American Judiciary, Part 7: Marbury v. Madison
On March 2, 1801, two days before leaving office, President John Adams submitted to Congress a list of fifty-eight names, all Federalists, to fill positions created by the recently passed Judiciary Act. But Secretary of State John Marshall was unable to fill all the commissions before Thomas Jefferson was sworn in as president on March 4. Jefferson directed his secretary of state, James Madison, to not deliver the remaining commissions, one of which was for a justice of the peace position for William Marbury. Marbury then sued requesting the Supreme Court issue a writ of mandamus which is a court order that compels a government official to perform a legally appointed task. On February 24, 1803, John Marshall, who was now the chief justice of the Supreme Court, issued his landmark ruling.
American Judiciary, Part 4: The Early Life of John Marshall
John Marshall is perhaps the most impactful and influential man in American history who was never president. Almost single handedly, Marshall created our national judiciary and established it as a branch of government co-equal to the legislative and executive branches. He was born on September 24, 1755, on the western frontier of the colony of Virginia and was raised in a frontier two-room log cabin, which he shared with his parents and numerous siblings. Obtaining an education on the frontier of Virginia was difficult and John had received less than two years of formal instruction. And except for a short six-week stint at the College of William and Mary studying law under George Wythe, that was all the schooling Marshall would ever receive.
American Judiciary, Part 3: Last Bastion of the Federalists
Near the end of his single term in office, President John Adams signed into law the Judiciary Act of 1801 to enact much needed judicial reform but also to solidify the judiciary as a Federalist bastion against the seismic changes in government expected from Thomas Jefferson’s Democratic-Republicans. Naturally, when Jefferson was sworn in as president and his Democratic-Republicans took over both houses of Congress, they moved quickly to reverse Adams’ judiciary measures.
American Judiciary, Part 2: An Independent Federal Judiciary
One of the first pieces of legislation crafted in the first Congress was the Judiciary Act of 1789, signed into law by President George Washington on September 24. This act established that “The supreme court of the United States shall consist of a chief justice and five associate justices” and that it would meet in two sessions each year in the nation’s capital.”
American Judiciary, Part 1: Courts in Early America
In Colonial America, because judges were appointed and paid for by the Crown, they were seen as an extension of Royal authority and its tyranny. Consequently, as states created their own constitutions after 1776, most gave the power to appoint judges to the legislature.