[On June 12th,
1967, the Supreme Court ruled
in Loving v. Virginia to strike
down all remaining laws prohibiting interracial marriage. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy
Loving and four other cases in which
the Court helped advance social progress, leading up to a special weekend post
on the role of courts and judges in our own society!]
On the decision
that could not stop a tragedy—but did, eventually, help make history.
In his final few
years as Chief Justice, John Marshall’s Supreme Court had two significant
chances to weigh in on one of the Early Republic’s most controversial and
tragic federal actions: Andrew Jackson’s
Indian Removal Act (1830), and its immediate, destructive, and enduring impacts
on the Cherokee Nation. Marshall and company whiffed on their first such
opportunity: ruling in 1831’s Cherokee Nation v. Georgia that the
tribe was more of a federal “ward” than an independent nation, and thus that
the Cherokee could not assert their sovereignty apart from the United States.
More exactly, that ruling allowed the Court to sidestep deciding the case
altogether, and thus perhaps to avoid utilizing Marshall’s concept of judicial
review to challenge and overturn Jackson’s discriminatory Act.
If that avoidance
was any part of Marshall’s or the Court’s purpose, however, it did not last
long. Less than a year later, the Court was offered the chance to, as Justice Joseph
Story put it, “wash [our] hands clean of the iniquity of oppressing the
Indians and disregarding their rights.” That chance was Worcester v. Georgia (1832), and in
the decision Marshall and his Court not only asserted the Cherokee tribe’s
specific right to determine what outsiders could visit their tribal lands (the
case’s explicit focus was a Georgia law prohibiting certain missionaries from
doing so), but also their broader status as a “distinct community occupying its
own territory in which the laws of Georgia can have no force.” In so doing, the
Court likewise affirmed all prior “treaties and laws of the United States” in
dealing with this distinct and sovereign community, and thus, without ever
explicitly referencing the Removal Act, supported the tribe’s
legal and historical arguments against the Act and in favor of the many
prior treaties and agreements it was violating.
In the moment,
this latter decision had no effect at all. President
Jackson supposedly responded, “John Marshall has made his decision; now let him
enforce it!”; whether he uttered those words or not, his actions
exemplified such a perspective, as he continue supporting Georgia and enacting
the Removal Act. Compared to the power of judicial removal and the heightened
role for the Court it had effected, this case thus seems to reveal the limits
of the Court’s authority. Yet if immediate power is one kind of legal
authority, precedent is another, and of course a more lasting one. And to many
scholars of Native American history and culture, the Worcester decision represented one of the first federal
acknowledgments of sovereignty—a
concept that has come to be increasingly central to a wide range of Native
American ideas, arguments, and efforts. Marshall might not have been able
to counter his era’s most discriminatory federal law, that is, but he
contributed to a far more lasting and progressive American idea.
Next decision
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Supreme Court decisions or contexts you’d highlight?
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