Fr. 39.50

Lest We Be Marshalled - Judicial Powers and Politics in Ohio, 1806-1812

English · Hardback

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Description

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Although the power of American courts to determine the constitutionality of laws (the power of judicial review) was sometimes disputed during the first decades of the nation's history, Ohio was the only state where the judiciary's claim to the power was challenged by subjecting judges who had exercised it to prosecution by impeachment. George Tod and Calvin Pease were accordingly tried by the Ohio Senate in 1809, charged with subverting the state constitution by undertaking as judges to pass on the constitutionality of an act of the legislature. With the legitimacy of such undertakings the sole contested issue, both trials ended with 'guilty' votes of a majority of the senators, one short of the two-thirds required for conviction. Frustrated by the inconclusiveness of this result, opponents of the power invoked a novel interpretation of the state constitution's tenure provision to purge Ohio courts of all judges considered insufficiently deferential to the legislative branch. Known as the Sweeping Resolution, this action raised the broader constitutional issue of the judiciary's independence as a branch of government. The controversy lasted from 1806, when the first of the court decisions invalidating an act of the legislature was rendered, until 1812 when the Sweeping Resolution was effectively repealed. The constitutional issues were themselves addressed by political processes, in statewide elections as well as in the impeachment trials and that they were concurrently subjects of prolonged and widely participatory public discourse makes the story especially interesting. "Lest We Be Marshall'd" was the punch line of a toast given in 1808 before a large gathering of Cincinnati citizenscelebrating the Fourth of July. This richly anecdotal story is set in a

About the author










Donald F. Melhorn, Jr. has been in practice with Marshall and Melhorn since 1964. He has also been a Lecturer in Law at the University of Toledo College of Law. He received his B.A. at Yale University and his LL.B. from Harvard Law School in 1960.

Product details

Authors Donald F Melhorn Jr, Donald F. Melhorn Jr
Publisher The University of Akron Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.04.2003
 
EAN 9781931968010
ISBN 978-1-931968-01-0
No. of pages 291
Dimensions 157 mm x 231 mm x 25 mm
Weight 612 g
Series Law, Politics, and Society
Law, Politics, and Society
Subjects Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Law > International law, foreign law

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