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Constitutional Law

– Marbury V. Madison Essay, Research Paper


Constitutional Law


Marbury v. Madison


Marbury v. Madison, one of the first Supreme Court cases asserting the


power of judicial review, is an effective argument for this power;


however, it lacks direct textual basis for the decision. Marshall


managed to get away with this deficiency because of the silence on many


issues and the vague wording of the Constitution. During the early


testing period when few precedents existed, there was much debate about


fundamental issues concerning what was intended by the words of the


Constitution and which part of government should have the final word in


defining the meaning of these words. Marshall used the Marbury case to


establish the Supreme Court’s place as the final judge.


Marshall identified three major questions that needed to be answered


before the Court could rule on the Marbury v. Madison case. The first of


these was, “Has the applicant a right to the commission he demands?” The


Constitution allows that “the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment


of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President


alone, . . . ” (Art. II, ? 2). The Judiciary Act of 1793 had given the


President the right to appoint federal judges and justices of the


peace; there is no dispute that such an appointment was within the scope


of the president’s powers. Debate arises because the Constitution is


silent on the exact time at which the appointment is considered


complete. The Supreme Court ruled that “when a commission has been


signed by the president, the appointment is made; and that the


commission is complete, when the seal of the United States has been


affixed to it by the [secretary of state].” This ruling does not have


direct constitutional support, but it is not an unreasonable decision.


The second question which Marshall addressed was, “If [Marbury] has a


right, and that right has been violated, do the laws of this country


afford him a remedy?” The answer is logically yes although there are no


specific words in the Constitution to support such an answer. Based on


the type of government intended by the Constitution, the government is


expected to protect individual liberty. As Marshall says, “[The


government] will certainly cease to deserve [to be termed a government


of laws, and not of men] if the laws furnish no remedy for the violation


of a vested right.” However, with this assertion Marshall established


the power of the Supreme Court to review actions of the executive branch


- a power that does not stem directly from the Constitution.


The third and final question which Marshall addressed was whether


Marbury “is entitled to the remedy for which he applies.” Marshall


further divides this question into two parts: the nature of the writ and


the power of the Supreme Court. In examining the nature of the writ,


Marshall solidifies further the Supreme Court authority over members of


the executive branch. Marshall admits that “the officer to whom [the


writ] is to be directed, must be one to whom, on legal principles, such


writ may be directed . . . ” and that the Supreme Court cannot “enquire


how the executive, or executive officers, perform duties in which they


have discretion.” Yet Marshall insists that the Supreme Court can issue


a mandamus “[where the head of a department] is directed by law to do a


certain act affecting the absolute rights of individuals.” This


assertion does not have Constitutional basis. The Constitution does not


expressly grant the

Supreme Court power over either of the other


branches of government.


Finally Marshall gets to the question based on which he decides the


case – the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction over this case. For the first


time in this case, Marshall uses direct constitutional basis to make his


ruling. He argues that,


“If it had been intended to leave it in the discretion of the


legislature to apportion the judicial power between the supreme and


inferior courts according to the will of that body, it would certainly


have been useless to have proceeded further than to have defined the


judicial power . . . The plain import of the words seems to be, that


in one class of cases its jurisdiction is original and not appellate; in


the other it is appellate, and not original.”


He bases this ruling on Art. III ? 2, which enumerates the cases in


which the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. Marshall


further maintains that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land.


In this contention as well Marshall has constitutional basis in Art. VI,


which states, “This constitution, and the Laws of the United States


which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; … shall be the supreme Law


of the Land.”


In his typical style, Marshall follows this constitutionally based


statement with one of the most controversial rulings, which has no


constitutional basis. He asserts, “It is emphatically the province and


duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” There is


nothing in the Constitution that assigns the duty of review solely to


the judicial department.


Although his decision loosely construes and even stretches the meaning


of the Constitution, Marshall’s ruling on this case overall is not


detrimental to the well-being of the American people. The Supreme Court


is the only branch of government that could act to strengthen the


national government during the early history of the Constitution.


Clearly, Congress could not take on the states’ rights advocates and the


state legislatures. If an early Congress had passed a law which a state


government objected to, the state legislature might have simply


nullified the law, thus forcing the national government into a


precarious situation. Congress would have to risk causing the state to


leave the Union to force them to comply with the new law. Furthermore,


the president also was not in a position to allow the federal government


more leeway in interpreting their powers. He does not make any laws of


his own and has no power to settle any questions of the states. Clearly,


the Supreme Court was the branch that could most easily facilitate the


strengthening of the national government into an effective and unified


nation rather than thirteen independent countries as the states had


seemed under the Articles of Confederation.


Critics will protest that the people do not elect the Supreme Court


Justices and therefore the Supreme Court should not have the power of


judicial review. As McCloskey points out, “No institution in a


democratic society could become and remain potent unless it could count


on a solid block of public opinion that would rally to it’s side in a


pinch.” Clearly, the Supreme Court is ultimately responsible to the will


of the people. By maintaining independence from politics, the Justices


avoid the major problems of political parties and party platforms.


Furthermore, the Supreme Court’s small size allows the Constitution to


speak with a unified voice throughout the country.


353

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