The Marbury v. Madison Mantra

by Timothy Baldwin

The arguments against the power of the states to arrest federal tyranny are as predictable as the sun coming up in the morning, and they are as philosophical in nature as the Declaration of Independence. One of the most commonly used arguments against such a State power is the United States Supreme Court (US S CT) dicta opinion in Marbury v. Madison in 1803, written by Chief Justice John Marshall. Before getting into the misunderstandings and misapplications of that infamous decision, we must first recognize the source and character of Marshall’s opinion. As Marshall himself admitted that the US is to be a country of “laws, not men,” we must establish that Marshall’s opinion does not equate to the “supreme law of the land” which the states and individuals are bound to obey. If our submission only requires that the US S CT speak, then we do not live as freemen, but as slaves.

Marshall was an ardent member of the Federalist Party (a pro-centralist party) and served as the Secretary of State in the pro-centralist administration of President John Adams, who appointed Marshall to the US S CT in 1801 at the “midnight” hour before Thomas Jefferson was sworn into office as President of the US. Marshall’s nationalist opinions were no secret either. Marshall believed that the US Constitution and Union were formed by the aggregate whole of the American people, and not by a compact of the states; that the Union formed “one nation, indivisible” and not a confederation of states; that State sovereignty as expressed in the Tenth Amendment equated more to a general idea than to any real applicable and relevant State power over the federal government; that the Constitution must be liberally interpreted for the sake of expanding federal powers at the expense of State sovereignty; and that the idea of State sovereignty was literally ridiculous. By the way, even most self-called conservatives today probably subscribe to these political beliefs, not even knowing the real historical facts behind such fallacious ideology.

Concerning Marshall’s philosophical belief relative to the formation of the USA, this historical fact must be admitted. It is crucially important for our discussion today in America. Historian and politically-motivated author, Edward Samuel Corwin, said of Marshall in his book, “John Marshall and the Constitution” (New Haven, CT, Yale Univ. Press, 1920), p. 34: “[Marshall's] attitude [to strengthen the national power and to curtail State legislative power] was determined not only by his sympathy for the sufferings of his former comrades in arms and by his veneration for his father and for Washington . . . but also by his military experience, which had RENDERED THE PRETENSIONS OF STATE SOVEREIGNTY RIDICULOUS IN HIS EYES.” (Emphasis added.) There is no question that Marshall had a pre-destined belief against State sovereignty in favor of national power. Corwin describes Marshall’s political belief regarding the US as a “nationalistic creed.”

So, is the nationalistic political persuasion of one man (appointed by a nationalistic President) and one court to form the basis of the true understanding of the nature and character of the USA? After all, Marshall admitted that the US is established by the rule of law, and not the rule of men. So, by Marshall’s own definition in Marbury v. Madison, a US S CT opinion does not establish law, but rather should reflect what the paramount law already is: “The constitution is either a superior, paramount law, unchangeable by ordinary means, or it is on a level with ordinary legislative acts, and like other acts, is alterable when the legislature shall please to alter it.” So, as the age-old question has gone: who determines whether or not the federal government has usurped power from the people of the states and from the State governments? The Marbury v. Madison believers are likely jumping up and down right now, raising their hands, saying, “Oh! Pick me! Pick me! I know! I know!” I can just see smirks on the faces of most ABA-law school graduates as they condemn anyone who would advocate another position to be true which is contrary to what Marshall presupposed to be true. Of course, their rationale goes as deep as a kiddy-pool and their thought process as far as an inner-city driveway.

Since 1803, the nationalists have pointed to Marshall’s declaration to conclusively say the states have no power over the opinion of the US S CT, for as Marshall states: “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” From this, most American lawyers and law students come to the conclusion that there is no authority above and beyond the US S CT’s interpretation of the US Constitution. Whatever the US S CT rules becomes “settled law” and the states are completely bound–of course, unless the US S CT says something different later. I was taught this in law school and every other ABA-accredited law school in America teaches this. But a true legal study of Marbury v. Madison reveals that Marshall’s opinion (which was actually dicta) never addressed the issue of State sovereignty whatsoever. American historian, Forrest McDonald, reveals this fact in his book, “State’s Rights and the Union: Imperium in Imperio, 1776-1876.” McDonald states, “Marshall was careful not to claim that the Supreme Court was the SOLE or FINAL ARBITER of acts of Congress.” (Emphasis added.) Ibid., (Lawrence, KS, Univ. Press of Kansas, 2000), p. 56. This is, in fact, the case.

Perhaps most telling about Marshall’s silence on the issue of being the sole or final arbiter is the fact that just a few years prior to his decision, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, through the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 and 1799, had advocated the State’s ability to actively nullify and resist unconstitutional actions from the federal government. Since Marshall’s opinion was mostly dicta anyway–meaning it had no relevance to the issue at hand–why not go ahead and state that the US S CT is the ONLY final arbiter of the US Constitution? But Marshall never did, and neither has any US S CT decision since Marbury v. Madison.

Thus, when someone suggests that the states possess the sovereign power to arrest federal encroachments outside of constitutionally enumerated powers, the nationalists emphatically argue their unsupported conclusion that the USA is one nation, indivisible, where the US S CT possesses the sole authority as the final arbiter on all matters politically relative to the US Constitution, and to suggest otherwise is treason!–even when the most authoritative sources have been so pointedly laid out to the contrary. Marshall’s opinions have not settled this matter, and the USA must come to grips with who we are, what we are and how we are.

What’s more, Marshall’s opinions of national expansion were conclusively derived from one main principle: that the USA is a nation formed by the whole people and not by individual states through a compact. This fact was admitted by Marshall-lover, Corwin, in 1920. Corwin clearly expresses this point as follows:

“The great principles which Marshall developed in his interpretation of the Constitution from the side of national power . . . were the following: ‘(1) THE CONSTITUTION IS AN ORDINANCE OF THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES, AND NOT A COMPACT OF THE STATES. (2) Consequently it is to be interpreted with a view to securing a beneficial use of the powers which it creates, not with the purpose of safeguarding the prerogatives of state sovereignty. (3) The Constitution was further designed . . . to be kept a commodious vehicle of the nation life . . . . (4) [The national government] is a sovereign government, both in its choice of the means by which to exercise its power and in its supremacy over all colliding or antagonistic powers. (5) The powers of Congress to regulate commerce is an exclusive power, so that the States may not intrude upon this field even though Congress has not acted. (6) The National Government and its instrumentalities are present within the States, not by the tolerance of the States, but by the supreme authority of the people of the United States.’ Of these several principles, THE FIRST IS OBVIOUSLY THE MOST IMPORTANT AND TO A GREAT EXTENT THE SOURCE OF THE OTHERS.” “John Marshall and the Constitution,” pp. 144-145. (Emphasis added.)

Corwin admits that all of Marshall’s opinions were based upon the presumption that the USA is a nation formed by the whole people as one body politic, and not by the individual, sovereign states via a compact. From this premise comes the vast expansion of federal power under the guise of constitutionality. Thus, if it were to be contrarily presumed that the USA is in fact a compact acceded to by the states, then the rules of interpretation that Marshall and subsequent US S CT justices used were wrong and require a different outcome. This fact cannot be overstated and is the source of all of the federal tyranny that many of you reading this article complain about. Thus, it behooves Americans to truly know WHAT IS THE TRUE NATURE AND CHARACTER OF OUR UNION: is it a National government formed by the whole people, or is it a compact among the states and acceded to by the states (otherwise known as a Confederacy)?

This article does not allow me to expound upon this subject in great depth, but it should be sufficient at this point at least to call into question Marshall’s presupposition regarding the nature and character of the USA by referring to some of the most authoritative sources on the subject during the formation of the US Constitution. Let us start with James Madison, who was one of the Federalist Paper authors and considered to be the Father of the US Constitution. In Federalist Paper 39, Madison examines the nature and character of the formation of the Union under the US Constitution. He admits that the US was formed by a federative (league of states) and NOT a national act. Madison proclaims:

“[T]he Constitution is to be founded on the assent and ratification of the people of America, given by deputies elected for the special purpose; but . . . this assent and ratification is to be given by the people, NOT AS INDIVIDUALS COMPOSING ONE ENTIRE NATION, BUT AS COMPOSING THE DISTINCT AND INDEPENDENT STATES TO WHICH THEY RESPECTIVELY BELONG. It is to be the ASSENT AND RATIFICATION of the SEVERAL STATES . . . The act, therefore, establishing the Constitution, will NOT BE A NATIONAL, but a FEDERAL act.

“That it will be a federal and NOT A NATIONAL ACT . . . THE ACT OF THE PEOPLE, AS FORMING SO MANY INDEPENDENT STATES, NOT AS FORMING ONE AGGREGATE NATION, IS OBVIOUS from this single consideration, that it is to result neither from the decision of a MAJORITY of the people of the Union, nor from that of a MAJORITY of the States. It must result from the UNANIMOUS ASSENT OF THE SEVERAL STATES that are parties to it . . . [T]he new Constitution will . . . be a FEDERAL, and not a NATIONAL constitution.” (Emphasis added.)

Madison pens in the clearest of terms that the US Constitution is a compact assented to by the State sovereigns in their legal capacities as individual bodies politic, and NOT as one mass of people, forming one body politic. If this were not enough to at least raise a serious question as to what has been shoved down our throats for 150 years, consider that even Alexander Hamilton confirms that the US Constitution is a compact between the states, and NOT a national act of the whole people. He says in Federalist Paper 85:

“To its complete establishment throughout the Union, [the US Constitution] will therefore REQUIRE THE CONCURRENCE OF THIRTEEN STATES . . . [T]he necessity of moulding and arranging all the particulars which are to compose the whole, in such a manner as to satisfy all the parties to the COMPACT . . . WE MAY SAFELY RELY ON THE DISPOSITION OF THE STATE LEGISLATURES TO ERECT BARRIERS AGAINST THE ENCROACHMENTS OF THE NATIONAL AUTHORITY.” (Emphasis added.)

Just in these two short excerpts from Founding Fathers, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, we see that Marshall’s premise that the USA is a nation formed by the whole of the people and not by the compact of the states is seriously called into question, which, of course, calls into question all of the principles of constitutional interpretation and resulting conclusions which derive from that false premise.

An honest look at the presumption that only the US S CT has the power to interpret federal encroachments on State sovereignty will reveal that the states have more power than what has been admitted ever since Marshall took the position of chief justice of the US S CT. For as Marshall admits in Marbury v. Madison, “questions [that are] in their nature political . . . CAN NEVER BE MADE IN THIS COURT.” (Emphasis added.) By definition, issues of State sovereignty are in their nature political, just as a treaty between the USA and foreign countries regards the matter of political sovereignty. Therefore, when our states begin to assert their natural and sovereign right of self-defense against federal tyranny, each State will answer to their sovereign–the people–and NOT to the United States Supreme Court.

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This post was written by:

Timothy_Baldwin - who has written 111 posts on Liberty Defense League.

Timothy Baldwin is an attorney from Pensacola, FL, who received his B.A. degree at the University of West Florida and graduated from Cumberland School of Law at Samford University in Birmingham, AL. After having received his Juris Doctorate degree from Cumberland, Baldwin became a Felony Prosecutor in the 1st District of Florida. In 2006, he started his own law practice, where he created specialized legal services entirely for property management companies. Tim is a prolific writer/columnist and writes for numerous publications, including The New American magazine. Tim is also an articulate speaker relevant to freedom’s issues. Tim is an author of legal and political articles, as well as his latest book, Freedom For A Change (published by Agrapha Publishing). Baldwin is involved in important state sovereignty movement issues, including being co-counsel in the federal litigation in Montana involving the Firearms Freedom Act.

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8 Responses to “The Marbury v. Madison Mantra”

  1. Pat Henry Says:

    Brother Tim,

    I salute you for your leadership in this issue. The Lord will magnify your voice as you continue to battle on the LEGAL and non-violent ground to restore “liberty in law” to these United States, in accordance with the Biblical principles that gave rise to this nation in the first place (through years of struggle from preaching the gospel to savage tribes through Magna Carta and on to this geography and William Penn’s great experiment). When we stand on a law basis, the God who ordains authority (Romans 13) stands with us. This means we will be victorious (as Revelation shows from its prophesied victory of the martyr saints and others who persevered under the hand of the Imperial Roman Beast and False Prophet of Judaism that rejected the true Messiah) – we, as one new man, Jew and Gentile, who submit ourselves to the authority of the Messiah, as the Israel of God.

    The prophets in the Church today have said the new front line will be the states, and this has come to pass already. Onward! The victory is at hand. Let us encourage one another to be faithful, and, as we evangelize and disciple, focus civil efforts on electing godly men in our state houses. We must also lift all of their hands in prayer, for the Lord can move hearts.

  2. Timothy_Baldwin Says:

    Thank you for your kind words. May we all be diligent and brave in our efforts to restore freedom in the states of America.

  3. Pat Henry Says:

    The need and effectiveness of INTERCESSORS should not be forgotten, discounted, or downplayed in the spiritual battle we face to advance the Kingdom of God in this hour. This is why I am also connected for prayer grist to the Reformation Prayer Network (whatever other opinions one may hold). I am gld to have today become acquainted with your thrust and clarifying the legal basis of states upholding liberty, and can but hope multiplied state legislators begin hearing your excellent research and bracing call to action.

  4. Poor clyde Says:

    Tim,

    I agree with you fully as the following indicates. I just left this reply, applicable here, on the CFL site for your perusal as it applies there as well. I apologize for the redundancy. I derive my conclusions from Justice Thomas’s opinion at 535 U.S. 743 (2002), set out below.

    First of all, let’s understand the one founding principle which 99% of the Citizens of this great Republic haven’t a clue of any genuine understanding and at this point we needn’t expound on the why. This Constitutional Republic was designed as a bottom up power structure. We the people declared our rights under the Declaration of Independence and thereupon created 13 Constitutional Colonies (Sovereign jurisdictions) called States which colonized under the Articles of Confederation as a Union of States which undoubtedly precipitated the moniker the “United States.” In the very early stages of the Confederation the intellectual observations of the founders revealed a few problems with the arrangements associated with the Confederacy. Their proposed solution was to have the Union States and their respective Citizens create a 14th sovereign jurisdiction by and through the Constitution of the United States granting total power over the territories ceded to the United States while also defining services to be rendered to the 13 Union States to, in effect, justify its existence.

    Even though there are now 50 Supposed to be Sovereign Union States and one Sovereign Federal Government with total control over its sovereign territorial boundaries bringing the total sovereign territories in this Constitutional Republic to 51. The real limits to the jurisdiction of federal laws is, with few exceptions, limited to the territory ceded to the federal government by and through Article I, section8 clause 17 and article IV, Section 3, Clause 2. Any legislation which attempts to affect areas within the sovereign territory of any of the Sovereign Union states must get past the Supremacy Clause which paraphrased demands that only those laws “made in Pursuance” of “this Constitution shall be the supreme Law of the Land.” To me that simply states that only those laws written pursuant to the powers granted to the United States (federal government) by we the Citizens of the Union States in conjunction with our elected Union State agents are, in fact, valid laws. Viewed from another angle, in this Constitutional Republic where the rule of law prevails, all valid laws derived from the powers granted by We the People by and through our Constitutions are, by definition, the Supreme Laws of the Land and those that aren’t so derived are simply “G.. D… pieces of paper.”

    However, there’s a sticky wicket in all this. The Union States have somewhere along the way voluntarily forfeited their Sovereignty (and therefore their so called States Rights) by paying a federal tax to the Federal Government thus becoming subservient to the federal government reversing the bottom up power structure to a historically typical top down power structure. Until the Union States cease paying such an unconstitutional tax, We the People are, by inference, subject to all federal laws and the whims of the Executive.

    Here’s the explanation. The lands ceded to the federal government form the total sovereign territory of the federal government in which there exists many federal states, i.e., Puerto Rico, D.C., Guam, American Somalia, and the instrumentalities associated to each. Each of these so called states is absolutely under the purview of all federal laws unless exempted by the legislation itself or elsewhere in federal statutes. Each federal state can be taxed by the federal government for the mere fact of its existence as an instrumentality thereto. Consequently, any sovereign state that willingly becomes a federal taxpayer is also willingly becoming, if only by inference, an instrumentality of the United States.

    That Mr. Baldwin is THE central problem we face today. Nothing else matters. Furthermore, no new laws, resolutions, or Constitutional alterations are needed. It’s simply a matter of getting the right laws suits before the courts to prosecute the responsible Union State agents for committing such a treasonous travesty to the ruination of our Constitutional Structure. See Federal Marine Commission (FMC) v. South Carolina State Ports Authority, 535 U.S. 743 (2002) and “Dual Sovereignty” at Poor Clyde’s Almanac set out below.

    I have spent the last half of my adult life (more than 25 years) researching the line in the sand between federal and Union State jurisdictions. One can find some of the results of that research posted as Articles at Poor Clyde’s Almanac, poorclydesalmanac.info, for further study. Gun Control and other seemingly overreaching federal laws are covered there as well.

    Someone has to become actively focused on this issue. Your background indicates that you have the mettle to do it.

    Cheers,

    Poor Clyde

  5. Timothy_Baldwin Says:

    Poor Clyde,

    Thank you for your comments.

  6. Bill Crist Says:

    2nd Chronicles 7:14 is where all the above must begin. Cleaning up our country begins at our own doorsteps. It spreads through evangelism but is prepared to protect via force if necessary, as authorized via Romans 13. Also, don’t forget, Jesus sent his apostles into all the world to teach and preach on a mission of love – however, he told them to carry a sword and if they didn’t have one, to sell their coat and buy one.
    Our founders came here to freely worship Christ, they wound up fighting with every ounce of human capacity right down to bare feet in the snow – Providence ordained their victory but not without every ounce of their own efforts. America flourished faster than any previous nation when Christian principles insured that Christian leaders were at the helm…. the gradual decline of American sovereignty to the point of being on the verge now of actually loosing it – can easily be shown to be congruent with America’s gradual moral decline and expulsion of those same Christian values purchased by the blood of our founders. May God Bless America – Pray for yourself and for her !

  7. Corwin Taylor Says:

    Enjoyed the article on Marbry v. Madison but wonder if the animosity between Maarshall and Jefferson, coupled with mere “dicta” should not have required Marshall to withdraw, rendering the decision null and void? I would appreciate some thought on this issue.

    Thanks, Corwin Taylor, (Hopefully no relation to the law professor with last name of Corwin)

  8. Timothy_Baldwin Says:

    Thanks, Corwin. Marshall had no affinity for Jefferson, for sure. Perhaps he should have recused himself from the case, but he did not feel compelled as such. Regardless, if he didn’t write the opinion, Joseph Story would have to the same effect.

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