Difference between revisions of "Morrison Waite" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
As chief justice he swore in Presidents Rutherford Hayes, [[James Garfield]], [[Chester A. Arthur]], and [[Grover Cleveland]].
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Waite's legacy to constitutional law falls into three domains. His opinions were the first interpreting the Civil War Amendments. Second, his opinions guided state governments as they sought to address economic changes resulting from the industrial revolution. Finally, Waite's view of the judicial function guided thinking about judicial review well into the twentieth century.
  
There is reason to believe that Justice Waite was not highly regarded by every one. One quote, attributed to one of his brother Justices, call him "an experiment no President has a right to make with our Court." However, like his successor Melville Fuller, he is credited with being an efficient and capable administrator of the Court.
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As chief justice, Waite swore in Presidents Rutherford Hayes, [[James Garfield]], [[Chester A. Arthur]], and [[Grover Cleveland]].
 +
 
 +
Like his successor Melville Fuller, he is credited with being an efficient and capable administrator of the Court.
  
 
Supreme Court Justice [[Felix Frankfurter]] said of him:<blockquote>"He did not confine the constitution within the limits of his own experience...The disciplined and disinterested lawyer in him transcended the bounds of the environment within which he moved and the views of the client whom he served at the bar".</blockquote>
 
Supreme Court Justice [[Felix Frankfurter]] said of him:<blockquote>"He did not confine the constitution within the limits of his own experience...The disciplined and disinterested lawyer in him transcended the bounds of the environment within which he moved and the views of the client whom he served at the bar".</blockquote>
  
Waite was one of the [[Peabody Education Fund|Peabody Trustees of Southern Education]] and was a vocal advocate to aiding schools for the education of blacks in the south.
+
Waite was one of the [[Peabody Education Fund|Peabody Trustees of Southern Education]], and was a vocal advocate to aiding schools for the education of blacks in the south.
  
 
==Quote==
 
==Quote==

Revision as of 21:00, 27 October 2007


Morrison Remick Waite
Morrison Waite


7th Chief Justice of the United States
In office
March 4, 1874 – March 23, 1888
Nominated by Ulysses S. Grant
Preceded by Salmon P. Chase
Succeeded by Melville Fuller

Born November 29 1816(1816-11-29)
Lyme, Connecticut
Died March 23 1888 (aged 71)
Washington, DC
Religion Episcopalian

Morrison Remick Waite, nicknamed "Mott" (November 29, 1816 – March 23, 1888) was the Chief Justice of the United States from 1874 to 1888.


Early life and career

He was born at Lyme, Connecticut, the son of Henry Matson Waite, who was a judge of the Superior Court and associate judge of the Supreme Court of Connecticut in 1834–1854 and chief justice of the latter in 1854–1857.

He graduated from Yale where he was classmate with the future Democratic presidential nominee in 1876, Samuel J. Tilden. There he became a member of the Skull and Bones Society in 1837, and soon afterwards moved to Maumee, Ohio, where he studied law in the office of Samuel L. Young, and was admitted to the bar in 1839. He served one term as mayor of Maumee. He married Amelia Warner in 1840, and had three sons with her—Henry Seldon, Christopher Champlin, Edward T, and one daughter, Mary F. In 1850, he moved to Toledo and soon came to be recognized as a leader of the state bar. In politics, he was first a Whig and later a Republican, and, in 1849–1850, he was a member of the Ohio Senate.

Before the Civil War, Waite opposed slavery and the southern slave states' withdrawal from the Union. In 1871, with William M. Evarts and Caleb Cushing, Waite represented the United States as counsel before the Alabama Tribunal at Geneva, and, in 1874, he presided over the Ohio constitutional convention.

Appointed Chief Justice

In the same year, Waite was appointed by President Ulysses S. Grant to succeed Judge Salmon P. Chase as Chief Justice of the United States, and he held this position until his death in 1888. President Grant had offered the Chief Justiceship to, among others, Senator Roscoe Conkling and Democrat Caleb Cushing before he settled on Waite who learned of his nomination by a telegram.

The nomination was not well-received. Former Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles remarked of the nomination that "It is a wonder that Grant did not pick up some old acquaintance, who was a stage driver or bartender, for the place," and the political journal The Nation said "Mr. Waite stands in the front-rank of second-rank lawyers."

The Waite Court, 1874–1888

In the cases that grew out of the American Civil War and Reconstruction, and especially in those that involved the interpretation of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth amendments, Waite sympathized with the general tendency of the court to restrict the further extension of the powers of the Federal government.

In a particularly notable ruling in United States v. Cruikshank, he struck down the Enforcement Act, ruling that, "The very highest duty of the States, when they entered into the Union under the Constitution, was to protect all persons within their boundaries in the enjoyment of these 'unalienable rights with which they were endowed by their Creator.' Sovereignty, for this purpose, rests alone with the States. It is no more the duty or within the power of the United States to punish for a conspiracy to falsely imprison or murder within a State, than it would be to punish for false imprisonment or murder itself." Waite concluded that, "We may suspect that race was the cause of the hostility but is it not so averred."

His belief was that white moderates should set the rules of racial relations in the South, which reflected the majority of the Court and the people of the United States, who were tired of the bitter racial strife involved with the affairs of Reconstruction. This decision practically overturned the Fourteenth Amendment. But it backfired when arch-segregationists in the South regained power and legislated the infamous Jim Crow laws that disenfranchised African-Americans in the South. These laws lasted long into the Twentieth Century.

Waite opinion of Munn v. Illinois (1877) was one of a group of six Granger cases involving Populist-inspired state legislation to fix maximum rates chargeable by grain elevators and railroads. Of it he wrote, that when a business or private property was "affected with a public interest," it was subject to governmental regulation. Thus, he was ruling against charges that Granger laws constituted encroachment of private property without due process of law and conflicted with the Fourteenth Amendment. The ardent New Dealers in the Franklin Roosevelt administration looked to Munn v. Illinois to guide them in matters like due process, commerce, and contract clauses .

He concurred with the majority in the Head Money Cases (1884), the Ku-Klux Case (United States v. Harris (1883), the Civil Rights Cases (1883), Pace v. Alabama (1883), and the Legal Tender Cases, including Juillard v. Greenman (1883). Among his own most important decisions were those in the Enforcement Act Cases (1875), the Sinking Fund Cases (1878), the Railroad Commission Cases (1886), and the Telephone Cases (1887).

Presidential run refused

In 1876 when there was talk about a third term for President Grant, some Republicans turned to Waite as they believed he was a better presidential nominee for the Republican Party than the scandal-tainted Grant. Waite turned down the idea, arguing "my duty was not to make it a stepping stone to someone else, but to preserve its purity and make my own name as honorable as that of any of my predecessors." In the aftermath of the presidential election of 1876, he refused to sit on the Electoral Commission that decided the electoral votes of Florida because of his close friendship of GOP presidential nominee Rutherford B. Hayes and his classmateship with the Democratic presidential nominee Samuel J. Tilden, whom Waite had studied together with at Yale College.

Waite served as chief justice for 14 years and died in Washington, D.C. on March 23, 1888, at the age of 71.

Legacy

Waite's legacy to constitutional law falls into three domains. His opinions were the first interpreting the Civil War Amendments. Second, his opinions guided state governments as they sought to address economic changes resulting from the industrial revolution. Finally, Waite's view of the judicial function guided thinking about judicial review well into the twentieth century.

As chief justice, Waite swore in Presidents Rutherford Hayes, James Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, and Grover Cleveland.

Like his successor Melville Fuller, he is credited with being an efficient and capable administrator of the Court.

Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter said of him:

"He did not confine the constitution within the limits of his own experience...The disciplined and disinterested lawyer in him transcended the bounds of the environment within which he moved and the views of the client whom he served at the bar".

Waite was one of the Peabody Trustees of Southern Education, and was a vocal advocate to aiding schools for the education of blacks in the south.

Quote

For protection against abusers by legislatures the People must resort to the polls, not the courts.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Magrath, C. Peter. Morrison R. Waite: The Triumph of Character, Macmillan, 1963. ASIN B0006A4074
  • Rehnquist, William H. The Supreme Court, 2002. ISBN 978-0375708619
  • Stephenson, Donald, & Renstrom, Peter. The Waite Court: Justice, Rulings, and Legacy, ABC-CLIO, 2003. ISBN 978-1576078297
  • Trimble, Bruce R. Chief Justice Waite: Defender of the Public Interest, Russell & Russell, 1970. ASIN B000CTZRG

External links

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