登陆注册
19902800000260

第260章 CHAPTER XI.(5)

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
  • 飞龙全传

    飞龙全传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 凉州词

    凉州词

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 释华严十明论叙

    释华严十明论叙

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 后画录

    后画录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十七史百将传

    十七史百将传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 家有恶妇

    家有恶妇

    当街撞见指腹为婚的对象公然带着姑娘秀恩爱该怎么办?一顿鞭子劈头盖脸的狠抽下去,直打的两人声声哀嚎,抱头求饶。静坐家中却遭遇倒打一耙的上门退亲该怎么办?行啊,大公子立马滚蛋,拿众人觊觎的二公子来换。什么?骂她恶妇?周芸梓提脚跺跺,昂头轻蔑的一笑:本小姐当得起这个众人唾弃的恶妇!
  • 瓦尔登湖

    瓦尔登湖

    梭罗远离尘嚣,他想在自然的安谧中寻找一种本真的生存状态,寻求一种更诗意的生活。《瓦尔登湖》一书,详细地记录了作家在长达两年的时间里的日常生活状态以及所思所想,他在小木屋旁开荒种地,春种秋收,自给自足。他是一个自然之子,他崇尚自然,与自然交朋友,与湖水、森林和飞鸟对话,在林中观察动物和植物,在船上吹笛,在湖边钓鱼,晚上,在小木屋中记下自己的观察和思考。他追求精神生活,关注灵魂的成长,他骄傲地宣称:“每个人都是自己王国的国王,与这个王国相比,沙皇帝国也不过是一个卑微小国,犹如冰天雪地中的小雪团。”梭罗以他的实际行动告诉我们:人们所追求的大部分奢侈品,大部分的所谓生活的舒适,非但没有必要,而且对人类进步大有妨碍。《瓦尔登湖》记述了作者在简单生活中深入思考与重塑自我的心路历程,文笔宁静恬淡,引人深思,具有一种使人沉静的力量。
  • 搞怪小娇妻

    搞怪小娇妻

    什么?他们竟然将她扫地出门要她嫁给素未谋面的人?小女子应当自力更生,想办法退婚去也……为什么他会令她心动,从而能忘记了退婚的念头啊?然而,无意中见识到未婚夫的真面目,她二话没说,卷了铺盖,逃了婚,闯荡江湖去也……
  • 明末之全面战争

    明末之全面战争

    崇祯年,黑暗时代的开端。崇祯年,一个民族的脊梁被压弯。崇祯年,曾今让世界各国抱着自卑心态为之向往的国度,让他们仰望的天堂世界,变成了随意割取,侮辱的下等民族。崇祯年,有太多的遗憾。
  • 一生必读的历史经验大全集(超值金版)

    一生必读的历史经验大全集(超值金版)

    世事如棋,人生如局,现实生活中每个人都如同棋手,都在社会这张无形的棋盘上精心地布局。善于揣摩人的心性,知晓历史博弈的智慧,你就能拥有精妙绝伦的高招,下出变幻莫测的妙棋:强者当更强,弱者将突围,变弱为强。本书精选古今中外众多鲜活的历史个案,力求真实再现历史上风云变幻的情境,充分展示人在生死存亡时刻的决策与谋略。本书以史为鉴,希望您在开启它的那一刻,不仅仅阅读到无数精彩纷呈、惊心动魄的历史故事。也能够从历史的长河中汲取博弈智慧,在现实中更好地选择人生策略,多一分成功,少一分失败。
  • 野兽拳王

    野兽拳王

    八角形的铁笼中,野兽们在嘶吼,咆哮!他们抛洒的热血,染红金色腰带!致命的打击,不屈的战意!让你的热血在赛场上沸腾!让你的眼泪在热血中纷飞!谁才是地上最强,谁才是世界之王!我也加一句:“求点,求推,求收藏,求指点......”欢迎光临:qq群252854291
  • 人物卷(文摘小说精品)

    人物卷(文摘小说精品)

    中外名家名作之荟萃。或讽刺、或鞭笞、或记人、或叙事,长短不一,内容各异,却一样地穿过时间的隧道,直击我们的心灵,再现了那个时代的人们不一样的内心世界……
  • 盗墓笔记故事

    盗墓笔记故事

    大爱老三的盗墓笔记,一算时间,如果从老三做创作准备算起,这一晃又是一个十年了。老三为了这本书也算是呕心沥血了,实在敬佩他的这种创作精神。最佩服老三的是他对小说的掌握和把握,挖的遍地坑又让你觉得欲罢不能,在本人拍案叫绝之时,突发奇想,想要写一篇同人,试图填补老三的各种神坑。谨以此文表达对老三的崇高敬意!稻米们请进来一起探讨,不喜吻喷!
  • 理财小窍门(最实用的居家小书)

    理财小窍门(最实用的居家小书)

    理财是那些有钱人的事,等我有钱了再谈理财吧。其实,这是一个错误的想法,理财理的不仅是钱,也是我们的生活。理财可以从身边的小事做起。你不理财,财不理你!理财应该从哪些方面入手呢?在理财的过程中我们应该注意些什么呢?本书从医疗、教育投资、家庭投资、信用卡等方面向你诠释了理财的定义。手持这本书,让您的理财生活化,简单化!
  • 玛丽苏重生记

    玛丽苏重生记

    玛丽苏穿越女主因为把空间秘密透漏给渣皇而被害死。死后重生为林家小娘子,美貌无敌,双商极高。林珑:我既然能为你打下江山,也能从你手中夺走。渣皇:呜呜呜!萧琰:娘子,渴不渴,我给你倒水。