(Continued.)
I said in my last number, that the supreme court under this constitution
would be exalted above all other power in the government, and subject to no
controul. The business of this paper will be to illustrate this, and to shew
the danger that will result from it. I question whether the world ever saw, in
any period of it, a court of justice invested with such immense powers, and yet
placed in a situation so little responsible. Certain it is, that in England,
and in the several states, where we have been taught to believe, the courts of
law are put upon the most prudent establishment, they are on a very different
footing.
The judges in England, it is true, hold their offices during their good
behaviour, but then their determinations are subject to correction by the house
of lords; and their power is by no means so extensive as that of the proposed
supreme court of the union.—I believe they in no instance assume the
authority to set aside an act of parliament under the idea that it is
inconsistent with their constitution. They consider themselves bound to decide
according to the existing laws of the land, and never undertake to controul
them by adjudging that they are inconsistent with the constitution—much
less are they vested with the power of giving an equitable construction
to the constitution.
The judges in England are under the controul of the legislature, for they
are bound to determine according to the laws passed by them. But the judges
under this constitution will controul the legislature, for the supreme court
are authorised in the last resort, to determine what is the extent of the
powers of the Congress; they are to give the constitution an explanation, and
there is no power above them to set aside their judgment. The framers of this
constitution appear to have followed that of the British, in rendering the
judges independent, by granting them their offices during good behaviour,
without following the constitution of England, in instituting a tribunal in
which their errors may be corrected; and without adverting to this, that the
judicial under this system have a power which is above the legislative, and
which indeed transcends any power before given to a judicial by any free
government under heaven.
I do not object to the judges holding their commissions during good
behaviour. I suppose it a proper provision provided they were made properly
responsible. But I say, this system has followed the English government in
this, while it has departed from almost every other principle of their
jurisprudence, under the idea, of rendering the judges independent; which, in
the British constitution, means no more than that they hold their places during
good behaviour, and have fixed salaries, they have made the judges
independent, in the fullest sense of the word. There is no power above
them, to controul any of their decisions. There is no authority that can remove
them, and they cannot be controuled by the laws of the legislature. In short,
they are independent of the people, of the legislature, and of every power
under heaven. Men placed in this situation will generally soon feel themselves
independent of heaven itself. Before I proceed to illustrate the truth of these
assertions, I beg liberty to make one remark—Though in my opinion the
judges ought to hold their offices during good behaviour, yet I think it is
clear, that the reasons in favour of this establishment of the judges in
England, do by no means apply to this country.
The great reason assigned, why the judges in Britain ought to be
commissioned during good behaviour, is this, that they may be placed in a
situation, not to be influenced by the crown, to give such decisions, as would
tend to increase its powers and prerogatives. While the judges held their
places at the will and pleasure of the king, on whom they depended not only for
their offices, but also for their salaries, they were subject to every undue
influence. If the crown wished to carry a favorite point, to accomplish which
the aid of the courts of law was necessary, the pleasure of the king would be
signified to the judges. And it required the spirit of a martyr, for the judges
to determine contrary to the king's will.—They were absolutely dependent
upon him both for their offices and livings. The king, holding his office
during life, and transmitting it to his posterity as an inheritance, has much
stronger inducements to increase the prerogatives of his office than those who
hold their offices for stated periods, or even for life. Hence the English
nation gained a great point, in favour of liberty. When they obtained the
appointment of the judges, during good behaviour, they got from the crown a
concession, which deprived it of one of the most powerful engines with which it
might enlarge the boundaries of the royal prerogative and encroach on the
liberties of the people. But these reasons do not apply to this country, we
have no hereditary monarch; those who appoint the judges do not hold their
offices for life, nor do they descend to their children. The same arguments,
therefore, which will conclude in favor of the tenor of the judge's offices for
good behaviour, lose a considerable part of their weight when applied to the
state and condition of America. But much less can it be shewn, that the nature
of our government requires that the courts should be placed beyond all account
more independent, so much so as to be above controul.
I have said that the judges under this system will be independent in
the strict sense of the word: To prove this I will shew—That there is no
power above them that can controul their decisions, or correct their errors.
There is no authority that can remove them from office for any errors or want
of capacity, or lower their salaries, and in many cases their power is superior
to that of the legislature.
1st. There is no power above them that can correct their errors or controul
their decisions—The adjudications of this court are final and
irreversible, for there is no court above them to which appeals can lie, either
in error or on the merits.—In this respect it differs from the courts in
England, for there the house of lords is the highest court, to whom appeals, in
error, are carried from the highest of the courts of law.
2d. They cannot be removed from office or suffer a dimunition of their
salaries, for any error in judgement or want of capacity.
It is expressly declared by the constitution,—"That they shall
at stated times receive a compensation for their services which shall not be
diminished during their continuance in office."
The only clause in the constitution which provides for the removal of the
judges from office, is that which declares, that "the president,
vice-president, and all civil officers of the United States, shall be removed
from office, on impeachment for, and conviction of treason, bribery, or other
high crimes and misdemeanors." By this paragraph, civil officers, in which
the judges are included, are removable only for crimes. Treason and bribery are
named, and the rest are included under the general terms of high crimes and
misdemeanors.—Errors in judgement, or want of capacity to discharge the
duties of the office, can never be supposed to be included in these words,
high crimes and misdemeanors. A man may mistake a case in giving
judgment, or manifest that he is incompetent to the discharge of the duties of
a judge, and yet give no evidence of corruption or want of integrity. To
support the charge, it will be necessary to give in evidence some facts that
will shew, that the judges commited the error from wicked and corrupt motives.
3d. The power of this court is in many cases superior to that of the
legislature. I have shewed, in a former paper, that this court will be
authorised to decide upon the meaning of the constitution, and that, not only
according to the natural and ob[vious] meaning of the words, but also according
to the spirit and intention of it. In the exercise of this power they will not
be subordinate to, but above the legislature. For all the departments of this
government will receive their powers, so far as they are expressed in the
constitution, from the people immediately, who are the source of power. The
legislature can only exercise such powers as are given them by the
constitution, they cannot assume any of the rights annexed to the judicial, for
this plain reason, that the same authority which vested the legislature with
their powers, vested the judicial with theirs—both are derived from the
same source, both therefore are equally valid, and the judicial hold their
powers independently of the legislature, as the legislature do of the judicial.
—The supreme court then have a right, independent of the legislature, to
give a construction to the constitution and every part of it, and there is no
power provided in this system to correct their construction or do it away. If,
therefore, the legislature pass any laws, inconsistent with the sense the
judges put upon the constitution, they will declare it void; and therefore in
this respect their power is superior to that of the legislature. In England the
judges are not only subject to have their decisions set aside by the house of
lords, for error, but in cases where they give an explanation to the laws or
constitution of the country, contrary to the sense of the parliament, though
the parliament will not set aside the judgement of the court, yet, they have
authority, by a new law, to explain a former one, and by this means to prevent
a reception of such decisions. But no such power is in the legislature. The
judges are supreme—and no law, explanatory of the constitution, will be
binding on them.
From the preceding remarks, which have been made on the judicial powers
proposed in this system, the policy of it may be fully developed.
I have, in the course of my observation on this constitution, affirmed and
endeavored to shew, that it was calculated to abolish entirely the state
governments, and to melt down the states into one entire government, for every
purpose as well internal and local, as external and national. In this opinion
the opposers of the system have generally agreed—and this has been
uniformly denied by its advocates in public. Some individuals, indeed, among
them, will confess, that it has this tendency, and scruple not to say, it is
what they wish; and I will venture to predict, without the spirit of prophecy,
that if it is adopted without amendments, or some such precautions as will
ensure amendments immediately after its adoption, that the same gentlemen who
have employed their talents and abilities with such success to influence the
public mind to adopt this plan, will employ the same to persuade the people,
that it will be for their good to abolish the state governments as useless and
burdensome.
Perhaps nothing could have been better conceived to facilitate the abolition
of the state governments than the constitution of the judicial. They will be
able to extend the limits of the general government gradually, and by
insensible degrees, and to accomodate themselves to the temper of the people.
Their decisions on the meaning of the constitution will commonly take place in
cases which arise between individuals, with which the public will not be
generally acquainted; one adjudication will form a precedent to the next, and
this to a following one. These cases will immediately affect individuals only;
so that a series of determinations will probably take place before even the
people will be informed of them. In the mean time all the art and address of
those who wish for the change will be employed to make converts to their
opinion. The people will be told, that their state officers, and state
legislatures are a burden and expence without affording any solid advantage,
for that all the laws passed by them, might be equally well made by the general
legislature. If to those who will be interested in the change, be added, those
who will be under their influence, and such who will submit to almost any
change of government, which they can be persuaded to believe will ease them of
taxes, it is easy to see, the party who will favor the abolition of the state
governments would be far from being inconsiderable.—In this situation,
the general legislature, might pass one law after another, extending the
general and abridging the state jurisdictions, and to sanction their
proceedings would have a course of decisions of the judicial to whom the
constitution has committed the power of explaining the constitution.—If
the states remonstrated, the constitutional mode of deciding upon the validity
of the law, is with the supreme court, and neither people, nor state
legislatures, nor the general legislature can remove them or reverse their
decrees.
Had the construction of the constitution been left with the legislature,
they would have explained it at their peril; if they exceed their powers, or
sought to find, in the spirit of the constitution, more than was expressed in
the letter, the people from whom they derived their power could remove them,
and do themselves right; and indeed I can see no other remedy that the people
can have against their rulers for encroachments of this nature. A constitution
is a compact of a people with their rulers; if the rulers break the compact,
the people have a right and ought to remove them and do themselves justice; but
in order to enable them to do this with the greater facility, those whom the
people chuse at stated periods, should have the power in the last resort to
determine the sense of the compact; if they determine contrary to the
understanding of the people, an appeal will lie to the people at the period
when the rulers are to be elected, and they will have it in their power to
remedy the evil; but when this power is lodged in the hands of men independent
of the people, and of their representatives, and who are not, constitutionally,
accountable for their opinions, no way is left to controul them but with a
high hand and an outstretched arm.
Brutus.