manifestly defective and hazards the existence of the
Constitution. . . . It will, nevertheless, be carried on
the triumphant vote of a great majority (many of them
inwardly cursing their leaders) because the President
has recommended it. . . . But I do not see how a
member is to excuse himself, either to his conscience or
to his constituents, for such excessive complaisance.
And a Washington correspondent wrote: "The passage of the bill to destroy the Judiciary may be much
obstructed but it will pass. Mr. Jefferson has set his heart upon this measure. "Tis his favorite measure
and his party will (whatever scruples some of them may
feel about the constitutionality of it) make this desired
offering to his revengeful spirit." Another wrote:
"A band of ministerial mutes stand ready to pass it
without debate. These mutes are highly drilled at
the Assembly Room."[1] The bill passed the House
by a party vote of fifty-nine to thirty-two, and became
law on March 31, 1802. Under its provisions, the Act
of 1801 was repealed, and the country was divided into
six instead of three Circuits, to each of which was assigned
definitely a separate Judge of the Supreme Court, who
together with a District Court Judge should compose the
Circuit Court.[2] "Judges created for political purposes, and for the worst of purposes under a republican
government, for the purpose of opposing the National will, from this day cease to exist," exultingly exclaimed an Administration paper.[3]
- ↑ Diary and Letters of Gouverneur Morris (1888), II, 411 et seq. See as to Morris' great speech on the bill, New York Spectator, Jan. 23, 30, 1802; Farmer's Weekly Museum, Feb. 2, 15, 1802; Connecticut Courant, Feb. 22, 1802, letter of a Washington correspondent; New York Evening Post, Feb. 22, 1802.
- ↑ While the Act did not meet the full desires of the Judges, it was admitted, even by Chief Justice Marshall, to be a "great improvement of the pre-existing system." United States v. Duvall (1821), 6 Wheat. 542, 547.
- ↑ See National Intelligencer, March 5, 1802; ibid., Feb. 5, 1802, terming the bill "the triumph of Republican principles. . . economy in the public expenditure, distrust of extravagant executive patronage, a dread of whatever tends to the