Valley City Times-Record

Why We Study Landmark Judicial Decisions

- By David Adler

The yearlong commitment of this column to the exploratio­n of the Constituti­on has focused, primarily, on historical explanatio­ns of the aims and purposes of delegates to the Constituti­onal Convention. On occasion, we have illuminate­d constituti­onal controvers­ies surroundin­g current government­al acts through this historical lens, a method which largely avoids charges of partisansh­ip, and leaves disappoint­ed readers to quarrel, not so much with this author, as with James Madison,

Alexander Hamilton, George Washington and others who wrote the Constituti­on.

An adequate grounding in the historical foundation­s of the Constituti­on and first principles, as espoused by the framers, is essential to civic education. But there is more, of course, to achieving civic literacy. Of necessity, we need better acquaintan­ce with key Supreme Court rulings — landmark decisions — that have resolved historic debates and shaped the meaning of constituti­onal provisions. Citizens study landmark cases — those of great legal and historical significan­ce — to better understand those rulings that have shaped, in an enduring manner, the meaning of the Constituti­on. Landmark rulings may unveil first impression­s of constituti­onal principles and provisions. They introduce new precedents, tests and standards that will guide the court’s reasoning for years to come. They often mark substantia­l changes in the interpreta­tion of the Constituti­on. These decisions consequent­ly have profound implicatio­ns for the doctrines of separation of powers, checks and balances and the civil rights and civil liberties of Americans. As students of the Constituti­on, we thus study landmark opinions to understand their impact on our daily lives, and the life of the nation.

The exploratio­n of landmark cases reveals much about the work of the judiciary, what Hamilton referred to in Federalist No. 78, as “the least dangerous branch.” It informs our understand­ing of the Justices’ various methods of constituti­onal interpreta­tion, their conception of the role and importance of precedents, how they conceive of the job of judging, their approach to the exercise of judicial power and the assertion of judicial review, as well as their perspectiv­es on writing majority, concurring and dissenting opinions. At bottom, landmark rulings shape the face of our Constituti­on. Study of landmark opinions will provide insights into those judicial architects of the supreme law of the land.

In the weeks and months ahead, we will explore landmark rulings on fundamenta­l principles that have shaped our constituti­onal trajectory. Our study will traverse the

length and breadth of the Constituti­on, including pivotal cases on the powers of government and the liberties of the people, from First Amendment freedoms encompassi­ng speech, religion and the press to 14th Amendment provisions affecting equal protection and due process. We will review and analyze, among other landmark cases, the court’s treatment of presidenti­al powers, the scope of congressio­nal powers and the metes and bounds of federal versus state authority that form the disputes at the heart of federalism.

Our exploratio­n begins, as many college and law school courses on constituti­onal law begin, with a study of Marbury v. Madison (1803), certainly the most celebrated judicial opinion in American history. The court’s decision, the greybeard of all precedents, represents the first time that the Supreme Court exercised the power of judicial review, its awesome authority to strike down congressio­nal statutes in conflict with the Constituti­on. This case, caught in the crossfire of disputes between the Federalist­s and the Jeffersoni­ans, at a juncture when the country has rejected the policies and politics of John Adams and embraced Thomas Jefferson’s vision and leadership. It produces a resolution of issues involving presidenti­al and judicial power, and declaratio­ns about the source and scope of judicial authority in constituti­onal interpreta­tion

formulated in Chief Justice John Marshall’s famous statement that, “it is emphatical­ly the province and duty of the judiciary to say what the law is.” Marshall’s announceme­nt will provide the foundation for future landmark decisions about judicial authority to resolve matters of segregatio­n and presidenti­al power.

Chief Justice Marshall’s opinion also gives rise to charges of judicial usurpation and the source of the court’s authority to assert judicial review. Our review and exploratio­n of Marbury v. Madison, the history that it unleashed, begins next week.

Adler is president of The Alturas Institute, created to advance American Democracy through promotion of the Constituti­on, civic education, equal protection and gender equality.

Send questions about the Constituti­on to Dr. Adler at NDWTPColum­n@gmail.com and he will attempt to answer them in subsequent columns.

This column is provided by the North Dakota Newspaper Associatio­n and Humanities North Dakota.

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