Seth Barrett Tillman, Letter to the
Editor, Taney was no champion of civil
liberties: His worst decision was Dred Scott, but there were plenty of others,
The Baltimore Sun, Feb. 24, 2016, 3:36 pm.
Responding to George W. Liebmann’s Taney Deserves His Tribute, The Baltimore Sun, Feb. 17, 2016, 4:37pm
George Liebmann thinks Taney’s statue should
remain on public display. Maybe it does; maybe it doesn’t. But the arguments
Liebmann puts forward make a very poor defense for his position.
First, Liebmann tells us that Taney “died a poor
man.” Taney was Chief Justice of the United States for over 25 years. During that
time, he was paid a princely and regular salary of $5,000 per year, and $6,500 per
year after 1855. At the time of Taney’s death, his savings, property, and other
investments amounted to so little that the Maryland bar took a up a collection
for his surviving daughters. Dying poor and leaving your children without means—when
you had had many opportunities to do them well—is not a sign of virtue. It is a
sign of neglect and irresponsibility.
Second, Liebmann tells us that Taney manumitted his
slaves, and that after doing so, Taney stated: “I am glad to say that none of
those who I manumitted disappointed my expectations, but have shown by their
conduct that they were worthy of freedom and knew how to use it.” Exactly why
should we care about Taney’s personal expectations in regard to his former
slaves? The measure of a decent post-slave
society is not what the former master thinks of what the former slave made of
his subsequent life, but what the former slave thinks of the former master and
what, if anything, the former master did to help the slave adjust to his new
circumstances. If one of Taney’s former slaves thought Taney deserved a statue,
then that would be telling. But Liebmann offers no such statement.
Finally, Liebmann tells us that Dred Scott was not the sum total of Taney’s judicial achievement. Instead,
Liebmann asks us to focus on Taney’s opinion in Ex parte Merryman (1861). But Merryman
does not help Liebmann’s or Taney’s cause, and this is not surprising because
very few commentators understand the case: including Liebmann.
In 1861, after Fort Sumter fell, the U.S. Army
seized John Merryman, a Maryland citizen and state militia officer, and
detained him in Fort McHenry, in Baltimore, Maryland. Merryman’s lawyers sought
a writ of habeas corpus. After a hearing, Taney determined that the Army had violated
the Constitution by seizing and detaining Merryman absent due process. Taney
offered much flowing language—the sort which endears him to do-gooders and
starry-eyed civil libertarians. But that is all that Taney did: He offered pieties in a judicial opinion.
The reality is that Taney did not grant Merryman habeas corpus. In other words, Taney did not order the Army, or the
commander at Fort McHenry (the named defendant in Ex parte Merryman), or the President, or anyone else to release
Merryman from the Army’s prison. Now, perhaps the Army would not have obeyed any
such a judicial order, but we will never know because Taney never issued one.
This reading of Merryman is not my idiosyncratic reading; rather, it is the
position of several prominent modern commentators, including: Brian McGinty (2011),
Bruce A. Ragsdale (2007), and Jack Stark (2002). Likewise, during the Civil War
itself, several courts refused to order the Army to release civilians detained
by the Army absent traditional due process. For example, Judge Betts, for the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York (1861), and Chief
Justice Dixon, for the Supreme Court of Wisconsin (1863), offered detained
Americans only civil-libertarian pieties in gracefully written opinions, but
these judges granted detainees no actual concrete relief. None. Moreover, in
order to justify their inaction, Betts and Dixon relied upon Taney’s Merryman opinion! In short, Merryman was a precedent for leaving
those detained by the Army in jail; it was not grounds for any relief.
The
bottom line is that those who value civil liberties during war time will find nothing
of substance in Ex parte Merryman. Taney
lived a long life and held a variety of state and federal offices. Perhaps he
is deserving of a statue, and perhaps that statue deserves a public venue. Perhaps.
But it is difficult to see how Ex parte
Merryman makes that case.
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
Welcome Instapundit and Chicago Boyz readers. My co-bloggers have posted a lot of good material, so please have a look around.
My prior post is [Here]: Seth Barrett
Tillman, Seth Barrett Tillman responding
to President Adam Falk, Williams College: the Allure of Forbidden Fruit, The New Reform Club
(Feb. 19, 2016, 11:45 AM).
2 comments:
Taney died October 12, 1864. That was 22 months after the Emancipation Proclimation, which I believe did not apply in Maryland. Manumission at that point, was not much of a gesture.
I don't have a precise date, but I believe Taney had manumitted his slaves well prior to the Emancipation Proclamation, and well prior to the Civil War.
Seth
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