Page 14 U. S. 360
upon it. This Court entered into an examination of that
question, and, being of the same opinion, affirmed the judgment.
There cannot, then, be an authority which could more completely
govern the present question.
It has been asserted at the bar that, in point of fact, the
Court of Appeals did not decide either upon the treaty or the title
apparent upon the record, but upon a compromise made under an act
of the legislature of Virginia. If it be true (as we are informed)
that this was a private act, to take effect only upon a certain
condition,
viz., the execution of a deed of release of
certain lands, which was matter
in pais, it is somewhat
difficult to understand how the Court could take judicial
cognizance of the act or of the performance of the condition,
unless spread upon the record. At all events, we are bound to
consider that the Court did decide upon the facts actually before
them. The treaty of peace was not necessary to have been stated,
for it was the supreme law of the land, of which all Courts must
take notice. And at the time of the decision in the Court of
Appeals and in this Court, another treaty had intervened, which
attached itself to the title in controversy and, of course, must
have been the supreme law to govern the decision if it should be
found applicable to the case. It was in this view that this Court
did not deem it necessary to rest its former decision upon the
treaty of peace, believing that the title of the defendant was, at
all events, perfect under the treaty of 1794.
Page 14 U. S. 361
The remaining questions respect more the practice than the
principles of this Court. The forms of process and the modes of
proceeding in the exercise of jurisdiction are, with few
exceptions, left by the Legislature to be regulated and changed as
this Court may, in its discretion, deem expedient. By a rule of
this Court, the return of a copy of a record of the proper court,
under the seal of that court, annexed to the writ of error, is
declared to be "a sufficient compliance with the mandate of the
writ." The record in this case is duly certified by the clerk of
the Court of Appeals and annexed to the writ of error. The
objection therefore which has been urged to the sufficiency of the
return cannot prevail.
Another objection is that it does not appear that the judge who
granted the writ of error did, upon issuing the citation, take the
bond required by the 22d section of the Judiciary Act.
We consider that provision as merely directory to the judge; and
that an omission does not avoid the writ of error. If any party be
prejudiced by the omission, this Court can grant him summary relief
by imposing such terms on the other party as, under all the
circumstances, may be legal and proper. But there is nothing in the
record by which we can judicially know whether a bond has been
taken or not, for the statute does not require the bond to be
returned to this Court, and it might with equal propriety be lodged
in the Court below, who would ordinarily execute the judgment to be
rendered on the writ. And the presumption of law is, until the
contrary
Page 14 U. S. 362
appears, that every judge who signs a citation has obeyed the
injunctions of the Act.
We have thus gone over all the principal questions in the cause,
and we deliver our judgment with entire confidence that it is
consistent with the Constitution and laws of the land.
We have not thought it incumbent on us to give any opinion upon
the question, whether this Court have authority to issue a writ of
mandamus to the Court of Appeals to enforce the former judgments,
as we do not think it necessarily involved in the decision of this
cause.
It is the opinion of the whole Court that the judgment of the
Court of Appeals of Virginia, rendered on the mandate in this
cause, be reversed, and the judgment of the District Court, held at
Winchester, be, and the same is hereby, affirmed.
JOHNSON, J.
It will be observed in this case that the Court disavows all
intention to decide on the right to issue compulsory process to the
State courts, thus leaving us, in my opinion, where the
Constitution and laws place us -- supreme over persons and cases as
far as our judicial powers extend, but not asserting any compulsory
control over the State tribunals.
In this view I acquiesce in their opinion, but not altogether in
the reasoning or opinion of my brother who delivered it. Few minds
are accustomed to the same habit of thinking, and our conclusions
are most satisfactory to ourselves when arrived at in our own
way.
Page 14 U. S. 363
I have another reason for expressing my opinion on this
occasion. I view this question as one of the most momentous
importance; as one which may affect, in its consequences, the
permanence of the American Union. It presents an instance of
collision between the judicial powers of the Union, and one of the
greatest States in the Union, on a point the most delicate and
difficult to be adjusted. On the one hand, the General Government
must cease to exist whenever it loses the power of protecting
itself in the exercise of its constitutional powers. Force, which
acts upon the physical powers of man, or judicial process, which
addresses itself to his moral principles or his fears, are the only
means to which governments can resort in the exercise of their
authority. The former is happily unknown to the genius of our
Constitution except as far as it shall be sanctioned by the latter,
but let the latter be obstructed in its progress by an opposition
which it cannot overcome or put by, and the resort must be to the
former, or government is no more.
On the other hand, so firmly am I persuaded that the American
people can no longer enjoy the blessings of a free government
whenever the State sovereignties shall be prostrated at the feet of
the General Government, nor the proud consciousness of equality and
security any longer than the independence of judicial power shall
be maintained consecrated and intangible, that I could borrow the
language of a celebrated orator and exclaim, "I rejoice that
Virginia has resisted."
Yet here I must claim the privilege of expressing
Page 14 U. S. 364
my regret, that the opposition of the high and truly respected
tribunal of that State had not been marked with a little more
moderation. The only point necessary to be decided in the case then
before them was "whether they were bound to obey the mandate
emanating from this Court?" But, in the judgment entered on their
minutes, they have affirmed that the case was, in this Court,
coram non judice, or, in other words, that this Court had
not jurisdiction over it.
This is assuming a truly alarming latitude of judicial power.
Where is it to end? It is an acknowledged principle of, I believe,
every Court in the world that not only the decisions, but
everything done under the judicial process of courts not having
jurisdiction are,
ipso facto, void. Are, then, the
judgments of this Court to be reviewed in every court of the Union?
and is every recovery of money, every change of property, that has
taken place under our process to be considered as null, void, and
tortious?
We pretend not to more infallibility than other courts composed
of the same frail materials which compose this. It would be the
height of affectation to close our minds upon the recollection that
we have been extracted from the same seminaries in which originated
the learned men who preside over the State tribunals. But there is
one claim which we can with confidence assert in our own name upon
those tribunals -- the profound, uniform, and unaffected respect
which this Court has always exhibited for State decisions give us
strong pretensions to judicial comity. And another claim I may
assert, in the name of the American people; in this Court, every
State in
Page 14 U. S. 365
the Union is represented; we are constituted by the voice of the
Union, and when decisions take place which nothing but a spirit to
give ground and harmonize can reconcile, ours is the superior claim
upon the comity of the State tribunals. It is the nature of the
human mind to press a favourite hypothesis too far, but magnanimity
will always be ready to sacrifice the pride of opinion to public
welfare.
In the case before us, the collision has been, on our part,
wholly unsolicited. The exercise of this appellate jurisdiction
over the State decisions has long been acquiesced in, and when the
writ of error in this case was allowed by the President of the
Court of Appeals of Virginia, we were sanctioned in supposing that
we were to meet with the same acquiescence there. Had that Court
refused to grant the writ in the first instance, or had the
question of jurisdiction, or on the mode of exercising
jurisdiction, been made here originally, we should have been put on
our guard, and might have so modelled the process of the Court as
to strip it of the offensive form of a mandate. In this case it
might have been brought down to what probably the 25th section of
the Judiciary Act meant it should be, to-wit, an alternative
judgment either that the State court may finally proceed at its
option to carry into effect the judgment of this Court or, if it
declined doing so, that then this Court would proceed itself to
execute it. The language, sense, and operation of the 25th section
on this subject merit particular attention. In the preceding
section, which has relation to causes brought up by writ of error
from the Circuit Courts
Page 14 U. S. 366
of the United States, this Court is instructed not to issue
executions, but to send a special mandate to the Circuit Court to
award execution thereupon. In case of the Circuit Court's refusal
to obey such mandate, there could be no doubt as to the ulterior
measures; compulsory process might, unquestionably, be resorted to.
Nor, indeed, was there any reason to suppose that they ever would
refuse, and therefore there is no provision made for authorizing
this Court to execute its own judgment in cases of that
description. But not so in cases brought up from the State courts;
the framers of that law plainly foresaw that the State courts might
refuse, and not being willing to leave ground for the implication
that compulsory process must be resorted to, because no specific
provision was made, they have provided the means, by authorizing
this Court, in case of reversal of the State decision, to execute
its own judgment. In case of reversal, only was this necessary,
for, in case of affirmance, this collision could not arise. It is
true that the words of this section are that this Court may, in
their discretion, proceed to execute its own judgment. But these
words were very properly put in, that it might not be made
imperative upon this Court to proceed indiscriminately in this way,
as it could only be necessary in case of the refusal of the State
courts, and this idea is fully confirmed by the words of the 13th
section, which restrict this Court in issuing the writ of mandamus,
so as to confine it expressly to those Courts which are constituted
by the United States.
Page 14 U. S. 367
In this point of view, the Legislature is completely vindicated
from all intention to violate the independence of the State
judiciaries. Nor can this Court, with any more correctness, have
imputed to it similar intentions. The form of the mandate issued in
this case is that known to appellate tribunals, and used in the
ordinary cases of writs of error from the courts of the United
States. It will, perhaps, not be too much, in such cases, to expect
of those who are conversant in the forms, fictions, and
technicality of the law not to give the process of courts too
literal a construction. They should be considered with a view to
the ends they are intended to answer and the law and practice in
which they originate. In this view, the mandate was no more than a
mode of submitting to that court the option which the 25th section
holds out to them.
Had the decision of the Court of Virginia been confined to the
point of their legal obligation to carry the judgment of this Court
into effect, I should have thought it unnecessary to make any
further observations in this cause. But we are called upon to
vindicate our general revising power, and its due exercise in this
particular case.
Here, that I may not be charged with arguing upon a hypothetical
case, it is necessary to ascertain what the real question is which
this Court is now called to decide on.
In doing this, it is necessary to do what, although, in the
abstract, of very questionable propriety, appears to be generally
acquiesced in, to-wit, to review the case as it originally came up
to this Court
Page 14 U. S. 368
on the former writ of error. The cause, then, came up upon a
case stated between the parties, and under the practice of that
State, having the effect of a special verdict. The case stated
brings into view the treaty of peace with Great Britain, and then
proceeds to present the various laws of Virginia and the facts upon
which the parties found their respective titles. It then presents
no particular question, but refers generally to the law arising out
of the case. The original decision was obtained prior to the Treaty
of 1794, but before the case was adjudicated in this Court, the
Treaty of 1794 had been concluded.
The difficulties of the case arise under the construction of the
25th section above alluded to, which, as far as it relates to this
case, is in these words:
"A final judgment or decree in any suit, in the highest Court of
law or equity of a State in which a decision in the suit could be
had, . . . where is drawn in question the construction of any
clause of the Constitution or of a treaty, . . . and the decision
is against the title set up or claimed by either party under such
clause, may be reexamined and reversed, or affirmed. . . . But no
other error shall be assigned or regarded as a ground of reversal
in any such case as aforesaid than such as appears on the face of
the record and immediately respects the before-mentioned questions
of validity or construction of the said treaties,"
&c.
The first point decided under this state of the case was that,
the judgment being a part of the record, if that judgment was not
such as, upon that case, it ought to have been, it was an error
apparent on the
Page 14 U. S. 369
face of the record. But it was contended that the case there
stated presented a number of points upon which the decision below
may have been founded, and that it did not therefore necessarily
appear to have been an error immediately respecting a question on
the construction of a treaty. But the Court held that, as the
reference was general to the law arising out of the case, if one
question arose which called for the construction of a treaty, and
the decision negatived the right set up under it, this Court will
reverse that decision, and that it is the duty of the party who
would avoid the inconvenience of this principle so to mould the
case as to obviate the ambiguity. And under this point arises the
question whether this Court can inquire into the title of the
party, or whether they are so restricted in their judicial powers
as to be confined to decide on the operation of a treaty upon a
title previously ascertained to exist.
If there is any one point in the case on which an opinion may be
given with confidence, it is this, whether we consider the letter
of the statute, or the spirit, intent, or meaning, of the
Constitution and of the legislature, as expressed in the 27th
section, it is equally clear that the title is the primary object
to which the attention of the Court is called in every such case.
The words are, "and the decision be against the title," so set up,
not against the construction of the treaty contended for by the
party setting up the title. And how could it be otherwise? The
title may exist notwithstanding the decision of the State courts to
the contrary, and, in that case, the
Page 14 U. S. 370
party is entitled to the benefits intended to be secured by the
treaty. The decision to his prejudice may have been the result of
those very errors, partialities, or defects in State jurisprudence
against which the Constitution intended to protect the individual.
And if the contrary doctrine be assumed, what is the consequence?
This Court may then be called upon to decide on a mere hypothetical
case -- to give a construction to a treaty without first deciding
whether there was any interest on which that treaty, whatever be
its proper construction, would operate. This difficulty was felt
and weighed in the case of
Smith and the State of
Maryland, and that decision was founded upon the idea that
this Court was not thus restricted.
But another difficulty presented itself: the Treaty of 1794 had
become the supreme law of the land since the judgment rendered in
the Court below. The defendant, who was at that time an alien, had
now become confirmed in his rights under that treaty. This would
have been no objection to the correctness of the original judgment.
Were we, then, at liberty to notice that treaty in rendering the
judgment of this Court?
Having dissented from the opinion of this Court in the original
case on the question of title, this difficulty did not present
itself in my way in the view I then took of the case. But the
majority of this Court determined that, as a public law, the treaty
was a part of the law of every case depending in this Court; that,
as such, it was not necessary that it should be spread upon the
record, and that it was obligatory
Page 14 U. S. 371
upon this Court, in rendering judgment upon this writ of error,
notwithstanding the original judgment may have been otherwise
unimpeachable. And to this opinion I yielded my hearty consent, for
it cannot be maintained that this Court is bound to give a judgment
unlawful at the time of rendering it, in consideration that the
same judgment would have been lawful at any prior time. What
judgment can now be lawfully rendered between the parties is the
question to which the attention of the Court is called. And if the
law which sanctioned the original judgment expire pending an
appeal, this Court has repeatedly reversed the judgment below,
although rendered whilst the law existed. So, too, if the plaintiff
in error die pending suit, and his land descend on an alien, it
cannot be contended that this Court will maintain the suit in right
of the judgment in favour of his ancestor, notwithstanding his
present disability.
It must here be recollected that this is an action of ejectment.
If the term formally declared upon expires pending the action, the
Court will permit the plaintiff to amend by extending the term --
why? Because, although the right may have been in him at the
commencement of the suit, it has ceased before judgment, and,
without this amendment, he could not have judgment. But suppose the
suit were really instituted to obtain possession of a leasehold,
and the lease expire before judgment, would the Court permit the
party to amend in opposition to the right of the case? On the
contrary, if the term formally declared on were more extensive than
the
Page 14 U. S. 372
lease in which the legal title was founded, could they give
judgment for more than costs? It must be recollected that, under
this judgment, a writ of restitution is the fruit of the law. This,
in its very nature, has relation to, and must be founded upon, a
present existing right at the time of judgment. And whatever be the
cause which takes this right away, the remedy must, in the reason
and nature of things, fall with it.
When all these incidental points are disposed of, we find the
question finally reduced to this -- does the judicial power of the
United States extend to the revision of decisions of State courts
in cases arising under treaties? But in order to generalize the
question and present it in the true form in which it presents
itself in this case, we will inquire whether the Constitution
sanctions the exercise of a revising power over the decisions of
State tribunals in those cases to which the judicial power of the
United States extends?
And here it appears to me that the great difficulty is on the
other side. That the real doubt is whether the State tribunals can
constitutionally exercise jurisdiction in any of the cases to which
the judicial power of the United States extends.
Some cession of judicial power is contemplated by the third
article of the Constitution; that which is ceded can no longer be
retained. In one of the Circuit Courts of the United States, it has
been decided (with what correctness I will not say) that the
cession of a power to pass an uniform act of bankruptcy, although
not acted on by the United States, deprives
Page 14 U. S. 373
the States of the power of passing laws to that effect. With
regard to the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, it would be
difficult to prove that the States could resume it if the United
States should abolish the Courts vested with that jurisdiction; yet
it is blended with the other cases of jurisdiction in the second
section of the third article, and ceded in the same words. But it
is contended that the second section of the third article contains
no express cession of jurisdiction; that it only vests a power in
Congress to assume jurisdiction to the extent therein expressed.
And under this head arose the discussion on the construction proper
to be given to that article.
On this part of the case, I shall not pause long. The rules of
construction, where the nature of the instrument is ascertained,
are familiar to every one. To me, the Constitution appears, in
every line of it, to be a contract which, in legal language, may be
denominated tripartite. The parties are the people, the States, and
the United States. It is returning in a circle to contend that it
professes to be the exclusive act of the people, for what have the
people done but to form this compact? That the States are
recognised as parties to it is evident from various passages, and
particularly that in which the United States guaranty to each State
a republican form of Government.
The security and happiness of the whole was the object, and, to
prevent dissention and collision, each surrendered those powers
which might make them dangerous to each other. Well aware of the
sensitive
Page 14 U. S. 374
irritability of sovereign States, where their wills or interests
clash, they placed themselves, with regard to each other, on the
footing of sovereigns upon the ocean, where power is mutually
conceded to act upon the individual, but the national vessel must
remain unviolated. And to remove all ground for jealousy and
complaint, they relinquish the privilege of being any longer the
exclusive arbiters of their own justice where the rights of others
come in question or the great interests of the whole may be
affected by those feelings, partialities, or prejudices, which they
meant to put down forever.
Nor shall I enter into a minute discussion on the meaning of the
language of this section. I have seldom found much good result from
hypercritical severity in examining the distinct force of words.
Language is essentially defective in precision, more so than those
are aware of who are not in the habit of subjecting it to
philological analysis. In the case before us, for instance, a rigid
construction might be made which would annihilate the powers
intended to be ceded. The words are, "shall extend to;" now that
which extends to does not necessarily include in, so that the
circle may enlarge until it reaches the objects that limit it, and
yet not take them in. But the plain and obvious sense and meaning
of the word "shall," in this sentence, is in the future sense, and
has nothing imperative in it. The language of the framers of the
Constitution is "We are about forming a General Government -- when
that Government is formed, its powers shall extend," &c. I
therefore see nothing imperative in this clause, and certainly
Page 14 U. S. 375
it would have been very unnecessary to use the word in that
sense; for, as there was no controlling power constituted, it would
only, if used in an imperative sense, have imposed a moral
obligation to act. But the same result arises from using it in a
future sense, and the Constitution everywhere assumes as a
postulate that wherever power is given, it will be used, or at
least used as far as the interests of the American people require
it, if not from the natural proneness of man to the exercise of
power, at least from a sense of duty and the obligation of an
oath.
Nor can I see any difference in the effect of the words used in
this section, as to the scope of the jurisdiction of the United
States' courts over the cases of the first and second description
comprised in that section. "Shall extend to controversies," appears
to me as comprehensive in effect as "shall extend to all cases."
For if the judicial power extend "to controversies between citizen
and alien," &c., to what controversies of that description does
it not extend? If no case can be pointed out which is excepted, it
then extends to all controversies.
But I will assume the construction as a sound one that the
cession of power to the General Government means no more than that
they may assume the exercise of it whenever they think it
advisable. It is clear that Congress have hitherto acted under that
impression, and my own opinion is in favour of its correctness. But
does it not then follow that the jurisdiction of the State court,
within the range ceded to the General Government, is permitted,
and
Page 14 U. S. 376
may be withdrawn whenever Congress think proper to do so? As it
is a principle that everyone may renounce a right introduced for
his benefit, we will admit that, as Congress have not assumed such
jurisdiction, the State courts may constitutionally exercise
jurisdiction in such cases. Yet surely the general power to
withdraw the exercise of it includes in it the right to modify,
limit, and restrain that exercise.
"This is my domain, put not your foot upon it; if you do, you
are subject to my laws; I have a right to exclude you altogether; I
have, then, a right to prescribe the terms of your admission to a
participation. As long as you conform to my laws, participate in
peace, but I reserve to myself the right of judging how far your
acts are conformable to my laws."
Analogy, then, to the ordinary exercise of sovereign authority
would sustain the exercise of this controlling or revising
power.
But it is argued that a power to assume jurisdiction to the
constitutional extent does not necessarily carry with it a right to
exercise appellate power over the State tribunals.
This is a momentous questions, and one on which I shall reserve
myself uncommitted for each particular case as it shall occur. It
is enough, at present, to have shown that Congress has not
asserted, and this Court has not attempted, to exercise that kind
of authority
in personam over the State courts which would
place them in the relation of an inferior responsible body without
their own acquiescence. And I have too much confidence in the State
tribunals to believe that a case ever will occur in which it will
be necessary
Page 14 U. S. 377
for the General Government to assume a controlling power over
these tribunals. But is it difficult to suppose a case which will
call loudly for some remedy or restraint? Suppose a foreign
minister or an officer acting regularly under authority from the
United States, seized today, tried tomorrow, and hurried the next
day to execution. Such cases may occur, and have occurred, in other
countries. The angry vindictive passions of men have too often made
their way into judicial tribunals, and we cannot hope forever to
escape their baleful influence. In the case supposed, there ought
to be a power somewhere to restrain or punish, or the Union must be
dissolved. At present, the uncontrollable exercise of criminal
jurisdiction is most securely confided to the State tribunals. The
Courts of the United States are vested with no power to scrutinize
into the proceedings of the State courts in criminal cases; on the
contrary, the General Government has, in more than one instance,
exhibited their confidence by a wish to vest them with the
execution of their own penal law. And extreme, indeed, I flatter
myself, must be the case in which the General Government could ever
be induced to assert this right. If ever such a case should occur,
it will be time enough to decide upon their constitutional power to
do so.
But we know that, by the 3d article of the Constitution,
judicial power, to a certain extent, is vested in the General
Government, and that, by the same instrument, power is given to
pass all laws necessary to carry into effect the provisions of the
Constitution. At present, it is only necessary to vindicate the
Page 14 U. S. 378
laws which they have passed affecting civil cases pending in
State tribunals.
In legislating on this subject, Congress, in the true spirit of
the Constitution, have proposed to secure to everyone the full
benefit of the Constitution without forcing any one necessarily
into the courts of the United States. With this view, in one class
of cases, they have not taken away absolutely from the State courts
all the cases to which their judicial power extends, but left it to
the plaintiff to bring his action there originally if he choose, or
to the defendant to force the plaintiff into the courts of the
United States where they have jurisdiction, and the former has
instituted his suit in the State courts. In this case, they have
not made it legal for the defendant to plead to the jurisdiction,
the effect of which would be to put an end to the plaintiff's suit
and oblige him, probably at great risk or expense, to institute a
new action; but the Act has given him a right to obtain an order
for a removal, on a petition to the State court, upon which the
cause, with all its existing advantages, is transferred to the
Circuit Court of the United States. This, I presume, can be subject
to no objection, as the Legislature has an unquestionable right to
make the ground of removal a ground of plea to the jurisdiction,
and the Court must then do no more than it is now called upon to
do, to-wit, give an order or a judgment, or call it what we will,
in favour of that defendant. And so far from asserting the
inferiority of the State tribunal, this act is rather that of a
superior, inasmuch as the Circuit Court of the United States
becomes bound,
Page 14 U. S. 379
by that order, to take jurisdiction of the case. This method, so
much more unlikely to affect official delicacy than that which is
resorted to in the other class of cases, might perhaps have been
more happily applied to all the cases which the Legislature thought
it advisable to remove from the State courts. But the other class
of cases, in which the present is included, was proposed to be
provided for in a different manner. And here, again, the
Legislature of the Union evince their confidence in the State
tribunals, for they do not attempt to give original cognizance to
their own Circuit Courts of such cases, or to remove them by
petition and order; but still believing that their decisions will
be generally satisfactory, a writ of error is not given immediately
as a question within the jurisdiction of the United States shall
occur, but only in case the decision shall finally, in the Court of
the last resort, be against the title set up under the
Constitution, treaty, &c.
In this act I can see nothing which amounts to an assertion of
the inferiority or dependence of the State tribunals. The presiding
judge of the State court is himself authorized to issue the writ of
error, if he will, and thus give jurisdiction to the Supreme Court;
and if he thinks proper to decline it, no compulsory process is
provided by law to oblige him. The party who imagines himself
aggrieved is then at liberty to apply to a judge of the United
States, who issues the writ of error, which (whatever the form) is,
in substance, no more than a mode of compelling the opposite party
to appear before this Court and maintain the legality of his
judgment obtained before the
Page 14 U. S. 380
state tribunal. An exemplification of a record is the common
property of every one who chooses to apply and pay for it, and thus
the case and the parties are brought before us; and so far is the
court itself from being brought under the revising power of this
Court that nothing but the case, as presented by the record and
pleadings of the parties, is considered, and the opinions of the
court are never resorted to unless for the purpose of assisting
this Court in forming their own opinions.
The absolute necessity that there was for Congress to exercise
something of a revising power over cases and parties in the State
courts will appear from this consideration.
Suppose the whole extent of the judicial power of the United
States vested in their own courts, yet such a provision would not
answer all the ends of the Constitution, for two reasons:
1st. Although the plaintiff may, in such case, have the full
benefit of the Constitution extended to him, yet the defendant
would not, as the plaintiff might force him into the court of the
State at his election.
2dly. Supposing it possible so to legislate as to give the
courts of the United States original jurisdiction in all cases
arising under the Constitution, laws, &c., in the words of the
2d section of the 3d article (a point on which I have some doubt,
and which in time might perhaps, under some
quo minus
fiction or a willing construction, greatly accumulate the
jurisdiction of those Courts), yet a very large class of cases
would remain unprovided for. Incidental questions would often
arise, and as a Court of competent
Page 14 U. S. 381
jurisdiction in the principal case must decide all such
questions, whatever laws they arise under, endless might be the
diversity of decisions throughout the Union upon the Constitution,
treaties, and laws of the United States, a subject on which the
tranquillity of the Union, internally and externally, may
materially depend.
I should feel the more hesitation in adopting the opinions which
I express in this case were I not firmly convinced that they are
practical, and may be acted upon without compromitting the harmony
of the Union or bringing humility upon the State tribunals. God
forbid that the judicial power in these States should ever for a
moment, even in its humblest departments, feel a doubt of its own
independence. Whilst adjudicating on a subject which the laws of
the country assign finally to the revising power of another
tribunal, it can feel no such doubt. An anxiety to do justice is
ever relieved by the knowledge that what we do is not final between
the parties. And no sense of dependence can be felt from the
knowledge that the parties, not the Court, may be summoned before
another tribunal. With this view, by means of laws, avoiding
judgments obtained in the State courts in cases over which Congress
has constitutionally assumed jurisdiction, and inflicting penalties
on parties who shall contumaciously persist in infringing the
constitutional rights of others -- under a liberal extension of the
writ of injunction and the habeas corpus
ad subjiciendum,
I flatter myself that the full extent of the constitutional
revising power may be secured to the United States, and the
Page 14 U. S. 382
benefits of it to the individual, without ever resorting to
compulsory or restrictive process upon the State tribunals; a right
which, I repeat again, Congress has not asserted, nor has this
Court asserted, nor does there appear any necessity for
asserting.
The remaining points in the case being mere questions of
practice, I shall make no remarks upon them.
Judgment affirmed.