The Executive Branch and the Origins of Judicial Independence

Kevin Arlyck
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Abstract

The early history of the federal judiciary as an independent branch of American government presents a puzzle. How did an institution that barely existed as a separate entity before the American Revolution be¬come coequal, and in some ways preeminent? Most accounts of the judiciary’s rise tell a story in which the courts consolidated their authority—especially the power of judicial review—by tacitly agreeing to withdraw from partisan politics. This article considers early judicial independence through a differ¬ent lens—the idea that the executive and legislative branches cannot interfere with judicial proceedings. This notion, which seems self-evident to us now, was less clear at the Founding. State legislatures in the 1780s routinely overrode judicial decisions, and it was not until the 1820s that courts seriously began to question the practice. As this article shows, the most insistent assertions of judicial invio¬lability came not from courts, but instead from the executive branch officials—in large part because they had little other choice. With a threadbare bureaucracy and no standing army, the early federal gov¬ernment existed more in theory than in fact. What it had was courts, which sat in every major port city and enjoyed broad jurisdiction over maritime matters. Forcing foreign disputants to adjudicate their claims in court spared the executive from making decisions that risked anger¬ing powerful European empires, and enabled it to leverage judicial resources to solve problems it could not manage on its own. In so doing, executive officers helped transform a still-undefined concept of judicial independence into a putatively hard barrier between the branches.
行政部门与司法独立的起源
作为美国政府的一个独立分支,联邦司法机构的早期历史令人费解。一个在美国革命之前几乎不作为独立实体存在的机构是如何变得平等的,并且在某些方面是卓越的?大多数关于司法崛起的报道都讲述了这样一个故事:法院通过默认退出党派政治来巩固自己的权威——尤其是司法审查的权力。本文从不同的角度考虑早期的司法独立,即行政和立法部门不能干涉司法程序。这一概念在我们现在看来是不言而喻的,但在建国时却不那么清楚。18世纪80年代,州立法机构经常推翻司法裁决,直到19世纪20年代,法院才开始认真质疑这种做法。正如本文所示,最坚持司法不可侵犯性的主张不是来自法院,而是来自行政部门的官员——在很大程度上是因为他们别无选择。由于官僚机构陈旧,没有常备军,早期的联邦政府更多地存在于理论而不是实际。它所拥有的是法院,法院设在每一个主要港口城市,对海事事务享有广泛的管辖权。迫使外国争端者在法庭上裁决他们的主张,使行政部门免于做出可能激怒强大的欧洲帝国的决定,并使其能够利用司法资源来解决它自己无法处理的问题。在这样做的过程中,行政官员帮助将司法独立的一个仍未定义的概念转变为分支之间推定的硬屏障。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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