威廉·j·马布里的任免和办公室的归属

IF 1 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW
S. Prakash
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引用次数: 0

摘要

学者们忽略了最著名的宪法案件之一中最重要的问题,掩盖了引发争议的阴谋。本文阐明了促成马布里诉麦迪逊案的事件,并解释了任命何时生效。众所周知,托马斯·杰斐逊拒绝向威廉·j·马布里(William J. Marbury)授予委任状,导致后者向最高法院申请行政令。人们普遍认为,杰斐逊拒绝马布里的理由是,马布里没有被任命为治安法官,恰恰是因为他从来没有接受过任命。事实上,杰斐逊的演讲论点是一种后爱国主义,与他在1801年3月的行动毫无关系。约翰·亚当斯的午夜任命激怒了杰斐逊,导致这位新总统将和平法官的任命视为无效。对杰斐逊来说,未能向其中一些被任命者交付委任状一点也不重要。似乎更重要的是,他觉得治安法官听命于他。本着这一信念,他同时将他们全部撤职,并休会任命了大多数人,除了包括威廉·j·马布里在内的十几个人。本文还讨论了威廉·j·马布里和其他从未接受过任命的午夜被任命者是否仍然被任命,考虑了任命何时生效的五种理论:参议院同意;同意后但在投入使用前;调试时;他接受了这个职位,接受了这个委托。在考虑这些理论的过程中,文章揭示了一个令人惊讶的事实,即托马斯·杰斐逊,作为国务卿,支持第二种理论,即任命在委托行为之前生效。此外,早在马布里诉麦迪逊案之前,亚当斯政府同样得出结论,任命可以在任何委员会发布或交付之前授予。尽管有这种趋同,《宪法》认为,这五种理论都不正确,因为每种理论都把宪法解读为对任命何时生效只有一个答案。没有单一的答案。相反,只要总统决定,任命就会生效。宪法赋予总统任命的权力,但从未明确规定任命的时间和方式。由于宪法没有具体规定任命的时间和方式,所以由总统来决定他任命的方式。这一结论源于宪法的一般原则:当宪法授予一个实体权力,但没有具体规定行使权力的具体方式时,受让人可以决定行使权力的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Appointment and Removal of William J. Marbury and When an Office Vests
Scholars have ignored the most important question in one of the most famousconstitutional law cases, obscuring the machinations that spawned the dispute. ThisArticle sheds light on the events that precipitated Marbury v. Madison and alsoexplains when an appointment vests. Thomas Jefferson famously refused to deliver acommission to William J. Marbury, causing the latter to seek a writ of mandamus fromthe Supreme Court. The received wisdom supposes that Jefferson’s refusal rested on thegrounds that Marbury had not been appointed a justice of the peace precisely because henever had received a commission. In fact, Jefferson’s delivery argument was a post-hocrationalization, having nothing to do with his actions in March of 1801. JohnAdams’s midnight appointments incensed Jefferson, leading the new President to treatall of the justice of the peace appointments as nullities. To Jefferson, the failure todeliver commissions to some of those appointees mattered not a whit. What seems tohave been far more significant is his sense that the justices of the peace served at hispleasure. Acting on this belief, he simultaneously removed them all and recess appointedmost of them, save for more than a dozen, including William J. Marbury.This Article also addresses whether William J. Marbury and the other midnight appointeeswho never received their commissions were nonetheless appointed, considering fivetheories of when an appointment vests: when the Senate consents; after consent butbefore commissioning; when commissioning occurs; with the delivery of a commission;and with acceptance of the office. In the course of considering these theories, the Articlediscloses the surprising fact that Thomas Jefferson, as Secretary of State, endorsed thesecond theory, namely that appointments vest before the act of commissioning. Moreover,well before Marbury v. Madison, the Adams Administration likewise concludedthat appointments could vest prior to any commission being issued or delivered. Despitethis convergence, the Article contends that none of the five theories is correct becauseeach reads the Constitution as enshrining a single answer regarding when an appointmentvests. There is no single answer. Rather an appointment vests whenever thePresident determines that it shall. The Constitution grants power to the President toappoint, never precisely specifying when or how an appointment vests. By not specifyingwhen or how appointment is made, the Constitution leaves it to the President todecide the manner in which he appoints. This conclusion derives from a general principleof constitutional law: When the Constitution grants power to an entity but doesnot specify the precise means by which it will be exercised, the grantee may decide themeans of exercising it.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: In 1925, a group of eager and idealistic students founded the Notre Dame Lawyer. Its name was changed in 1982 to the Notre Dame Law Review, but all generations have remained committed to the original founders’ vision of a law review “synonymous with respect for law, and jealous of any unjust attacks upon it.” Today, the Law Review maintains its tradition of excellence, and its membership includes some of the most able and distinguished judges, professors, and practitioners in the country. Entirely student edited, the Law Review offers its members an invaluable occasion for training in precise analysis of legal problems and in clear and cogent presentation of legal issues.
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