CHAPTER 1 - The supreme court
The Supreme Court of the United States
on March 10, 1919, handed down a decision on the Debs
case. That decision is far-reaching in its immediate
significance and still more far-reaching in its ultimate
implications.
What is the Supreme Court of the United States?
Article III, Section I of the Constitution provides
as follows:
“The judicial power of the United
States shall be vested in one Supreme Court....
The judges shall hold their offices during good behavior.”
The judges are appointed by the President
and confirmed by the Senate (Article XII, Section
II). That is all the constitution provides with
regard to the Supreme Court.
At the present time, there are nine
judges on the Supreme bench. It might interest
you to know some facts about the nine. All of
the judges are men. The chief justice is Edward
D. White, who was born in 1845 and admitted to the
bar in 1868. He is seventy-three years of age.
His birth-place was Louisiana. He served in the
Confederate Army, in the State Senate, in the State
Supreme Court and in the United States Senate.
He has been a member of the Supreme Court for twenty-five
years. Joseph McKenna is the second member in
point of seniority. He was born in 1843.
His birth-place is Philadelphia. He was a county
District Attorney, a member of the State Legislature,
a member of the national House of Representatives,
attorney-general of the United States and a United
States Circuit Judge. He has been a member of
the Supreme Court for twenty-two years. Oliver
W. Holmes, the Justice who read the Debs decision,
was born in Boston in 1841. He is seventy-seven
years of age. He was admitted to the bar in 1866.
Justice Holmes served in the Union Army; he was a
member of the Harvard Law School Faculty. He has
been a member of the Supreme Court for seventeen years.
Those are the three oldest men on the Supreme bench.
They are the three men who have been on the bench
longest, but their political background is typical
of the political background of the other members of
the Supreme Court, with the single exception of Justice
Louis D. Brandeis, who as far as I know, held no public
office at all before he was appointed a justice of
the Supreme Court three years ago.
The nine members of the Supreme Court
are all old men. Four of them were born before
1850; eight of them were born before 1860; one of them
was born since 1861, that is, James C. McReynolds,
who was born in 1862. There is not a single member
of the Supreme Court bench born since the Civil War.
The oldest man on the bench is Justice Holmes, seventy-seven;
the youngest man on the bench is Justice McReynolds,
fifty-seven; the average age of the justices of the
Supreme Court is sixty-six years. These men all
began practising law while we were children, or before
we were born. Three of them began the practice
of law before 1870; six of them began to practice
law before 1880; nine of them before 1884. The
last member of the Supreme bench to be admitted to
the practice of law, Justice McReynolds, was admitted
in 1884.
The Supreme Court Justices were educated
in the generation preceding the modern epoch of financial
imperialism. They were mature when the industrial
order as we know it today, was established. They
are the men whose word is the word of final authority
in all the affairs concerning the government of the
United States.
The Supreme Court, not because the
Constitution grants it the power, but because successive
decisions of the Court have established that precedent,
has the right to veto any piece of legislation passed
by Congress and signed by the President. The
Supreme Court is the voice of final authority in the
affairs of the government of the United States.
After it has spoken, there is no further authority
under the machinery of this government.
The Debs Case came before the Supreme
Court. The Supreme Court has given its decision.
Eugene Debs goes to jail for ten years. Under
the existing order of government, there is no appeal
from this decision, except an appeal to arbitrary
executive clemency.