Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Worst Supreme Court Decision Ever?
American Heritage ^ | 03/06/07 | Frederic D. Schwarz

Posted on 03/06/2007 11:54:14 AM PST by Borges

A century and a half ago today, on March 6, 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court delivered its decision in the case of Dred Scott v. John F. A. Sandford. Scott was a Missouri slave, and Sanford (whose last name was misspelled in the court papers) was a New York businessman who had custody of some family property, including Scott and his wife and two daughters. Back in 1846 Scott (along with his family) had sued for freedom on the grounds that his previous owner, an Army surgeon, had lived in the state of Illinois and the territory of Wisconsin for several years. Slavery was illegal in both places.

The case had been decided in Scott’s favor in 1850, but two years later Missouri’s supreme court had reversed the decision. If the matter had rested there, the result, however unfair, would have caused little controversy. Since the suit’s filing, however, the Mexican War and its aftermath had brought slavery to the forefront of the national debate, and the wealthy abolitionists who were financing Scott’s suit decided to pursue an appeal in federal court. They could easily have bought Scott and his family and emancipated them, but, like many present-day activists, they were hoping for a judicial solution to a political problem.

The Supreme Court tried to sidestep the controversy by resorting to a Catch-22. Scott had filed his claim as a citizen of Missouri, but since he was a slave, he was not entitled to that status. The suit would not be valid unless he first gained citizenship. In other words, to sue for freedom in federal court, he had to be free already. Dodging the central issue in this way would buy the Supreme Court some time and perhaps allow the issues to be solved by other means.

However, the two strongest antislavery justices declined to go along with the ruling and insisted on writing dissents calling for Scott to be freed. Once they had made their intentions clear, the other justices decided they had to refute them. Stubbornness on both sides opened up an enormous can of worms, as a case that could have been dismissed on technical grounds turned into an excuse for all the justices to air their views of property, slavery, freedom, and the federal government’s role in it all.

The court’s decision was as splintered as any in its history, with each justice writing his own opinion. Six of the nine agreed that a slave could not be a citizen. Three went on, unnecessarily, to say that even a freed slave could not be a citizen, while two dissented and the rest were silent on this question. Yet the feuding justices did not stop even there.

The decision of the chief justice, Roger Taney, which was considered that of the court, sweepingly declared Congress’s prohibition of slavery in territories north of 36° 30’, enacted in 1820 as part of the Missouri Compromise, to be unconstitutional. The federal government, wrote Taney, had no such jurisdiction; it could not prohibit any citizen from bringing his property, including slaves, into any federal territories or enjoying its use there. Only a properly constituted state government could ban slavery. Scott v. Sandford was the first time since Marbury v. Madison (1803) that the Supreme Court had struck down a federal law.

In fairness to Taney, it should be noted that the phrase most often quoted from his decision is usually misunderstood. In seeking to interpret the Constitution according to what its framers had in mind, Taney said that they had considered Africans as “beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations; and so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect.” Taney did not mean that in 1857 the black man still had no rights, just that the Constitution had been written 70 years earlier with that understanding. Nonetheless, “no rights which the white man was bound to respect” was the sound bite that got repeated across the country in the decision’s aftermath and is still repeated to this day.

The concurring justices hoped that their decision would settle the vexing question of slavery in the territories once and for all. It didn’t. Most Northerners greeted the decision with outrage. Bad enough, they thought, that the court had rejected Scott’s claim, but by denying Congress any right to regulate slavery in the territories, it had swept away the carefully crafted compromises that were holding the nation together, however tenuously. Some felt it was only a matter of time before the court went further and imposed a similar restriction on state governments.

Ever since the Revolution, the free states and slave states had tried to coexist peacefully, accepting their differences and respecting each other’s laws. While it was an appealing idea, the two systems could not be kept completely separate, and where they overlapped there was friction. Free black seamen landing in Southern ports were subject to arrest if they left their ships, despite federal maritime laws to the contrary. Many Northerners were dismayed that Congress allowed slavery in the District of Columbia, a federal territory (though slave sales were prohibited there in 1850 as a bone tossed to unappreciative slavery opponents).

Most troublesome of all had been the issue of slaves who escaped into free states, often with the help of abolitionists. Slave owners considered the practice no better than thievery, while most Northerners resented the forcible use of their police and courts to restore human beings to bondage. Yet even fugitive slaves would not have brought the union down by themselves; there simply weren’t enough of them to cause such a drastic step.

When it came to slavery in the territories, however, the live-and-let-live principle was stretched past its breaking point. It’s hard to draw a direct connection between the Dred Scott decision and the outbreak of war four years later, but by encouraging Southerners to assert their power and preventing Congress from finessing this extremely contentious issue, the Dred Scott decision hardened positions pro and con and made a sectional conflict much more difficult to avoid. For example, Stephen Douglas’s doctrine of popular sovereignty—letting settlers decide whether to permit slavery in a territory—might or might not have defused the issue, but the Dred Scott decision made it moot.

For all the upheaval it created nationally, the decision made little difference to Scott, who since 1854 had been living in St. Louis as virtually a free man. His owner, Irene Sanford Emerson (John Sanford’s sister, and the Army surgeon’s widow), had married an abolitionist who maintained ownership of Scott only so the suit could be pursued. (Sanford was given nominal custody so that the plaintiff and defendant would be residents of different states, a necessity for the federal suit.) In any event, Scott and his family were emancipated shortly after the decision was announced. Dred Scott become something of a local celebrity but did not enjoy his status for long, dying of tuberculosis on September 17, 1858. No one knows for sure what became of his wife and daughters.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: roevewade; roevwade
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-91 next last
To: AZRepublican
and if all the rights of men were secured soley under the federal govt slavery would still be alive and well today

Ever been to a Rez?

21 posted on 03/06/2007 12:38:59 PM PST by NativeSon (-sittin' back, waitin' for my casino...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: Borges

It is a three way tie between Dred Scott, Plessy vs. Ferguson, and Roe vs. Wade.

In all three, the court made policy instead of applying the law, in all three the court ignored the plain meaning of the Constitution, and in all three there were tragic consequences that took years to overcome.


22 posted on 03/06/2007 12:42:40 PM PST by GreenLanternCorps ("It's a dog eat dog world, and I'm wearing Milkbone underwear... " -Norm Peterson)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cicero
If we ever get a ruling finding a constitutional right for the state to mandate euthanasia of the sick, handicapped, and elderly, that will make it a trifecta.

"Terri Schiavo" was the camel's nose on that one.

23 posted on 03/06/2007 1:03:36 PM PST by Ignatz ("I think we should tax all foreigners living abroad.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: Justa; y'all
Justa:
Marbury vs. Madison because it gave the USSC the self-proclaimed right to decide what is constitutional and what is not. It took the arbitration of government away from the people and their legislatures and placed it with the courts.

Marbury vs. Madison said the USSC has the power to write opinions on what laws are constitutional and which are unconstitutional. Marbury noted that the arbitration of governmental 'legislative law', -- at all levels - fed/state/local, was subject to Constitutional restraints [as per the 10th].

The people [juries] are the laws final arbiters.

24 posted on 03/06/2007 1:10:09 PM PST by tpaine (" My most important function on the Supreme Court is to tell the majority to take a walk." -Scalia)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: cdcdawg
Wickard would never have been considered without Gibbons v Ogden establishing a ratio decidendi.
25 posted on 03/06/2007 1:14:06 PM PST by frithguild (The Freepers moved as a group, like a school of sharks sweeping toward an unaware and unarmed victim)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: Hemingway's Ghost
"The worst decision of all time was in Wickard v. Filburn, because it prevents burn-outs like me from smoking weed."

I agree this is the worst case of all time but not for the reason that you can't smoke dope. (Not that there's anything wrong with that....) In Wickard the Court held that a man growing his own wheat, in his own field, purely for his own consumption constituted interstate commerce and was thus subject to Federal regulation. This essentially made EVERYTHING interstate commerce and thus killed the concept known as Federalism, a concept Madison said was essential in the American Constitutional scheme to prevent the tyranny of faction. Modern day experience shows he was right.

26 posted on 03/06/2007 1:17:22 PM PST by joebuck
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]

To: joebuck
In Wickard the Court held that a man growing his own wheat, in his own field, purely for his own consumption constituted interstate commerce and was thus subject to Federal regulation. This essentially made EVERYTHING interstate commerce and thus killed the concept known as Federalism, a concept Madison said was essential in the American Constitutional scheme to prevent the tyranny of faction. Modern day experience shows he was right.

Well . . . that's what I would have written were I not going for the easy chuckle!

27 posted on 03/06/2007 1:20:22 PM PST by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: cripplecreek
cripplecreek wrote:

Sparf vs US (1895 I think) is the single worst decision. The court ruled that although juries have the right to ignore a judge's instructions on the law, they don't have to be made aware of the right to do so.

Worse yet, many States absolutely ~forbid~ any constitutionally based defense being made before a jury.

It effectively gives total power to judges, prosecutors, and defenders while rendering juries powerless. One notable case where jurors were made fully aware of their rights was the Randy Weaver trial.

Well put. We have lost the right to a fully informed jury of our peers.

28 posted on 03/06/2007 1:20:33 PM PST by tpaine (" My most important function on the Supreme Court is to tell the majority to take a walk." -Scalia)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: GreenLanternCorps
Dred Scott, Plessy vs. Ferguson, and Roe vs. Wade.

All of these preresent temporary errors - Roe will be reversed. But Gibbons v. Ogden has too much weight piled ontop of it to overturn it. Gibbons is the cornerstone for the federal usurptation of 80% of the poer it now wields. Think of what our feredal government would be without the power legislate based upon commerce "power". It would wield power narrowly for foreign affairs and and national defense - as it was meant to be.

29 posted on 03/06/2007 1:20:36 PM PST by frithguild (The Freepers moved as a group, like a school of sharks sweeping toward an unaware and unarmed victim)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 22 | View Replies]

To: kittymyrib
Roe v. Wade is the worst, resulting in the deaths of 41 million US citizens and qualifying us for the severe punishment that God will visit on our country.

I hope you don't think that abortion was illegal in the US before Roe v Wade. It wasn't. Before Roe v Wade, abortion was legal in a number of states -- 25 IIRC. In other states where it was technically illegal, there were exceptions (health of the mother which included mental health) which were relatively easily circumvented based on the signature of a Doctor.

To be fair, Roe did not cause the deaths of 41 million. I'd agree, it made it easier, but many of those abortions would have occurred regardless of the Roe decision.

The real culprit in the majority of those 41 million was the "sexual revolution" coupled with the break down of the traditional family brought about by the Great Society welfare programs.

I don't know what percent of that 41 million to lay at the feet of Roe, but I do know that our societal moral breakdown has caused far more abortions than Roe has.

From a legal standpoint, I'd rank Roe and Scott as equally bad decisions without trying to assign a death tole for either.

30 posted on 03/06/2007 1:26:53 PM PST by Ditto
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: AZRepublican; Non-Sequitur
It was national law at the time, and I think up to 1960 that only whites could be citizens. The ruling had no bearing on his rights in a free state, it was just in the slave states he could not seek federal relief.

Wrong and wrong.

1. Blacks were citizens with voting rights in 5 of the states at the time of the Scott decision.

2. Scott said that blacks free or slave, in a free state or a slave state, were not citizens and had no right to petition in Federal court.

Aside from ignoring the Constitution, ignoring the clear intent of the Framers, and ignoring well documented history, Taney and the majority, ignored states rights simply to appease the wishes of the Slave Power to expand their empire.

31 posted on 03/06/2007 1:38:21 PM PST by Ditto
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: tpaine

Informed juries would make these months long show trials a thing of the past. The John Couey confession would not be thrown out in the Lunsford murder trial. Ramos and Compean would likely be free men today.

Informed juries would return rationale to our courts. We may not always like the outcomes but I would trust informed juries a lot more than those we keep ignorant like today.


32 posted on 03/06/2007 1:47:35 PM PST by cripplecreek (Peace without victory is a temporary illusion.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 28 | View Replies]

To: Borges
I'm not sure I would call Dred Scott the worst U.S. Supreme Court decision of all time, mainly because it was argued and decided on valid points and may very well have been "correct" under the law at the time.

If you want to see a terrible decision, read the joint opinion of Anthony Kennedy, Sandra O'Connor, and David Souter in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992). The "majority" opinion in that case was a pile of such bizarre, unmitigated nonsense that it would have received a failing grade in any high school civics class.

33 posted on 03/06/2007 1:48:52 PM PST by Alberta's Child (Can money pay for all the days I lived awake but half asleep?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Borges
My vote for worst ever (but I have a personal involvement):
http://allanfavish.com/ajf_response_to_decision.htm
34 posted on 03/06/2007 1:49:50 PM PST by AJFavish
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Justa

Amen.


35 posted on 03/06/2007 1:51:32 PM PST by Dead Corpse (What would a free man do?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: Alberta's Child
If you want to see a terrible decision, read the joint opinion of Anthony Kennedy, Sandra O'Connor, and David Souter in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992). The "majority" opinion in that case was a pile of such bizarre, unmitigated nonsense that it would have received a failing grade in any high school civics class.

I second this post
36 posted on 03/06/2007 1:57:47 PM PST by somniferum (Annoy a liberal.. Work hard and be happy.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 33 | View Replies]

To: AZRepublican
It was national law at the time, and I think up to 1960 that only whites could be citizens.

1960? What? The 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868.

-ccm

37 posted on 03/06/2007 1:58:14 PM PST by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: Borges
Most troublesome of all had been the issue of slaves who escaped into free states, often with the help of abolitionists.

I am proud to state that my great-great-great-grandfather's farm in Ohio was a station on the Underground Railroad. I regard the Old South with contempt, and feel that it deserves all it got from Gen. Sherman and more besides.

-ccm

38 posted on 03/06/2007 2:00:12 PM PST by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ccmay

I'm talking about naturalization law. Dred Scott was before the 14th.


39 posted on 03/06/2007 2:05:02 PM PST by AZRepublican ("The degree in which a measure is necessary can never be a test of the legal right to adopt it.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]

To: Ditto; y'all
There are some redeeming qualities to parts of the Dread Scott decision, about our 2nd Amendment rights. -- This is from a law school blog:


" -- The court in Dred Scott decided that since the US had been a racist nation since its inception, a racist law in 1856 could not be challenged by a black gent, since he lacked the privileges and immunities of US Citizenship as held by the group 'the people' mentioned in the Constitution.
The court used the complete phrase 'privileges and immunities' over 30 times, and exhaustively defined it. To the court in Dred Scott, the 'privileges and immunities of US citizenship' included the entire Bill Of Rights just for starters.

The court hypothesized what would happen if such privileges and immunities were declared held by blacks:

For if they were so received, and entitled to the privileges and immunities of citizens, it would exempt them [blacks] from the operation of the special laws and from the police regulations which they considered to be necessary for their own safety. It would give to persons of the negro race, who were recognized as citizens in any one State of the Union, the right to enter every other State whenever they pleased, singly or in companies, without pass or passport, and without obstruction, to sojourn there as long as they pleased, to go where they pleased at every hour of the day or night without molestation, unless they committed some violation of law for which a white man would be punished; and it would give them the full liberty of speech in public and in private upon all subjects upon which its own citizens might speak; to hold public meetings upon political affairs,

and to keep and carry arms wherever they went. [emphasis added]

It is critical to understand that the ruling in Dred Scott was not invalidated by the Civil War 1861-1865 and the deaths of over 500,000.
Indeed, the slaves may have been freed by Lincoln's order and then the 13th Amendment, but the courts holding on racist laws being in harmony with the Founders intent still stood.

Hence the South began writing specifically racist laws, the infamous 'Black Codes'...virtually all of which contained special race-specific restrictions on arms:

1. That it shall not be lawful for any freedman, mulatto, or free person of color in this State, to own fire-arms, or carry about his person a pistol or other deadly weapon.

2. That after the 20th day of January, 1866, any person thus offending may be arrested upon the warrant of any acting justice of the peace, and upon conviction fined any sum not exceeding $100 or imprisoned in the county jail, or put to labor on the public works of any county, incorporated town, city, or village, for any term not exceeding three months.

3. That if any gun, pistol or other deadly weapon be found in the possession of any freedman, mulatto or free person of color, the same may by any justice of the peace, sheriff, or constable be taken from such freedman, mulatto, or free person of color; and if such person is proved to be the owner thereof, the same shall, upon an order of any justice of the peace, be sold, and the proceeds thereof paid over to such freedman, mulatto, or person of color owning the same. [Ed. note: the off-duty fashion choices of “justices of the peace, sheriffs, or constables” at that time tended toward an ensemble of basic white bedsheets with eyeholes...especially at night.]

4. That it shall not be lawful for any person to sell, give, or lend fire-arms or ammunition of any description whatever, to any freedman, free negro or mulatto; and any person so violating the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined in the sum of not less than fifty nor more than one hundred dollars, at the discretion of the jury trying the case.

Alabama statute of 1865, from The Second Amendment: Towards An African-Americanist Reconsideration" two more state-level examples precede that one.

Per Dred Scott, this was perfectly acceptable. The only way the 1868 legislature could fix that was to overturn the US Supreme Court which meant a Constitutional Amendment, the 14th.


Which is why they borrowed Dred Scott's phrasing in the 14th they started out by making it clear blacks were citizens, and then forbade states from violating the rights of citizens.

In doing so, framers of the 14th such as Ohio Republican John Bingham knew that they were carrying out the courts worst fears, allowing the freemen to keep and carry arms wherever they went (among other things).
See the Halbrook cites above. Bingham and company made no secret of this during the debates on the 14th and the various acts that led up to it and supported it.

So what does all this mean?

1. If the 14th reinforced an individual right to arms, it strengthens the arguments for an individual right interpretation (standard model) as recently supported by the 5th Circuit in US vs. Emerson.
Even if the right to bear arms was originally primarily to ensure a militia with no personal right intended (which is ludicrous to anyone who studies the Founders' writings closely), that cannot have been the case in 1868 because no Southern state was going to voluntarily put blacks under organized arms!
The uniforms of State Militias in the south of that time ran toward modified bedsheets. So we're talking about a right to personal arms for private defense, against both criminals and the state itself.

2. And we're no longer talking about flintlock muskets, are we? Revolvers were common as fleas by then, with working models available since 1836.
In fact, used specimens were affordable to freemen. The Mormon security forces prior to their move to Utah were well known for packing .44cal percussion revolvers with barrels chopped to 3" or so, carried concealed. And rifles of up to 15shot capacity were available, as were the first Gatling Guns(!) patented 1862.

3. Better yet, we see that the right to arms is protected from STATE infringement.

4. Best of all, the framers of the 14th would have known that for freemen to safely bear arms wherever they went, the arms in question would of necessity be concealed! Anybody want to guess what a Southern cop of 1869 would think of a melanin-enhanced gent doing open-carry? (Last time the NYPD thought they had an armed black dude in sight, they opened up with 41 rounds, and that was in our more œmodern, enlightened age.) This particular logic chain is the only path I know of to gaining a Constitutional right to bear CONCEALED arms that the courts may one day adopt, once they abandon the horrific racism of Cruikshank.


Posted by: Joan A. Conway | February 24, 2007 at 01:16 PM

A Practical Guide To Race And Gun Control
by Jim March
40 posted on 03/06/2007 2:08:06 PM PST by tpaine (" My most important function on the Supreme Court is to tell the majority to take a walk." -Scalia)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-91 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson