A History of the Supremes (Not the Motown Group)
UCLA law professor and former Supreme Court clerk Stuart Banner has written an encyclopedic history of the Supreme Court of the United States. He not only covers the case law, but he also covers the personalities, the politics inside and outside the court, from its earliest beginnings in the 1790’s to the present. In the interest of full disclosure, I had a very small adventure with the Supreme Court as a plaintiff in Yahr v. Resor (4th Circuit 1970) and having cert. denied in 1971.
What Banner rightly argues, the Supreme Court always was and always is a political body. When the Senate was controlled by a party not in the White House, appointments were often delayed until the next election. Merrick Garland’s nomination in 2016 was not an exception to history. As the old wag goes, “the Supreme Court follows the election returns.”
What I found interesting was Banner’s discussion of the 1925 judicial reforms, authored by Chief Justice Howard Taft and adopted by Congress. Those reforms enabled the Supreme Court to reject cases coming before it and it enabled the court to leave a rather dingy office space in the Senate office building to the Greco-Roman shrine it occupies today. According to Banner the ability of the court to choose its cases enabled it to take cases, many concerning civil rights, that it wouldn’t have previously taken because of a very crowded docket. Further he notes that the Republican Administrations in the 1920’s appointed several moderate justices, Harlan Fiske Stone, Charles Evans Hughes, and Owen Roberts. Those three justices played a meaningful role in ratifying the New Deal legislation of the late 1930’s.
While Banner applauds and criticizes many Supreme Court cases, he is silent on why the Supreme Court, from Marberry v. Madison in 1801 to Dred Scott in 1857, the Supreme Court did not overturn a single act of Congress. While after the Civil War and to this day many congressional acts were overturned. So, why was the court, so deferential to the congress in the early 1800’s. Banner rightly mentions Gibbons v. Ogden ((1824) which established federal supremacy over interstate commerce, but he fails to mention its huge economic impact in opening the Midwest and establishing New York City as the nation’s leading port.
He also doesn’t criticize Euclid v. Ambler Realty (1926) which ratified local zoning and, in my opinion, a regulatory taking; Berman v. Parker (1954) and Kelo v. New London (2005) which enabled government to seize private property and turn it over to another private party, not for direct use by the government for a public purpose. He does note the extreme extension of the commerce power in Wickard v. Filburn (1942) which prevented a farmer from growing crops for his own use, hardly interstate commerce. My guess is that the case would be decided differently today.
Lastly, he speaks favorably of Chevron v. NRDC (1984) which gave huge discretion to administrative agencies to go beyond the clear intent of Congress. Fortunately, that was overturned this year in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimundo. I do note that his book went to press ahead of that case.
These criticisms aside, Banner clearly explains how and why the Supreme Court overturned much of Reconstruction and how and why much of the rights we enjoy today were creatures of Supreme Court actions from the 1920’s on. However, although he discusses how the Supreme Court functioned as a super-legislature in overturning laws protecting workers and individuals, he is less critical of the court creating rights without any direct constitutional underpinning. The controversy over Roe v. Wade and its repeal is an exemplar of this. This is a book for supreme court nerds, and if you are one, it is well worth the long read.