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						No. 81 The Judiciary Continued, and 
						the Distribution of the Judicial Authority - From 
						McLEAN'S Edition, New York.
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				| Author: Alexander Hamilton 
 To the People of the State of New York:
 
 LET US now return to the partition of the judiciary authority 
				between different courts, and their relations to each other, 
				``The judicial power of the United States is'' (by the plan of 
				the convention) ``to be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such 
				inferior courts as the Congress may, from time to time, ordain 
				and establish.''
 
 That there ought to be one court of supreme and final 
				jurisdiction, is a proposition which is not likely to be 
				contested. The reasons for it have been assigned in another 
				place, and are too obvious to need repetition. The only question 
				that seems to have been raised concerning it, is, whether it 
				ought to be a distinct body or a branch of the legislature. The 
				same contradiction is observable in regard to this matter which 
				has been remarked in several other cases. The very men who 
				object to the Senate as a court of impeachments, on the ground 
				of an improper intermixture of powers, advocate, by implication 
				at least, the propriety of vesting the ultimate decision of all 
				causes, in the whole or in a part of the legislative body.
 
 The arguments, or rather suggestions, upon which this charge is 
				founded, are to this effect: ``The authority of the proposed 
				Supreme Court of the United States, which is to be a separate 
				and independent body, will be superior to that of the 
				legislature. The power of construing the laws according to the 
				SPIRIT of the Constitution, will enable that court to mould them 
				into whatever shape it may think proper; especially as its 
				decisions will not be in any manner subject to the revision or 
				correction of the legislative body. This is as unprecedented as 
				it is dangerous. In Britain, the judicial power, in the last 
				resort, resides in the House of Lords, which is a branch of the 
				legislature; and this part of the British government has been 
				imitated in the State constitutions in general. The Parliament 
				of Great Britain, and the legislatures of the several States, 
				can at any time rectify, by law, the exceptionable decisions of 
				their respective courts. But the errors and usurpations of the 
				Supreme Court of the United States will be uncontrollable and 
				remediless.'' This, upon examination, will be found to be made 
				up altogether of false reasoning upon misconceived fact.
 
 In the first place, there is not a syllable in the plan under 
				consideration which DIRECTLY empowers the national courts to 
				construe the laws according to the spirit of the Constitution, 
				or which gives them any greater latitude in this respect than 
				may be claimed by the courts of every State. I admit, however, 
				that the Constitution ought to be the standard of construction 
				for the laws, and that wherever there is an evident opposition, 
				the laws ought to give place to the Constitution. But this 
				doctrine is not deducible from any circumstance peculiar to the 
				plan of the convention, but from the general theory of a limited 
				Constitution; and as far as it is true, is equally applicable to 
				most, if not to all the State governments. There can be no 
				objection, therefore, on this account, to the federal judicature 
				which will not lie against the local judicatures in general, and 
				which will not serve to condemn every constitution that attempts 
				to set bounds to legislative discretion.
 
 But perhaps the force of the objection may be thought to consist 
				in the particular organization of the Supreme Court; in its 
				being composed of a distinct body of magistrates, instead of 
				being one of the branches of the legislature, as in the 
				government of Great Britain and that of the State. To insist 
				upon this point, the authors of the objection must renounce the 
				meaning they have labored to annex to the celebrated maxim, 
				requiring a separation of the departments of power. It shall, 
				nevertheless, be conceded to them, agreeably to the 
				interpretation given to that maxim in the course of these 
				papers, that it is not violated by vesting the ultimate power of 
				judging in a PART of the legislative body. But though this be 
				not an absolute violation of that excellent rule, yet it verges 
				so nearly upon it, as on this account alone to be less eligible 
				than the mode preferred by the convention. From a body which had 
				even a partial agency in passing bad laws, we could rarely 
				expect a disposition to temper and moderate them in the 
				application. The same spirit which had operated in making them, 
				would be too apt in interpreting them; still less could it be 
				expected that men who had infringed the Constitution in the 
				character of legislators, would be disposed to repair the breach 
				in the character of judges. Nor is this all. Every reason which 
				recommends the tenure of good behavior for judicial offices, 
				militates against placing the judiciary power, in the last 
				resort, in a body composed of men chosen for a limited period. 
				There is an absurdity in referring the determination of causes, 
				in the first instance, to judges of permanent standing; in the 
				last, to those of a temporary and mutable constitution. And 
				there is a still greater absurdity in subjecting the decisions 
				of men, selected for their knowledge of the laws, acquired by 
				long and laborious study, to the revision and control of men 
				who, for want of the same advantage, cannot but be deficient in 
				that knowledge. The members of the legislature will rarely be 
				chosen with a view to those qualifications which fit men for the 
				stations of judges; and as, on this account, there will be great 
				reason to apprehend all the ill consequences of defective 
				information, so, on account of the natural propensity of such 
				bodies to party divisions, there will be no less reason to fear 
				that the pestilential breath of faction may poison the fountains 
				of justice. The habit of being continually marshalled on 
				opposite sides will be too apt to stifle the voice both of law 
				and of equity.
 
 These considerations teach us to applaud the wisdom of those 
				States who have committed the judicial power, in the last 
				resort, not to a part of the legislature, but to distinct and 
				independent bodies of men. Contrary to the supposition of those 
				who have represented the plan of the convention, in this 
				respect, as novel and unprecedented, it is but a copy of the 
				constitutions of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, 
				Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, 
				and Georgia; and the preference which has been given to those 
				models is highly to be commended.
 
 It is not true, in the second place, that the Parliament of 
				Great Britain, or the legislatures of the particular States, can 
				rectify the exceptionable decisions of their respective courts, 
				in any other sense than might be done by a future legislature of 
				the United States. The theory, neither of the British, nor the 
				State constitutions, authorizes the revisal of a judicial 
				sentence by a legislative act. Nor is there any thing in the 
				proposed Constitution, more than in either of them, by which it 
				is forbidden. In the former, as well as in the latter, the 
				impropriety of the thing, on the general principles of law and 
				reason, is the sole obstacle. A legislature, without exceeding 
				its province, cannot reverse a determination once made in a 
				particular case; though it may prescribe a new rule for future 
				cases. This is the principle, and it applies in all its 
				consequences, exactly in the same manner and extent, to the 
				State governments, as to the national government now under 
				consideration. Not the least difference can be pointed out in 
				any view of the subject.
 
 It may in the last place be observed that the supposed danger of 
				judiciary encroachments on the legislative authority, which has 
				been upon many occasions reiterated, is in reality a phantom. 
				Particular misconstructions and contraventions of the will of 
				the legislature may now and then happen; but they can never be 
				so extensive as to amount to an inconvenience, or in any 
				sensible degree to affect the order of the political system. 
				This may be inferred with certainty, from the general nature of 
				the judicial power, from the objects to which it relates, from 
				the manner in which it is exercised, from its comparative 
				weakness, and from its total incapacity to support its 
				usurpations by force. And the inference is greatly fortified by 
				the consideration of the important constitutional check which 
				the power of instituting impeachments in one part of the 
				legislative body, and of determining upon them in the other, 
				would give to that body upon the members of the judicial 
				department. This is alone a complete security. There never can 
				be danger that the judges, by a series of deliberate usurpations 
				on the authority of the legislature, would hazard the united 
				resentment of the body intrusted with it, while this body was 
				possessed of the means of punishing their presumption, by 
				degrading them from their stations. While this ought to remove 
				all apprehensions on the subject, it affords, at the same time, 
				a cogent argument for constituting the Senate a court for the 
				trial of impeachments.
 
 Having now examined, and, I trust, removed the objections to the 
				distinct and independent organization of the Supreme Court, I 
				proceed to consider the propriety of the power of constituting 
				inferior courts, and the relations which will subsist between 
				these and the former.
 
 The power of constituting inferior courts is evidently 
				calculated to obviate the necessity of having recourse to the 
				Supreme Court in every case of federal cognizance. It is 
				intended to enable the national government to institute or 
				AUTHORIZE, in each State or district of the United States, a 
				tribunal competent to the determination of matters of national 
				jurisdiction within its limits.
 
 But why, it is asked, might not the same purpose have been 
				accomplished by the instrumentality of the State courts? This 
				admits of different answers. Though the fitness and competency 
				of those courts should be allowed in the utmost latitude, yet 
				the substance of the power in question may still be regarded as 
				a necessary part of the plan, if it were only to empower the 
				national legislature to commit to them the cognizance of causes 
				arising out of the national Constitution. To confer the power of 
				determining such causes upon the existing courts of the several 
				States, would perhaps be as much ``to constitute tribunals,'' as 
				to create new courts with the like power. But ought not a more 
				direct and explicit provision to have been made in favor of the 
				State courts? There are, in my opinion, substantial reasons 
				against such a provision: the most discerning cannot foresee how 
				far the prevalency of a local spirit may be found to disqualify 
				the local tribunals for the jurisdiction of national causes; 
				whilst every man may discover, that courts constituted like 
				those of some of the States would be improper channels of the 
				judicial authority of the Union. State judges, holding their 
				offices during pleasure, or from year to year, will be too 
				little independent to be relied upon for an inflexible execution 
				of the national laws. And if there was a necessity for confiding 
				the original cognizance of causes arising under those laws to 
				them there would be a correspondent necessity for leaving the 
				door of appeal as wide as possible. In proportion to the grounds 
				of confidence in, or distrust of, the subordinate tribunals, 
				ought to be the facility or difficulty of appeals. And well 
				satisfied as I am of the propriety of the appellate 
				jurisdiction, in the several classes of causes to which it is 
				extended by the plan of the convention. I should consider every 
				thing calculated to give, in practice, an UNRESTRAINED COURSE to 
				appeals, as a source of public and private inconvenience.
 
 I am not sure, but that it will be found highly expedient and 
				useful, to divide the United States into four or five or half a 
				dozen districts; and to institute a federal court in each 
				district, in lieu of one in every State. The judges of these 
				courts, with the aid of the State judges, may hold circuits for 
				the trial of causes in the several parts of the respective 
				districts. Justice through them may be administered with ease 
				and despatch; and appeals may be safely circumscribed within a 
				narrow compass. This plan appears to me at present the most 
				eligible of any that could be adopted; and in order to it, it is 
				necessary that the power of constituting inferior courts should 
				exist in the full extent in which it is to be found in the 
				proposed Constitution.
 
 These reasons seem sufficient to satisfy a candid mind, that the 
				want of such a power would have been a great defect in the plan. 
				Let us now examine in what manner the judicial authority is to 
				be distributed between the supreme and the inferior courts of 
				the Union. The Supreme Court is to be invested with original 
				jurisdiction, only ``in cases affecting ambassadors, other 
				public ministers, and consuls, and those in which A STATE shall 
				be a party.'' Public ministers of every class are the immediate 
				representatives of their sovereigns. All questions in which they 
				are concerned are so directly connected with the public peace, 
				that, as well for the preservation of this, as out of respect to 
				the sovereignties they represent, it is both expedient and 
				proper that such questions should be submitted in the first 
				instance to the highest judicatory of the nation. Though consuls 
				have not in strictness a diplomatic character, yet as they are 
				the public agents of the nations to which they belong, the same 
				observation is in a great measure applicable to them. In cases 
				in which a State might happen to be a party, it would ill suit 
				its dignity to be turned over to an inferior tribunal. Though it 
				may rather be a digression from the immediate subject of this 
				paper, I shall take occasion to mention here a supposition which 
				has excited some alarm upon very mistaken grounds. It has been 
				suggested that an assignment of the public securities of one 
				State to the citizens of another, would enable them to prosecute 
				that State in the federal courts for the amount of those 
				securities; a suggestion which the following considerations 
				prove to be without foundation.
 
 It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amenable 
				to the suit of an individual WITHOUT ITS CONSENT. This is the 
				general sense, and the general practice of mankind; and the 
				exemption, as one of the attributes of sovereignty, is now 
				enjoyed by the government of every State in the Union. Unless, 
				therefore, there is a surrender of this immunity in the plan of 
				the convention, it will remain with the States, and the danger 
				intimated must be merely ideal. The circumstances which are 
				necessary to produce an alienation of State sovereignty were 
				discussed in considering the article of taxation, and need not 
				be repeated here. A recurrence to the principles there 
				established will satisfy us, that there is no color to pretend 
				that the State governments would, by the adoption of that plan, 
				be divested of the privilege of paying their own debts in their 
				own way, free from every constraint but that which flows from 
				the obligations of good faith. The contracts between a nation 
				and individuals are only binding on the conscience of the 
				sovereign, and have no pretensions to a compulsive force. They 
				confer no right of action, independent of the sovereign will. To 
				what purpose would it be to authorize suits against States for 
				the debts they owe? How could recoveries be enforced? It is 
				evident, it could not be done without waging war against the 
				contracting State; and to ascribe to the federal courts, by mere 
				implication, and in destruction of a pre-existing right of the 
				State governments, a power which would involve such a 
				consequence, would be altogether forced and unwarrantable.
 
 Let us resume the train of our observations. We have seen that 
				the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court would be confined 
				to two classes of causes, and those of a nature rarely to occur. 
				In all other cases of federal cognizance, the original 
				jurisdiction would appertain to the inferior tribunals; and the 
				Supreme Court would have nothing more than an appellate 
				jurisdiction, ``with such EXCEPTIONS and under such REGULATIONS 
				as the Congress shall make.''
 
 The propriety of this appellate jurisdiction has been scarcely 
				called in question in regard to matters of law; but the clamors 
				have been loud against it as applied to matters of fact. Some 
				well-intentioned men in this State, deriving their notions from 
				the language and forms which obtain in our courts, have been 
				induced to consider it as an implied supersedure of the trial by 
				jury, in favor of the civil-law mode of trial, which prevails in 
				our courts of admiralty, probate, and chancery. A technical 
				sense has been affixed to the term ``appellate,'' which, in our 
				law parlance, is commonly used in reference to appeals in the 
				course of the civil law. But if I am not misinformed, the same 
				meaning would not be given to it in any part of New England. 
				There an appeal from one jury to another, is familiar both in 
				language and practice, and is even a matter of course, until 
				there have been two verdicts on one side. The word 
				``appellate,'' therefore, will not be understood in the same 
				sense in New England as in New York, which shows the impropriety 
				of a technical interpretation derived from the jurisprudence of 
				any particular State. The expression, taken in the abstract, 
				denotes nothing more than the power of one tribunal to review 
				the proceedings of another, either as to the law or fact, or 
				both. The mode of doing it may depend on ancient custom or 
				legislative provision (in a new government it must depend on the 
				latter), and may be with or without the aid of a jury, as may be 
				judged advisable. If, therefore, the re-examination of a fact 
				once determined by a jury, should in any case be admitted under 
				the proposed Constitution, it may be so regulated as to be done 
				by a second jury, either by remanding the cause to the court 
				below for a second trial of the fact, or by directing an issue 
				immediately out of the Supreme Court.
 
 But it does not follow that the re-examination of a fact once 
				ascertained by a jury, will be permitted in the Supreme Court. 
				Why may not it be said, with the strictest propriety, when a 
				writ of error is brought from an inferior to a superior court of 
				law in this State, that the latter has jurisdiction of the fact 
				as well as the law? It is true it cannot institute a new inquiry 
				concerning the fact, but it takes cognizance of it as it appears 
				upon the record, and pronounces the law arising upon it. This is 
				jurisdiction of both fact and law; nor is it even possible to 
				separate them. Though the common-law courts of this State 
				ascertain disputed facts by a jury, yet they unquestionably have 
				jurisdiction of both fact and law; and accordingly when the 
				former is agreed in the pleadings, they have no recourse to a 
				jury, but proceed at once to judgment. I contend, therefore, on 
				this ground, that the expressions, ``appellate jurisdiction, 
				both as to law and fact,'' do not necessarily imply a 
				re-examination in the Supreme Court of facts decided by juries 
				in the inferior courts.
 
 The following train of ideas may well be imagined to have 
				influenced the convention, in relation to this particular 
				provision. The appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court (it 
				may have been argued) will extend to causes determinable in 
				different modes, some in the course of the COMMON LAW, others in 
				the course of the CIVIL LAW. In the former, the revision of the 
				law only will be, generally speaking, the proper province of the 
				Supreme Court; in the latter, the re-examination of the fact is 
				agreeable to usage, and in some cases, of which prize causes are 
				an example, might be essential to the preservation of the public 
				peace. It is therefore necessary that the appellate jurisdiction 
				should, in certain cases, extend in the broadest sense to 
				matters of fact. It will not answer to make an express exception 
				of cases which shall have been originally tried by a jury, 
				because in the courts of some of the States ALL CAUSES are tried 
				in this mode; and such an exception would preclude the revision 
				of matters of fact, as well where it might be proper, as where 
				it might be improper. To avoid all inconveniences, it will be 
				safest to declare generally, that the Supreme Court shall 
				possess appellate jurisdiction both as to law and FACT, and that 
				this jurisdiction shall be subject to such EXCEPTIONS and 
				regulations as the national legislature may prescribe. This will 
				enable the government to modify it in such a manner as will best 
				answer the ends of public justice and security.
 
 This view of the matter, at any rate, puts it out of all doubt 
				that the supposed ABOLITION of the trial by jury, by the 
				operation of this provision, is fallacious and untrue. The 
				legislature of the United States would certainly have full power 
				to provide, that in appeals to the Supreme Court there should be 
				no re-examination of facts where they had been tried in the 
				original causes by juries. This would certainly be an authorized 
				exception; but if, for the reason already intimated, it should 
				be thought too extensive, it might be qualified with a 
				limitation to such causes only as are determinable at common law 
				in that mode of trial.
 
 The amount of the observations hitherto made on the authority of 
				the judicial department is this: that it has been carefully 
				restricted to those causes which are manifestly proper for the 
				cognizance of the national judicature; that in the partition of 
				this authority a very small portion of original jurisdiction has 
				been preserved to the Supreme Court, and the rest consigned to 
				the subordinate tribunals; that the Supreme Court will possess 
				an appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, in all the 
				cases referred to them, both subject to any EXCEPTIONS and 
				REGULATIONS which may be thought advisable; that this appellate 
				jurisdiction does, in no case, ABOLISH the trial by jury; and 
				that an ordinary degree of prudence and integrity in the 
				national councils will insure us solid advantages from the 
				establishment of the proposed judiciary, without exposing us to 
				any of the inconveniences which have been predicted from that 
				source.
 
 PUBLIUS.
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