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Cold Case File: Indictable Acts and Officer Accountability in Marbury v. Madison

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2013

KAREN ORREN*
Affiliation:
University of California at Los Angeles
CHRISTOPHER WALKER*
Affiliation:
University of California at Los Angeles
*
Professor Karen Orren, University of California at Los Angeles (orren@ucla.edu).
Christopher Walker, University of California at Los Angeles (wlkrkrsm@ucla.edu).

Abstract

Starting from the position that officer accountability is a core value of American constitutionalism, this article reassesses Marbury v. Madison in light of the indictable acts connected to the nondelivery of Marbury's commission. First, it reads Chief Justice Marshall's opinion against the background of personal and political hostility among the principals, including between Marbury and President Jefferson. Second, it identifies avenues of further redress open to Marbury before and after the Supreme Court's refusal of the mandamus order, and it considers why they were not pursued. Finally, having identified alternative procedural traditions on which Marshall could have drawn, and reviewed decisions by state and federal judges in analogous suits against officers, it concludes that Marbury's deepest contribution was to elevate the principle of jurisdiction over the imperative of remedy in constitutional decision making.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2013 

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