that some seem to
regard it with a species of that awful reverence in which the
inhabitants of Asia look up to their princes."[855] This exasperated
sentence shows the change that Marshall, during his eighteen years on
the bench, had wrought in the standing and repute of the Supreme
Court.[856] The doctrines of the Chief Justice amount to this, said
Niles--"congress may grant _monopolies_" at will, "if the _price_ is
paid for them, or without any pecuniary consideration at all." As for
the Chief Justice personally, he "has not added ... to his stock of
reputation by writing it--_it is excessively labored_."[857]
Papers throughout the country copied Niles's bitter criticisms,[858] and
public opinion rapidly crystallized against Marshall's Nationalist
doctrine. Every where the principle asserted by the Chief Justice became
a political issue; or, rather, his declaration, that that principle was
law, made sharper the controversy that had divided the people since the
framing of the Constitution.
In number after number of his _Register_ Niles, pours his wrath on
Marshall's matchless interpretation. It is "far more dangerous to the
union and happiness of the people of the United States than ... _foreign
invasion_.[859] ... Certain nabobs in Boston, New York, Philadelphia and
Baltimore, ... to secure the passage of an act of _incorporation_, ...
fairly purchase the souls of some members of the national legislature
with _money_, as happened in Georgia, or secure the votes of others by
making them _stockholders_, as occurred in New York, and the act is
passed.[860]... We call upon the people, the honest people, who hate
_monopolies_ and _privileged orders_, to arise in their strength and
purge our political temple of the _money-changers_ and those who sell
_doves_--causing a reversion to the original purity of our system of
government, that the faithful centinel may again say, 'ALL'S
WELL!'"[861]
Extravagant and demagogical as this language of Niles's now seems, he
was sincere and earnest in the use of it. Copious quotations from the
_Register_ have been here made because it had the strongest influence on
American public opinion of any publication of its time. Niles's
_Register_ was, emphatically, the mentor of the country editor.[862]
At last the hour had come when the Virginia Republican triumvirate could
strike with an effect impossible of achievement in 1816 when the Supreme
Court rebuked and overpowered the State appellate tribunal in Martin
_vs._ Hunter's Lessee.[863] Nobody outside of Virginia then paid any
attention to that decision, so obsessed was the country by speculation
and seeming prosperity. But in 1819 the collapse had come; poverty and
discontent were universal; rebellion against Nationalism was under way;
and the vast majority blamed the Bank of the United States for all their
woes. Yet Marshall had upheld "the monster." The Virginia Junto's
opportunity had arrived.
No sooner had Marshall returned to Richmond than he got wind of the
coming assault upon him. On March 23, 1819, the _Enquirer_ published his
opinion in full. The next day the Chief Justice wrote Story: "Our
opinion in the Bank case has aroused the sleeping spirit of Virginia,
if indeed it ever sleeps. It will, I understand, be attacked in the
papers with some asperity, and as those who favor it never write for the
publick it will remain undefended & of course be considered as _damnably
heretical_."[864] He had been correctly informed. The attack came
quickly.
On March 30, Spencer Roane opened fire in the paper of his cousin Thomas
Ritchie, the _Enquirer_,[865] under the _nom de guerre_ of "Amphictyon."
His first article is able, calm, and, considering his intense feelings,
fair and moderate. Roane even extols his enemy:
"That this opinion is very able every one must admit. This was to have
been expected, proceeding as it does from a man of the most profound
legal attainments, and upon a subject which has employed his thoughts,
his tongue, and his pen, as a politician, and an historian for more than
thirty years. The subject, too, is one which has, perhaps more than any
other, heretofore drawn a broad line of distinction between the two
great parties in this country, on which line no one has taken a more
distinguished and decided rank than the judge who has thus expounded the
supreme law of the land. It is not in my power to carry on a contest
upon such a subject with a man of his gigantic powers."[866]
Niles had spoken to "the plain people"; Roane is now addressing the
lawyers and judges of the country. His essay is almost wholly a legal
argument. It is based on the Virginia Resolutions of 1799 and gives the
familiar State Rights arguments, applying them to Marshall's
opinion.[867] In his second article Roane grows vehement, even fiery,
and finally exclaims that Virginia "never will _employ force to support
her doctrines till other measures have entirely failed_."[868]
His attacks had great and immediate response. No sooner had copies of
the _Enquirer_ containing the first letters of Amphictyon reached
Kentucky than the Republicans of that State declared war on Marshall. On
April 20, the _Enquirer_ printed the first Western response to Roane's
call to arms. Marshall's principles, said the Kentucky correspondent,
"must raise an alarm throughout our widely extended empire.... The
people must rouse from the lap of Delilah and prepare to meet the
Philistines.... No mind can compass the extent of the encroachments upon
State and individual rights which may take place under the principles of
this decision."[869]
[Illustration: SPENCER ROANE]
Even Marshall, a political and judicial veteran in his sixty-fifth
year, was perturbed. "The opinion in the Bank case continues to be
denounced by the democracy in Virginia," he writes Story, after the
second of Roane's articles appeared. "An effort is certainly making to
induce the legislature which will meet in December to take up the
subject & to pass resolutions not very unlike those which were called
forth by the alien & sedition laws in 1799. Whether the effort will be
successful or not may perhaps depend in some measure on the sentiments
of our sister states. To excite this ferment the opinion has been
grossly misrepresented; and where its argument has been truly stated it
has been met by principles one would think too palpably absurd for
intelligent men.
"But," he gloomily continues, "prejudice will swallow anything. If the
principles which have been advanced on this occasion were to prevail the
constitution would be converted into the old confederation."[870]
As yet Roane had struck but lightly. He now renewed the Republican
offensive with greater spirit. During June, 1819, the _Enquirer_
published four articles signed "Hampden," from Roane's pen. Ritchie
introduced the "Hampden" essays in an editorial in which he urged the
careful reading of the exposure "of the alarming errors of the Supreme
Court.... Whenever State rights are threatened or invaded, Virginia will
not be the last to sound the tocsin."[871]
Are the people prepared "to give _carte blanche_ to our federal rulers"?
asked Hampden. Amendment of the Constitution by judicial interpretation
is taking the place of amendment by the people. Infamous as the methods
of National judges had been during the administration of Adams, "the
most abandoned of our rulers," Marshall and his associates have done
worse. They have given "a _general_ letter of attorney to the future
legislators of the Union.... That man must be a deplorable idiot who
does not see that there is no ... difference" between an "_unlimited_
grant of power and a grant limited in its terms, but accompanied with
_unlimited_ means of carrying it into execution.... The crisis is one
which portends destruction to the liberties of the American people."
Hampden scoldingly adds: "If Mason or Henry could lift their patriot
heads from the grave, ... they would almost exclaim, with Jugurtha,
'Venal people! you will soon perish if you can find a purchaser.'"[872]
For three more numbers Hampden pressed the Republican assault on
Marshall's opinion. The Constitution is a "_compact_, to which the
_States_ are the parties." Marshall's argument in the Virginia
Convention of 1788 is quoted,[873] and his use of certain terms in his
"Life of Washington" is cited.[874] If the powers of the National
Government ought to be enlarged, "let this be the act of the _people_,
and not that of subordinate agents."[875] The opinion of the Chief
Justice repeatedly declares "that the general government, though limited
in its powers, is supreme." Hampden avows that he does "not understand
this jargon.... The _people_ only are supreme.[876]... Our general
government ... is as much a ... 'league' as was the former
confederation." Therefore, the Virginia Court of Appeals, in Hunter
_vs._ Fairfax, declared an act of Congress "unconstitutional, although
it had been sanctioned by the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United
States." Pennsylvania, too, had maintained its "sovereignty."[877]
Hampden has only scorn for "_some_ of the judges" who concurred in the
opinion of the Chief Justice. They "had before been accounted
republicans.... Few men come out from high places, as pure as they went
in."[878] If Marshall's doctrine stands, "the triumph over our liberties
will be ... easy and complete." What, then, could "arrest this
calamity"? Nothing but an "appeal" to the people. Let this majestic and
irresistible power be invoked.[879]
That he had no faith in his own theory is proved by the rather dismal
fact that, more than two months before Marshall "violated the
Constitution" and "endangered the liberties" of the people by his Bank
decision, Roane actually arranged for the purchase, as an investment for
his son, of $4900 worth of the shares of the Bank of the United States,
and actually made the investment.[880] This transaction, consummated
even before the argument in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, shows that Roane,
the able lawyer, was sure that Marshall would and ought to sustain the
Bank in its controversy with the States that were trying to destroy it.
Moreover, Dr. John Brockenbrough, President of the Bank of Virginia,
actually advised the investment.[881]
It is of moment, too, to note at this point the course taken by
Marshall, who had long owned stock in the Bank of the United States. As
soon as he learned that the suit had been brought which, of a certainty,
must come before him, the Chief Justice disposed of his holdings.[882]
So disturbed was Marshall by Roane's attacks that he did a thoroughly
uncharacteristic thing. By way of reply to Roane he wrote, under the
_nom de guerre_ of "A Friend of the Union," an elaborate defense of his
opinion and, through Bushrod Washington, procured the publication of it
in the _Union_ of Philadelphia, the successor of the _Gazette of the
United States_, and the strongest Federalist newspaper then surviving.
On June 28, 1819, the Chief Justice writes Washington: "I expected three
numbers would have concluded my answer to Hampden but I must write two
others which will follow in a few days. If the publication has not
commenced I could rather wish the signature to be changed to 'A
Constitutionalist.' A Friend of the Constitution is so much like a
Friend of the Union that it may lead to some suspicion of identity.... I
hope the publication has commenced unless the Editor should be unwilling
to devote so much of his paper to this discussion. The letters of
Amphyction & of Hampden have made no great impression in Richmond but
they were designed for the country [Virginia] & have had considerable
influence there. I wish the refutation to be in the hands of some
respectable members of the legislature as it may prevent some act of the
assembly [torn--probably "both"] silly & wicked. If the publication be
made I should [like] to have two or three sets of the papers to hand if
necessary. I will settle with you for the printer."[883]
The reading of Marshall's newspaper effort is exhausting; a summary of
the least uninteresting passages will give an idea of the whole paper.
The articles published in the _Enquirer_ were intended, so he wrote, to
inflict "deep wounds on the constitution," are full of "mischievous
errours," and are merely new expressions of the old Virginia spirit of
hostility to the Nation. The case of M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland serves
only as an excuse "for once more agitating the publick mind, and
reviving those unfounded jealousies by whose blind aid ambition climbs
the ladder of power."[884]
After a long introduction, Marshall enters upon his defense which is as
wordy as his answer to the Virginia Resolutions. He is sensitive over
the charge, by now popularly made, that he controls the Supreme Court,
and cites the case of the Nereid to prove that the Justices give
dissenting opinions whenever they choose. "The course of every tribunal
must necessarily be, that the opinion which is to be delivered as the
opinion of the court, is previously submitted to the consideration of
all the judges; and, if any part of the reasoning be disapproved, it
must be so modified as to receive the approbation of all, before it can
be delivered as the opinion of all."
Roane's personal charges amount to this: "The chief justice ... is a
federalist; who was a politician of some note before he was judge; and
who with his tongue and his pen supported the opinions he avowed." With
the politician's skill Marshall uses the fact that the majority of the
court, which gave the Nationalist judgment in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland,
were Republicans--"four of whom [Story, Johnson, Duval, and Livingston]
have no political sin upon their heads;--who in addition to being
eminent lawyers, have the still greater advantage of being sound
republicans; of having been selected certainly not for their federalism,
by Mr Jefferson, and Mr Madison, for the high stations they so properly
fill." For eight tedious columns of diffuse repetition Marshall goes on
in defense of his opinion.[885]
When the biographer searches the daily life of a man so surpassingly
great and good as Marshall, he hopes in no ungenerous spirit to find
some human frailty that identifies his hero with mankind. The Greeks did
not fail to connect their deities with humanity. The leading men of
American history have been ill-treated in this respect--for a century
they have been held up to our vision as superhuman creatures to admire
whom was a duty, to criticize whom was a blasphemy, and to love or
understand whom was an impossibility.
All but Marshall have been rescued from this frigid isolation. Any
discovery of human frailty in the great Chief Justice is, therefore,
most welcome. Some small and gracious defects in Marshall's character
have appeared in the course of these volumes; and this additional
evidence of his susceptibility to ordinary emotion is very pleasing.
With all his stern repression of that element of his character, we find
that he was sensitive in the extreme; in reality, thirsting for
approval, hurt by criticism. In spite of this desire for applause and
horror of rebuke, however, he did his duty, knowing beforehand that his
finest services would surely bring upon him the denunciation and abuse
he so disliked. By such peevishness as his anonymous reply in the
_Union_ to Roane's irritating attacks, we are able to get some measure
of the true proportions of this august yet very human character.
When Marshall saw, in print, this controversial product of his pen, he
was disappointed and depressed. The editor had, he avowed, so confused
the manuscript that it was scarcely intelligible. At any rate, Marshall
did not want his defense reproduced in New England. Story had heard of
the article in the _Union_, and wrote Marshall that he wished to secure
the publication of it. The Chief Justice replied:
"The piece to which you allude was not published in Virginia. Our
patriotic papers admit no such political heresies. It contained, I
think, a complete demonstration of the fallacies & errors contained in
those attacks on the opinion of the Court which have most credit here &
are supposed to proceed from a high source,[886] but was so mangled in
the publication that those only who had bestowed close attention to the
subject could understand it.
"There were two numbers[887] & the editor of the Union in Philadelphia,
the paper in which it was published, had mixed the different numbers
together so as in several instances to place the reasoning intended to
demonstrate one proposition under another. The points & the arguments
were so separated from each other, & so strangely mixed as to constitute
a labyrinth to which those only who understood the whole subject
perfectly could find a clue."[888]
It appears that Story insisted on having at least Marshall's rejoinder
to Roane's first article reproduced in the Boston press. Again the Chief
Justice evades the request of his associate and confidant: "I do not
think a republication of the piece you mention in the Boston papers to
be desired, as the antifederalism of Virginia will not, I trust, find
its way to New England. I should also be sorry to see it in Mr.
Wheaton's[889] appendix because that circumstance might lead to
suspicions regarding the author & because I should regret to see it
republished in its present deranged form with the two centres
transposed."[890]
For a brief space, then, the combatants rested on their arms, but each
was only gathering strength for the inevitable renewal of the engagement
which was to be sterner than any previous phases of the contest.
Soon after the convening of the first session of the Virginia
Legislature held subsequent to the decision of M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland,
Roane addressed the lawmakers through the _Enquirer_, now signing
himself "Publicola." He pointed out the "absolute disqualification of
the supreme court of the U. S. to decide with impartiality upon
controversies between the General and State Governments";[891] and, to
"ensure _unbiassed_" decisions, insisted upon a Constitutional amendment
to establish a tribunal "(as occasion may require)" appointed partly by
the States and partly by the National Government, "with _appellate_
jurisdiction from the present supreme court."[892]
Promptly a resolution against Marshall's opinion was offered in the
House of Delegates.[893] This noteworthy paper was presented by Andrew
Stevenson, a member of the "committee for Courts of Justice."[894] The
resolutions declared that the doctrines of M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland
would "undermine the pillars of the Constitution itself." The provision
giving to the judicial power "_all cases_ arising _under the
Constitution_" did not "extend to questions which would amount to a
subversion of the constitution itself, by the usurpation of one
contracting party on another." But Marshall's opinion was calculated to
"change the whole character of the government."[895]
Sentences from the opinion of the Chief Justice are quoted, including
the famous one: "Let the end be legitimate, ... and all the means which
are appropriate, ... which are not prohibited, ... are constitutional."
Did not such expressions import that Congress could "conform the
constitution to their own designs" by the exercise of "unlimited and
uncontrouled" power? The ratifying resolution of the Constitution by the
Virginia Convention of 1788 is quoted.[896] Virginia's voice had been
heard to the same effect in the immortal Resolutions of 1799. Her views
had been endorsed by the country in the Presidential election of
1800--that "great revolution of principle." Her Legislature, therefore,
"enter their most solemn protest, against the decision of the supreme
court, and of the principles contained in it."
In this fashion the General Assembly insisted on an amendment to the
National Constitution "creating a _tribunal_" authorized to decide
questions relative to the "powers of the general and state governments,
under the compact." The Virginia Senators are, therefore, instructed to
do their best to secure such an amendment and "to resist on every
occasion" attempted legislation by Congress in conflict with the views
set forth in this resolution or those of 1799 "which have been
re-considered, and are fully and entirely approved of by this Assembly."
The Governor is directed to transmit the resolutions to the other
States.[897]
At this point Slavery and Secession enter upon the scene. Almost
simultaneously with the introduction of the resolutions denouncing
Marshall and the Supreme Court for the judgment and opinion in M'Culloch
_vs._ Maryland, other resolutions were offered by a member of the House
named Baldwin denouncing the imposition of restrictions on Missouri (the
prohibition of slavery) as a condition of admitting that Territory to
the Union. Such action by Congress would "excite feelings eminently
hostile to the fraternal affection and prudent forbearance which ought
ever to pervade the confederated union."[898] Two days later, December
30, the same delegate introduced resolutions to the effect that only the
maintenance of the State Rights principle could "preserve the
confederated union," since "no government can long exist which lies at
the mercy of another"; and, inferentially, that Marshall's opinion in
M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland had violated that principle.[899]
A yet sterner declaration on the Missouri question quickly followed,
declaring that Congress had no power to prohibit slavery in that State,
and that "Virginia will support the good people of Missouri in their
just rights ... and will co-operate with them in resisting with manly
fortitude any attempt which Congress may make to impose restraints or
restrictions as the price of their admission" to the Union.[900] The
next day these resolutions, strengthened by amendment, were
adopted.[901] On February 12, 1820, the resolutions condemning the
Nationalist doctrine expounded by the Chief Justice in the Bank case
also came to a vote and passed, 117 ayes to 38 nays.[902] They had been
amended and reamended,[903] but, as adopted, they were in substance the
same as those originally offered by Stevenson. Through both these sets
of resolutions--that on the Missouri question and that on the Bank
decision--ran the intimation of forcible resistance to National
authority. Introduced at practically the same time, drawn and advocated
by the same men, passed by votes of the same members, these important
declarations of the Virginia Legislature were meant to be and must be
considered as a single expression of the views of Virginia upon National
policy.
In this wise did the Legislature of his own State repudiate and defy
that opinion of John Marshall which has done more for the American
Nation than any single utterance of any other one man, excepting only
the Farewell Address of Washington. In such manner, too, was the slavery
question brought face to face with Marshall's lasting exposition of the
National Constitution. For, it should be repeated, in announcing the
principles by virtue of which Congress could establish the Bank of the
United States, the Chief Justice had also asserted, by necessary
inference, the power of the National Legislature to exact the exclusion
of slavery as a condition upon which a State could be admitted to the
Union. At least this was the interpretation of Virginia and the South.
The slavery question did not, to be sure, closely touch Northern States,
but their local interests did. Thus it was that Ohio aligned herself
with Virginia in opposition to Marshall's Nationalist statesmanship, and
in support of the Jeffersonian doctrine of Localism. In such fashion did
the Ohio Bank question become so intermingled with the conflict over
Slavery and Secession that, in the consideration of Marshall's opinions
at this time, these controversies cannot be separated. The facts of the
Ohio Bank case must, therefore, be given at this point.[904]
Since the establishment at Cincinnati, early in 1817, of a branch of
the Bank of the United States, Ohio had threatened to drive it from the
State by a prohibitive tax. Not long before the argument of M'Culloch
_vs._ Maryland in the Supreme Court, the Ohio Legislature laid an annual
tax of $50,000 on each of the two branches which, by that time, had been
established in that State.[905] On February 8, 1819, only four days
previous to the hearing of the Maryland case at Washington, and less
than a month before Marshall delivered his opinion, the Ohio lawmakers
passed an act directing the State Auditor, Ralph Osborn, to charge this
tax of $50,000 against each of the branches, and to issue a warrant for
the immediate collection of $100,000, the total amount of the first
year's tax.
This law is almost without parallel in severity, peremptoriness, and
defiant contempt for National authority. If the branches refused to pay
the tax, the Ohio law enjoined the person serving the State Auditor's
warrant to seize all money or property belonging to the Bank, found on
its premises or elsewhere. The agent of the Auditor was directed to open
the vaults, search the offices, and take everything of value.[906]
Immediately the branch at Chillicothe obtained from the United States
District Court, then in session at that place, an injunction forbidding
Osborn from collecting the tax;[907] but the bank's counsel forgot to
have a writ issued to stay the proceedings. Therefore, no order of the
court was served; instead a copy of the bill praying that the Auditor be
restrained, together with a subpoena to answer, was sent to Osborn.
These papers were not, of course, an injunction, but merely notice that
one had been applied for. Thinking to collect the tax before the
injunction could be issued, Osborn forthwith issued his Auditor's
warrant to one John L. Harper to collect the tax immediately. Assisted
by a man named Thomas Orr, Harper entered the Chillicothe branch of the
Bank of the United States, opened the vaults, seized all the money to be
found, and deposited it for the night in the local State bank. Next
morning Harper and Orr loaded the specie, bank notes, and other
securities in a wagon and started for Columbus.[908]
The branch bank tardily obtained an order from the United States Court
restraining Osborn, the State Auditor, and Harper, the State agent, from
delivering the money to the State Treasurer and from making any report
to the Legislature of the collection of the tax. This writ was served on
Harper as he and Orr were on the road to the State Capital with the
money. Harper simply ignored the writ, drove on to Columbus, and handed
over to the State Treasurer the funds which he had seized at
Chillicothe.
Harper and Orr were promptly arrested and imprisoned in the jail at
Chillicothe.[909] Because of technical defects in serving the warrant
for their arrest and in the return of the marshal, the prisoners were
set free.[910] An order was secured from the United States Court
directing Osborn and Harper to show cause why an attachment should not
be issued against them for having disobeyed the court's injunction not
to deliver the bank's money to the State Treasurer. After extended
argument, the court issued the attachment, which, however, was not made
returnable until the January term, 1821.
Meanwhile the Virginia Legislature passed its resolutions denouncing
Marshall's opinion in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, and throughout the
country the warfare upon the Supreme Court began. The Legislature of
Ohio acted with a celerity and boldness that made the procedure of the
Virginia Legislature seem hesitant and timid. A joint committee was
speedily appointed and as promptly made its report. This report and the
resolutions recommended by it were adopted without delay and transmitted
to the Senate of the United States.[911]
The Ohio declaration is drawn with notable ability. A State cannot be
sued--the true meaning of the Constitution forbids, and the Eleventh
Amendment specifically prohibits, such procedure.
Yet the action against Osborn, State Auditor, and Samuel Sullivan, State
Treasurer, is, "to every substantial purpose, a process against the
State." The decision of the National Supreme Court that the States have
no power to tax branches of the Bank of the United States does not bind
Ohio or render her tax law "a dead letter."[912]
The Ohio Legislature challenges the _bona fides_ of M'Culloch _vs._
Maryland: "If, by the management of a party, and through the
inadvertence or connivance of a State, a case be made, presenting to the
Supreme Court of the United States for decision important ... questions
of State power and State authority, upon no just principle ought the
States to be concluded by any decision had upon such a case.... Such is
the true character of the case passed upon the world by the title of
McCulloch _vs._ Maryland," which, "when looked into, is found to be ...
throughout, an agreed case, made expressly for the purpose of obtaining
the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States.... This agreed
case was manufactured in the summer of the year 1818" and rushed through
two Maryland courts, "so as to be got upon the docket of the Supreme
Court of the United States for adjudication at their February term,
1819.... It is truly an alarming circumstance if it be in the power of
an aspiring corporation and an unknown and obscure individual thus to
elicit opinions compromitting the vital interests of the States that
compose the American Union."
Luckily for Ohio and all the States, this report goes on to say, some
of Marshall's opinions have been "totally impotent and unavailing," as,
for instance, in the case of Marbury _vs._ Madison. Marbury did not get
his commission; "the person appointed in his place continued to act; his
acts were admitted to be valid; and President Jefferson retained his
standing in the estimation of the American people." It was the same in
the case of Fletcher _vs._ Peck. Marshall held that "the Yazoo
purchasers ... were entitled to their lands. But the decision availed
them nothing, unless as a make-weight in effecting a compromise." Since,
in neither of these cases, had the National Government paid the
slightest attention to the decision of the Supreme Court, how could Ohio
"be condemned because she did not abandon her solemn legislative acts as
a dead letter upon the promulgation of an opinion of that
tribunal"?[913]
The Ohio Legislature then proceeds to analyze Marshall's opinion in
M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland. All the arguments made against the principle
of implied powers since Hamilton first announced that principle,[914]
and all the reasons advanced against the doctrine that the National
Government is supreme, in the sense employed by Marshall, are restated
with clearness and power. However, since the object of the tax was to
drive the branches of the Bank out of Ohio, the Legislature suggests a
compromise. If the National institution will cease business within the
State and "give assurance" that the branches be withdrawn, the State
will refund the tax money it has seized.[915]
Instantly turning from conciliation to defiance, "because the reputation
of the State has been assailed," the Legislature challenges the National
Government to make good Marshall's assertion that the power which
created the Bank "must have the power to preserve it." Ohio should pass
laws "forbidding the keepers of our jails from receiving into their
custody any person committed at the suit of the Bank of the United
States," and prohibiting Ohio judges, recorders, notaries public, from
recognizing that institution in any way.[916] Congress will then have to
provide a criminal code, a system of conveyances, and other extensive
measures. Ohio and the country will then learn whether the power that
created the Bank can preserve it.
The Ohio memorial concludes with a denial that the "political rights"
and "sovereign powers" of a State can be settled by the Supreme Court of
the Nation "in cases contrived between individuals, and where they [the
States] are, no one of them, parties direct." The resolutions further
declare that the opinion of the other States should be secured.[917]
This alarming manifesto was presented to the National Senate on February
1, 1821, just six weeks before Marshall delivered the opinion of the
Supreme Court in Cohens _vs._ Virginia.[918]
Pennsylvania had already taken stronger measures; had anticipated even
Virginia. Within seven weeks from the delivery of Marshall's opinion in
M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, the Legislature of Pennsylvania proposed an
amendment to the National Constitution prohibiting Congress from
authorizing "any bank or other monied institution" outside of the
District of Columbia.[919] The action of Ohio was an endorsement of that
of Virginia and Pennsylvania. Indiana had already swung into line.[920]
So had Illinois and Tennessee.[921] For some reason, Kentucky, soon to
become one of the most belligerent and persevering of all the States in
her resistance to the "encroachments" of Nationalism as expounded by the
Supreme Court, withheld her hand for the moment.
Most unaccountably, South Carolina actually upheld Marshall's
opinion,[922] which that State, within a decade, was to repudiate,
denounce, and defy in terms of armed resistance.[923] New York and
Massachusetts,[924] consulting their immediate interests, were very
stern against the Localism of Ohio, Virginia, and Pennsylvania.[925]
Georgia expressed her sympathy with the Localist movement, but, for the
time being, was complaisant[926]--a fact the more astonishing that she
had already proved, and was soon to prove again, that Nationalism is a
fantasy unless it is backed by force.[927]
Notwithstanding the eccentric attitude of various members of the Union,
it was only too plain that a powerful group of States were acting in
concert and that others ardently sympathized with them.
At this point, in different fashion, Virginia spoke again, this time by
the voice of that great protagonist of Localism, John Taylor of
Caroline, the originator of the Kentucky Resolutions,[928] and the most
brilliant mind in the Republican organization of the Old Dominion.
Immediately after Marshall's opinion in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, and
while the Ohio conflict was in progress, he wrote a book in denunciation
and refutation of Marshall's Nationalist principles. The editorial by
Thomas Ritchie, commending Taylor's book, declares that "the crisis has
come"; the Missouri question, the Tariff question, the Bank question,
have brought the country to the point where a decision must be made as
to whether the National Government shall be permitted to go on with its
usurpations. "If there is any book capable of arousing the people, it is
the one before us."
Taylor gave to his volume the title "Construction Construed, and
Constitutions Vindicated." The phrases "exclusive interests" and
"exclusive privileges" abound throughout the volume. Sixteen chapters
compose this classic of State Rights philosophy. Five of them are
devoted to Marshall's opinion in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland; the others to
theories of government, the state of the country, the protective tariff,
and the Missouri question. The principles of the Revolution, avows
Taylor, "are the keys of construction" and "the locks of
liberty.[929]... No form of government can foster a fanaticism for
wealth, without being corrupted." Yet Marshall's ideas establish "the
despotick principle of a gratuitous distribution of wealth and poverty
by law."[930]
If the theory that Congress can create corporations should prevail,
"legislatures will become colleges for teaching the science of getting
money by monopolies or favours."[931] To pretend faith in Christianity,
and yet foster monopoly, is "like placing Christ on the car of
Juggernaut."[932] The framers of the National Constitution tried to
prevent the evils of monopoly and avarice by "restricting the powers
given to Congress" and safeguarding those of the States; "in fact, by
securing the freedom of property."[933]
Marshall is enamored of the word "sovereignty," an "equivocal and
illimitable word," not found in "the declaration of independence, nor
the federal constitution, nor the constitution of any single state"; all
of them repudiated it "as a traitor of civil rights."[934] Well that
they had so rejected this term of despotism! No wonder Jugurtha
exclaimed, "Rome was for sale," when "the government exercised an
absolute power over the national property." Of course it would "find
purchasers."[935] To this condition Marshall's theories will bring
America.
[Illustration: JOHN TAYLOR]
Whence this effort to endow the National Government with powers
comparable to those of a monarchy? Plainly it is a reaction--"many wise
and good men, ... alarmed by the illusions of Rousseau and Godwin, and
the atrocities of the French revolution, honestly believe that these
[democratic] principles have teeth and claws, which it is expedient to
draw and pare, however constitutional they may be; without considering
that such an operation will subject the generous lion to the wily
fox; ... subject liberty and property to tyranny and fraud."[936]
In chapter after chapter of clever arguments, illumined by the sparkle
of such false gems as these quotations, Taylor prepares the public mind
for his direct attack on John Marshall. He is at a sad disadvantage; he,
"an unknown writer," can offer only "an artless course of reasoning"
against the "acute argument" of Marshall's opinion, concurred in by the
members of the Supreme Court whose "talents," "integrity,"
"uprightness," and "erudition" are universally admitted.[937] The
essence of Marshall's doctrine is that, although the powers of the
National Government are limited, the means by which they may be executed
are unlimited. But, "as ends may be made to beget means, so means may be
made to beget ends, until the co-habitation shall rear a progeny of
unconstitutional bastards, which were not begotten by the people."[938]
Marshall had said that "'the creation of a corporation appertains to
sovereignty.'" This is the language of tyranny. The corporate idea crept
into British law "wherein it hides the heart of a prostitute under the
habiliments of a virgin."[939] But since, in America, only the people
are "sovereign," and, to use Marshall's own words, the power to create
corporations "appertains to sovereignty," it follows that neither State
nor National Governments can create corporations.[940]
The Chief Justice is a master of the "science of verbality" by which the
Constitution may be rendered "as unintelligible, as a single word would
be made by a syllabick dislocation, or a jumble of its letters; and turn
it into a reservoir of every meaning for which its expounder may have
occasion."
Where does Marshall's "artifice of verbalizing" lead?[941] To an
"artificially reared, a monied interest ... which is gradually obtaining
an influence over the federal government," and "craftily works upon the
passions of the states it has been able to delude" [on the slavery
question], "to coerce the defrauded and discontented states into
submission." For this reason talk of civil war abounds. "For what are
the states talking about disunion, and for what are they going to war
among themselves? To create or establish a monied sect, composed of
privileged combinations, as an aristocratical oppressor of them
all."[942] Marshall's doctrine that Congress may bestow "exclusive
privileges" is at the bottom of the Missouri controversy. "Had the
motive ... never existed, the discussion itself would never have
existed; but if the same cause continues, more fatal controversies may
be expected."[943]
Finally Taylor hurls at the Nation the challenge of the South, which the
representatives of that section, from the floor of Congress, quickly
repeated in threatenings of civil war.[944] "There remains a right,
anterior to every political power whatsoever, ... the natural right of
self-defence.... It is allowed, on all hands, that danger to the
slave-holding states lurks in their existing situation, ... and it must
be admitted that the right of self-defence applies to that situation....
I leave to the reader the application of these observations."[945]
Immediately upon its publication, Ritchie sent a copy of Taylor's book
to Jefferson, who answered that he knew "before reading it" that it
would prove "orthodox." The attack upon the National courts could not be
pressed too energetically: "The judiciary of the United States is the
subtle corps of sappers and miners constantly working under ground to
undermine the foundations of our confederated fabric.... An opinion is
huddled up in conclave, perhaps by a majority of one, delivered as if
unanimous, and with the silent acquiescence of lazy and timid
associates, by a crafty chief judge, who sophisticates the law to his
mind, by the turn of his own reasoning."[946]
FOOTNOTES:
[784] These penalties were forfeits of $500 for every offense--a sum
that would have aggregated hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of
dollars, in the case of the Baltimore branch, which did an enormous
business. The Maryland law also provided that "every person having any
agency in circulating" any such unauthorized note of the Bank should be
fined one hundred dollars. (Act of Feb. 11, 1818, _Laws of Maryland_,
174.)
[785] Story to White, March 3, 1819, Story, I, 325.
[786] Webster always dressed with extreme care when he expected to make
a notable speech or argument. For a description of his appearance on
such an occasion see Sargent: _Public Men and Events_, I, 172.
[787] 4 Wheaton, 323.
[788] _Ib._ 324.
[789] _Ib._ 327.
[790] _Ib._ 328.
[791] 4 Wheaton, 330 _et seq._
[792] _Ib._ 362 _et seq._
[793] _Ib._ 272-73.
[794] _Ib._ 374.
[795] Tyler: _Memoir of Roger Brooke Taney_, 141.
[796] The student should carefully examine Pinkney's argument. Although
the abstract of it given in Wheaton's report is very long, a painstaking
study of it will be helpful to a better understanding of the development
of American Constitutional law. (4 Wheaton, 377-400.)
[797] Story to White, March 3, 1819, Story, I, 324-25.
[798] 4 Wheaton, 426.
[799] See _supra_, chap. V.
[800] Webster to Mason, Feb. 24, 1819, Van Tyne, 78-79.
[801] Webster to Smith, Feb. 28, 1819, _ib._ 79-80.
[802] From February 22 to February 27 and from March 1 to March 3, 1819.
[803] February 18, 1819. See _Annals_, 15th Cong. 2d Sess. 1240.
[804] _Ib._ 1242.
[805] _Annals_, 15th Cong. 2d Sess. 1249-50.
[806] _Ib._ 1254.
[807] _Ib._ 1286.
[808] _Ib._ 1311.
[809] _Ib._ 1404-06.
[810] "Marshall's opinion in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland, is perhaps the
most celebrated Judicial utterance in the annals of the English speaking
world." (_Great American Lawyers_: Lewis, II, 363.)
[811] As the biographer of Washington, Marshall had carefully read both
Hamilton's and Jefferson's Cabinet opinions on the constitutionality of
a National bank. Compare Hamilton's argument (vol. II, 72-74, of this
work) with Marshall's opinion in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland.
[812] 4 Wheaton, 400.
[813] _Ib._ (Italics the author's.)
[814] 4 Wheaton, 400-02.
[815] "In discussing this question, the counsel for the state of
Maryland have deemed it of some importance, in the construction of the
constitution, to consider that instrument not as emanating from the
people, but as the act of sovereign and independent states. The powers
of the general government, it has been said, are delegated by the
states, who alone are truly sovereign; and must be exercised in
subordination to the states, who alone possess supreme dominion.
"It would be difficult to sustain this proposition. The convention which
framed the constitution was indeed elected by the state legislatures.
But the instrument, when it came from their hands, was a mere proposal,
without obligation, or pretensions to it. It was reported to the then
existing Congress of the United States, with a request that it might 'be
submitted to a convention of delegates, chosen in each state, by the
people thereof, under the recommendation of its legislature, for their
assent and ratification.' This mode of proceeding was adopted; and by
the convention, by Congress, and by the state legislatures, the
instrument was submitted to the people.
"They acted upon it in the only manner in which they can act safely,
effectively, and wisely, on such a subject, by assembling in convention.
It is true, they assembled in their several states--and where else
should they have assembled? No political dreamer was ever wild enough to
think of breaking down the lines which separate the states, and of
compounding the American people into one common mass. Of consequence,
when they act, they act in their states. But the measures they adopt do
not, on that account, cease to be the measures of the people themselves,
or become the measures of the state governments. From these conventions
the constitution derives its whole authority." (4 Wheaton, 402-03.)
[816] 4 Wheaton, 403-04.
[817] _Ib._ 405.
[818] The Nationalist ideas of Marshall and Lincoln are identical; and
their language is so similar that it seems not unlikely that Lincoln
paraphrased this noble passage of Marshall and thus made it immortal.
This probability is increased by the fact that Lincoln was a profound
student of Marshall's Constitutional opinions and committed a great many
of them to memory.
The famous sentence of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address was, however, almost
exactly given by Webster in his Reply to Hayne: "It is ... the people's
Government; made for the people; made by the people; and answerable to
the people." (_Debates_, 21st Cong. 1st Sess. 74; also Curtis, I,
355-61.) But both Lincoln and Webster merely stated in condensed and
simpler form Marshall's immortal utterance in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland.
(See also _infra_, chap. X.)
[819] 4 Wheaton, 405-06.
[820] 4 Wheaton, 406-07. (Italics the author's.)
[821] _Ib._, 407-08.
[822] See vol. I, 72, of this work.
[823] 4 Wheaton, 408-09.
[824] 4 Wheaton, 409-10.
[825] _Ib._ 411.
[826] "The Congress shall have Power ... to make all Laws which shall be
necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers,
and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of
the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof."
(Constitution of the United States, Article I, Section 8.)
[827] 4 Wheaton, 412.
[828] _Ib._ 413.
[829] See vol. II, 71, of this work.
[830] Vol. II, 72-74, of this work.
[831] 4 Wheaton, 414.
[832] 4 Wheaton, 415.
[833] _Ib._ 416-17.
[834] 4 Wheaton, 417-18.
[835] 4 Wheaton, 419-21.
[836] _Ib._ 421.
[837] _Ib._ 423.
[838] 4 Wheaton, 424-25.
[839] 4 Wheaton, 425-26.
[840] 4 Wheaton, 426.
[841] See _supra_, 158 _et seq._
[842] 4 Wheaton, 426.
[843] 4 Wheaton, 427.
[844] _Ib._ 429-30.
[845] 4 Wheaton, 431.
[846] _Ib._
[847] 4 Wheaton, 432-33.
[848] 4 Wheaton, 435-36.
[849] _Ib._ 437.
[850] Story to his mother, March 7, 1819, Story, I, 325-26.
[851] See _infra_, 420; also 325-27; 338-39, 534-37.
[852] Niles, XVI, 41-44.
[853] _Ib._ 68-76.
[854] See _infra_, chap. VIII.
[855] Niles, XVI, 65.
[856] See vol. III, 130-31, of this work.
[857] Niles, XVI, 65.
[858] _Ib._ 97. For instance, the _Natchez Press_, in announcing its
intention to print Marshall's whole opinion, says that, if his doctrine
prevails, "the independence of the individual states ... is obliterated
at one fell sweep." No country can remain free "that tolerates
incorporated banks, in any guise." (_Ib._ 210.)
[859] _Ib._ 103.
[860] _Ib._ 104.
[861] Niles, XVI, 105.
[862] Niles's attack on Marshall's opinion in M'Culloch _vs._ Maryland
ran through three numbers. (See _ib._ 41-44; 103-05; 145-47.)
[863] See _supra_, 161-67.
[864] Marshall to Story, March 24, 1819, _Proceedings, Mass, Hist. Soc._
2d Series, XIV, 324.
[865] See _supra_, 146.
[866] Enquirer, March 30, 1819, as quoted in _Branch Hist. Papers_,
June, 1905, 52-53.
[867] _Branch Hist. Papers_, June, 1905, 51-63.
[868] _Enquirer_, April 2, 1819, as quoted in _Branch Hist. Papers_,
June, 1905, 76. (Italics the author's.)
[869] _Enquirer_, April 20, 1819, as quoted in _ib._ 76.
[870] Marshall to Story, May 27, 1819, _Proceedings, Mass. Hist. Soc._
2d Series, XIV, 325.
[871] _Enquirer_, June 11, 1819, as quoted in _Branch Hist. Papers_,
June, 1905, footnote to 77.
[872] _Enquirer_, June 11, 1819, as quoted in _Branch Hist. Papers_,
June, 1905, 77-82.
[873] _Enquirer_, June 15, 1819, as quoted in _ib._ 85; also _Enquirer_,
June 18, 1819, as quoted in _ib._ 95.
[874] _Enquirer_, June 15, 1819, as quoted in _ib._ 91.
[875] _Ib._ 87; also _Enquirer_, June 18, 1819, as quoted in _ib._
96-97.
[876] _Ib._ 98.
[877] _Enquirer_, June 22, 1819, as quoted in _Branch Hist. Papers_,
June, 1905, 116.
[878] _Ib._ 118.
[879] _Ib._ 121. Madison endorsed Roane's attacks on Marshall. (See
Madison to Roane, Sept. 2, 1819, _Writings of James Madison_: Hunt,
VIII, 447-53.)
[880] See Roane to his son, Jan. 4, 1819, _Branch Hist. Papers_, June,
1905, 134; and same to same, Feb. 4, 1819, _ib._ 135.
Eighteen days before Marshall delivered his opinion Roane again writes
his son: "I have to-day deposited in the vaults of the Virga. bank a
certificate in your name for 50 shares U. S. bank stock, as per memo.,
by Mr. Dandridge Enclosed. The shares cost, as you will see, $98 each."
(Roane to his son, Feb. 16, 1810, _ib._ 136.)
[881] Roane to his son, note 4, p. 317.
[882] The entire transaction is set out in letters of Benjamin Watkins
Leigh to Nicholas Biddle, Aug. 21, Aug. 28, Sept. 4, and Sept. 13, 1837;
and Biddle to Leigh, Aug. 24 and 25, Sept. 7 and Sept. 15, 1837. (Biddle
MSS. in possession of Professor R. C. McGrane of the University of Ohio,
to whose courtesy the author is indebted for the use of this material.
These letters appear in full in the _Correspondence of Nicholas Biddle_:
McGrane, 283-89, 291-92, published in September, 1919, by Houghton
Mifflin Company, Boston.)
[883] Marshall to Bushrod Washington, June 28, 1819. This letter is
unsigned, but is in Marshall's unmistakable handwriting and is endorsed
by Bushrod Washington, "C. Just. Marshall." (Marshall MSS. Lib. Cong.)
[884] UNION, April 24, 1819.
[885] _Union_, April 24, 1819.
[886] Marshall means that Jefferson inspired Roane's attacks.
[887] Marshall had written five essays, but the editor condensed them
into two numbers.
[888] Marshall to Story, May 27, 1819, _Proceedings, Mass. Hist. Soc._
2d Series, XIV, 325.
[889] Henry Wheaton, Reporter of the Supreme Court.
[890] Marshall to Story, July 13, 1819, _Proceedings, Mass. Hist. Soc._
2d Series, XIV, 326.
[891] _Enquirer_, Jan. 30, 1821.
[892] _Ib._ Feb. 1, 1821.
[893] _Journal_, House of Delegates, Virginia, 1819-20, 56-59.
[894] _Ib._ 9.
[895] _Ib._ 57.
[896] This resolution declared that Virginia assented to the
Constitution only on condition that "Every power _not granted_, remains
with the people, and at their will; that _therefore no right of any
denomination can be cancelled, abridged, restrained, or modified_, by
the congress, by the senate, or house of representatives acting in any
capacity; by the President or any department, or officer of the United
States, except in those instances in which power is given by the
constitution for those purposes." (_Journal_, House of Delegates,
Virginia, 1819-20, 58.)
[897] _Journal_, House of Delegates, Virginia, 1819-20, 59.
[898] _Ib._ 76.
[899] _Journal_, House of Delegates, Virginia, 1819-20, 85.
[900] _Ib._ 105.
[901] _Ib._ 108-09.
[902] _Ib._ 179.
[903] _Ib._ 175-78.
[904] For Marshall's opinion in this controversy see _infra_, 347 _et
seq._
[905] The second branch was established at Chillicothe.
[906] Chap. 83, _Laws of Ohio, 1818-19_, 1st Sess. 190-99.
Section 5 of this act will give the student the spirit of this
autocratic law. This section made it the "duty" of the State agent
collecting the tax, after demand on and refusal of the bank officers to
pay the tax, if he cannot readily find in the bank offices the necessary
amount of money, "to go into each and any other room or vault ... and to
every closet, chest, box or drawer in such banking house, to open and
search," and to levy on everything found. (_Ib._ 193.)
[907] A private letter to Niles says that when it was found that an
injunction had been granted, the friends of the bank rejoiced, "wine was
drank freely and mirth abounded." (Niles, XVII, 85.) This explains the
otherwise incredible negligence of the bank's attorneys in the
proceedings next day.
[908] Niles, XVII, 85-87, reprinting account as published in the
_Chillicothe Supporter_, Sept. 22, 1819, and the _Ohio Monitor_, Sept.
25, 1819.
[909] Niles, XVII, 147.
[910] _Ib._ 338.
[911] Report of Committee made to the Ohio Legislature and transmitted
to Congress. (_Annals_, 16th Cong. 2d Sess. 1685 _et seq._)
[912] _Annals_, 16th Cong. 2d Sess. 1691.
[913] _Annals_, 16th Cong. 2d Sess. 1696-97.
[914] See vol. II, 72-74, of this work.
[915] _Annals_, 16th Cong. 2d Sess. 1712.
[916] _Ib._ 1713.
[917] _Ib._ 1714.
[918] See _infra_, chap. VII of this work.
[919] _State Doc. Fed. Rel._: Ames, 90; and see Niles, XVI, 97, 132.
[920] Pennsylvania House of Representatives, _Journal, 1819-20_, 537;
_State Doc. Fed. Rel._: Ames, footnote to 90-91.
[921] _Ib._
[922] _Ib._ 91.
[923] See _infra_, chap. X.
[924] _State Doc. Fed. Rel._: Ames, 92-103.
[925] _Ib._ 92, 101-03.
[926] _Ib._ 91.
[927] See _infra_, chap. X.
[928] See vol. II, 397, of this work.
[929] Taylor: _Construction Construed, and Constitutions Vindicated_, 9.
[930] Taylor: _Construction Construed_, 11-12. Taylor does not, of
course, call Marshall by name, either in this book or in his other
attacks on the Chief Justice.
[931] _Ib._ 15.
[932] _Ib._ 16.
[933] _Ib._ 18.
[934] _Ib._ 25-26.
[935] _Ib._ 28.
[936] Taylor: _Construction Construed_, 77.
[937] _Ib._ 79.
[938] _Ib._ 84.
[939] _Ib._ 87.
[940] Taylor: _Construction Construed_, 89.
[941] _Ib._ 161.
[942] _Ib._ 233.
[943] _Ib._ 237.
It is interesting to observe that Taylor brands the protective tariff as
one of the evils of Marshall's Nationalist philosophy. "It destroys the
division of powers between federal and state governments, ... it
violates the principles of representation, ... it recognizes a sovereign
power over property, ... it destroys the freedom of labour, ... it
taxes the great mass of capital and labour, to enrich the few; ... it
increases the burden upon the people ... increases the mass of
poverty; ... it impoverishes workmen and enriches employers; ... it
increases the expenses of government, ... it deprives commerce of the
freedom of exchanges, ... it corrupts congress ... generates the
extremes of luxury and poverty." (Taylor: _Construction Construed_,
252-53.)
[944] See _infra_, 340-42; and see _infra_, chap. X.
[945] Taylor: _Construction Construed_, 314.
[946] Jefferson to Ritchie, Dec. 25, 1820, _Works_: Ford, XII, 176-78.
He declined, however, to permit publication of his endorsement of
Taylor's book. (_Ib._)
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