登陆注册
15709400000260

第260章

The States are entirely free on this point. The usual course is to have one Supreme Court, sometimes called by that name, sometimes the Court of Appeals, and sometimes the Court of Errors. Then they have such especial courts as their convenience may dictate. The State jurisprudence includes all causes not expressly or by necessary implication secured to the national courts. The tribunals of the States have exclusive control over domestic relations, religion, education, the tenure and descent of land, the inheritance of property, police regulations, municipal economy, and all matters of internal trade. In this category, of course, come the relations of husband and wife, parent and child, master and servant, owner and slave, guardian and ward, tradesman and apprentice. So also do all police and criminal regulations not external in their character--highways, railroads, canals, schools, colleges, the relief of paupers, and those thousand other affairs of the world by which men are daily surrounded in their own homes and their own districts. As to such subjects Congress can make no law, and over them Congress and the national tribunals have no jurisdiction. Congress cannot say that a man shall be hung for murder in New York, nor if a man be condemned to be hung in New York can the President pardon him. The legislature of New York must say whether or no hanging shall be the punishment adjudged to murder in that State; and the Governor of the State of New York must pronounce the man's pardon--if it be that he is to be pardoned. But Congress must decide whether or no a man shall be hung for murder committed on the high seas, or in the national forts or arsenals; and in such a case it is for the President to give or to refuse the pardon.

The judges of the States are appointed as the constitution or the laws of each State may direct in that matter. The appointments, Ithink, in all the old States, were formerly vested in the governor.

In some States such is still the case. In some, if I am not mistaken, the nomination is now made, directly, by the legislature.

But in most of the States the power of appointing has been claimed by the people, and the judges are voted in by popular election, just as the President of the Union and the Governors of the different States are voted in. There has for some years been a growing tendency in this direction, and the people in most of the States have claimed the power--or rather the power has been given to the people by politicians who have wished to get into their hands, in this way, the patronage of the courts. But now, at the present moment, there is arising a strong feeling of the inexpediency of appointing judges in such a manner. An anti-democratic bias is taking possession of men's minds, causing a reaction against that tendency to universal suffrage in everything which prevailed before the war began. As to this matter of the mode of appointing judges, I have heard but one opinion expressed; and I am inclined to think that a change will be made in one State after another, as the constitutions of the different States are revised. Such revisions take place generally at periods of about twenty-five years'

duration. If, therefore, it be acknowledged that the system be bad, the error can be soon corrected.

Nor is this mode of appointment the only evil that has been adopted in the State judicatures. The judges in most of the States are not appointed for life, nor even during good behavior. They enter their places for a certain term of years, varying from fifteen down, Ibelieve, to seven. I do not know whether any are appointed for a term of less than seven years. When they go out they have no pensions; and as a lawyer who has been on the bench for seven years can hardly recall his practice, and find himself at once in receipt of his old professional income, it may easily be imagined how great will be the judge's anxiety to retain his position on the bench.

This he can do only by the universal suffrages of the people, by political popularity, and a general standing of that nature which enables a man to come forth as the favorite candidate of the lower orders. This may or may not be well when the place sought for is one of political power--when the duties required are political in all their bearings. But no one can think it well when the place sought for is a judge's seat on the bench--when the duties required are solely judicial. Whatever hitherto may have been the conduct of the judges in the courts of the different States, whether or no impurity has yet crept in, and the sanctity of justice has yet been outraged, no one can doubt the tendency of such an arrangement. At present even a few visits to the courts constituted in this manner will convince an observer that the judges on the bench are rather inferior than superior to the lawyers who practice before them. The manner of address, the tone of voice, the lack of dignity in the judge, and the assumption by the lawyer before him of a higher authority than his, all tell this tale. And then the judges in these courts are not paid at a rate which will secure the services of the best men. They vary in the different States, running from about 600l. to about 1000l. per annum. But a successful lawyer, practicing in the courts in which these judges sit, not unfrequently earns 3000l. a year. A professional income of 2000l. a year is not considered very high. When the different conditions of the bench are considered, when it is remembered that the judge may lose his place after a short term of years, and that during that short term of years he receives a payment much less than that earned by his successful professional brethren, it can hardly be expected that first-rate judges should be found. The result is seen daily in society. You meet Judge This and Judge That, not knowing whether they are ex-judges or in-judges; but you soon learn that your friends do not hold any very high social position on account of their forensic dignity.

It is, perhaps, but just to add that in Massachusetts, which Icannot but regard as in many respects the noblest of the States, the judges are appointed by the Governor, and are appointed for life.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 做人要内敛 做事要方圆

    做人要内敛 做事要方圆

    本书内容包括:谦虚——态度好才能人缘好;低调——弯得低才能站得高;妥协——看得透才能认得真;糊涂——输得起才能赢得了;放弃——拿得起才能放得下等。
  • 风谕

    风谕

    少年家祸,跌宕重生,苍茫世界寻求强者之路……
  • 懒猫洛洛

    懒猫洛洛

    懒得耍心眼,懒得弄明白,懒得斗家长,懒得谈恋爱,懒着懒着……过得也还好嘛(⊙_⊙)?
  • 吸血契约伯爵的无奈

    吸血契约伯爵的无奈

    情不知从何起,而一往情深。本是上帝的宠儿,只为一个情字,甘愿下地狱。问世间情为何物,直叫人生死相许。天帝的女儿,终究也逃不过一个情字。今夕何夕,情起缘灭。
  • 古玉灵卷

    古玉灵卷

    这世上总流传着古玉与灵卷的传闻,得其一便可统领一方天下。倘若集齐所有,便可窥视长生不老之秘,得七大秘宝之方。一起追寻着遗留的脚步,揭开这世上的未知存在!o(≧v≦)o~~力作新书!~求收藏,求推荐!
  • 爱上我,你的本能

    爱上我,你的本能

    宠文一本,主凯线。当然也会出现源源和烊烊。
  • 穿越之亚瑟帝国

    穿越之亚瑟帝国

    三个女生意外发现一本古老的书,由这本书引起了一系列不可思议的事情。
  • 学会工作 学会休息

    学会工作 学会休息

    不会休息的人常常以某些名人为榜样,认为只有废寝忘食、徐以继日地工作,工作再工作,就能取得优异成绩,并以牺牲休息为自豪。其实这是非常片面的。许多名人所以在工作中做出惊人成绩并非因为他们以牺牲休息为代价,恰恰相反,他们当中许多人因为很重视休息,才赢得了健康的体魄和旺盛的精力,这正是他们成就事业的基础和本钱。本书收集了许多精彩的故事,它们是爱的化身,是真情的足迹,是风雨人生的希望之光,是平凡生活中的智慧之灯。它们都是我们平凡生命中的鹅卵石,捡起来放在口袋里,终有一天它会变成无价的宝石。
  • 随身武帝

    随身武帝

    现代普通的青年程飞,在一个雨夜被天打雷劈到程家的练武废材身上。资质不给力?有了武帝系统,只要随随便便的一个穿越,逆袭什么的完全不是什么问题。来吧丹药们,符文装备们,宝物们...乖乖的到我碗里来吧。就算你是神,只要给我看重的,我明的的抢不到,暗中的也要偷偷的出手...
  • 前列腺病实用自我疗法(实用自我疗法系列)

    前列腺病实用自我疗法(实用自我疗法系列)

    前列腺病是男性的“专利”,给男性朋友的生活带来很大的影响。本书从正确了解前列腺,正确检查前列腺病、前列腺炎、前列腺增生症,前列腺疾病的饮食治疗等方面为患者提供权威的医学指导。