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Okla-homey
3/6/2009, 06:41 AM
March 6, 1857 Supreme Court rules in Dred Scott case

On this day 152 years ago, in a 7-2 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court hands down its decision on Sandford v. Scott, a case that intensified national divisions over the issue of slavery.

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Chief Justice Roger Taney of Maryland (a slave state) wrote the opinion

In 1834, Dred Scott, a slave, had been taken to Illinois, a free state, and then Wisconsin territory, where the Missouri Compromise of 1820 prohibited slavery. Scott lived in Wisconsin with his master, Dr. John Emerson, an Army surgeon, for several years before returning to Missouri, a slave state.

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Dred Scott. He died in 1858 about a year after the historic decision which bears his name.

In 1846, after Emerson died, Scott sued his master's widow for his freedom on the grounds that he had lived as a resident of a free state and territory. He won his suit in a lower court, but the Missouri supreme court reversed the decision.

Scott appealed the decision, and as his new "master" (to whom Scott had been leased,) John F.A. Sanford, was a resident of New York, a federal court decided to hear the case on the basis of the diversity of state citizenship represented. Note: The case went down in official Court records as Sandford v. Scott because a clerk misspelled appellee Sanford's name and the error was never corrected.

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From the National Archives

After a federal district court decided against Scott, the case came on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which was divided along slavery and antislavery lines; although the Southern justices had a majority.

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Map of pre-1860 US. Slave states in grey, free in pink. Organized territories in green.

During the trial, the antislavery justices used the case to defend the constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise, which had been repealed by the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. The Southern majority responded by ruling on this day in 1857, that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional and that Congress had no power to prohibit slavery in the territories.

Three of the Southern justices also held that blacks who were slaves or whose ancestors were slaves were not entitled to the rights of a federal citizen and therefore had no standing to sue.

These rulings all confirmed that, in the view of the nation's highest court, under no condition did Dred Scott have the legal right to request his freedom. The Supreme Court's verdict further inflamed the irrepressible differences in America over the issue of slavery, which in 1861 erupted with the outbreak of the American Civil War.

Bottomline, the Court ruled that:

- No blacks, not even "free" blacks, could ever become citizens of the United States. They were "beings of an inferior order" not included in the phrase "all men" in the Declaration of Independence nor afforded any rights by the Constitution.

- The exclusion of slavery from a U.S. territory in the Missouri Compromise was an unconstitutional deprivation of property (Negro slaves) without due process prohibited by the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. IOW, if the law could deprive a slave owner of his property without "due process" that would constitute a violation of the 5th amendment. This is the first appearance in American constitutional law of the concept of "substantive due process," as opposed to "procedural" due process.

- Dred Scott was not free, because Missouri law alone applied after he returned there.

The matter was ultimately decided by ratification of the 13, 14 and 15th amendments to the Constitution in the wake of the Civil War which outlawed slavery, established citizenship of former slaves and bestowed upon them all the rights possessed by any other American citizen -- of course it was not until a hundred years later after the great civil rights struggles of the 1960's that these rights would become "real."

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King Crimson
3/6/2009, 06:52 AM
punning in the title, is not so great. :D

i like those old maps and have a couple of "Indian Territory".

Mixer!
3/6/2009, 10:10 AM
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/2c/Judge_Dredd_promo_poster.jpg

bri
3/6/2009, 11:46 AM
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3369/3333570206_e27d684671_o.jpg

47straight
3/6/2009, 12:27 PM
Homey, you need to highlight the ramifications of that old due process argument and it's philosophical children.

Penguin
3/6/2009, 01:06 PM
How did so many Southerners get on the Supreme Court?

Also, I know that the Southern legislators left Congress before the Civil War. Did some Southern justices leave the Supreme Court too?

Preservation Parcels
3/7/2009, 03:40 AM
I work at the historic New Castle Court House. In 1848, Chief Justice Taney presided over the trial of Thomas Garrett there. He was charged with helping Samuel Hawkins' family of eight to freedom. Justice Taney had asserted that "black men had no rights which white men were bound to respect."

Garrett was fined $5400, a huge amount of money. William Still wrote in his 1872 book, The Underground Railroad (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/15263/15263-h/15263-h.htm), "When the trials were concluded, Mr. Garrett arose, the court being adjourned, made a speech of an hour to the large crowd in the court-room, in the course of which he declared his intention to redouble his exertions, so help him God. His bold assertion was greeted with mingled cheers and hisses, and at the conclusion of his speech one of the jurors who had convicted him strode across the benches, grasped his hand, and begged his forgivenness."

Taney, a Maryland slaveholder himself, had financial interest in making sure the trial ended up as it did. He was clearly trying to send a message that abolitionist activity would be punished. At the time, there was a lot of question about "packing the jury" with slaveholders to make sure.

Interestingly, even though Maryland was a slave state just like Delaware, Missouri, and Kentucky, all four of those border states fought for the North all the while retaining their slaves. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation only freed slaves in states that were in rebellion. Since those four states fought for the Union, they were allowed to keep their slaves until ratification of the 13th Amendment after the War.

Another man, John Hunn, was on trial at the same time as Thomas Garrett. He was fined $2500. Previously one of the most prosperous farmers in the state, he had to sell his farm and property to pay the fine. He moved to South Carolina where he worked with the Freedman's Bureau. He died penniless. His son became the governor of Delaware in 1901, the year in which the state finally signed the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments.

Thank you, Homey. It makes me wonder how many people today would sacrifice so much for something in which they believed.