The Dred Scott Decision doc


The Dred Scott Decision

There have been several cases in the history of the Supreme

Court that have had a powerful impact on both the highest court of the

land and the history of the United States. The Dred Scott decision can

definitely be included in this category of monumental cases that

changed the course of American history. Until this decision the

Supreme Court had a flawless reputation. Its prestige and credibility

were beyond reproach. This high regard for the Supreme Court made

people on both sides of the slavery issue turn to it in the hope that

what could not be resolved in the political world could be solved in

the legal world by the highest court of the land. But this was really

expecting too much of judicial power. The major error associated with

this case was the misguided belief that a flaming political

problem,slavery, could become manageable by calling it a legal problem

and handing it over to the courts to resolve.

In the Dred Scott case the decision was based on "expediency

not principle." The big problem was trying to use judicial power to

settle a major political problem. Although the Dred Scott decision may

have been the result of a trial , in reality it was a case of the

court battling with the complex issue of slavery, especially in the

territories, in the mid l800's.

In order to tell the story of a slave you have to tell the

story of his master. The slave does not have an identity or history of

his own. In Virginia, Peter Blow and his family had many slaves. Among

these slaves was a young man named Sam, or as we know him today, Dred

Scott. Peter Blow decided to move his estate to Alabama and then to

the thriving port city of St. Louis. During these years, Dred

married and had a child. After the death of the Blows, Dred was sold

to Dr. Emerson, an army surgeon. He and Scott traveled through

Illinois and Minnesota. When Dr. Emerson died , Dred Scott was sent

back to St. Louis to Mrs. Emerson. This was when Scott argued that

under the terms of the Missouri Compromise, the fact that he and Dr.

Emerson lived in Illinois and Minnesota made him a free man. The

Missouri Compromise did not allow slavery in whatever territory that

remained from the Louisiana Purchase north of a specific line, 36o 30'

of north latitude.

At this time the issue of slavery was a major concern. The

Mexican War provided the United States with a lot of new territory,

and the question of the future of slavery in the territories was on

everyones mind. The people of the North who were against slavery

wanted Congress to prohibit slavery in the territories.

John C. Calhoun, the spokesman for the South, said that

Congress did not have the right to prohibit slavery in the

territories. The Southern attempt to extend the line of the Missouri

Compromise failed, so their only hope was Calhoun's constitutional

criticism of Congress' attempt to prohibit slavery in the territories.

This was why they plunged themselves completely behind Calhoun's

ideas. Calhoun argued that the territories were "the common property

of the states of this Union. They are called the' territories of the

United States,' and what are the ' United States' but the States

united? Sir, these territories are the property of the States united;

held jointly for their common use." This statement beautifully

illustrates how extreme the Southern view of state sovereignty was. It

was the Southern belief that the states should have the right to

declare slavery in their states and it is beyond congressional power

to prohibit slavery.

Southerners believed that their very existence depended on an

equal amount of slave and free states. They realized that if Congress

prohibited slavery in the territories there would be no more equality

of slave states and free states.

The Northern view was based upon the Wilmot Proviso which

expressed the view that Congress had not only the right but also the

responsibility to prohibit slavery. The Northern view was also based

upon the very constitution itself which said that Congress has the

power to "make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the

Territory... belonging to the United States."

Calhoun presented his ideas to Congress, telling them that the

territories belong to the states and since Congress is merely the

agent of the states, it has no right to prohibit slavery. It all came

down to whether or not you believe that state's rights are more

important than federal rights or vice versa. Many debates, including

the Lincoln-Douglas Debate, focused on this hot issue.

With much debate, Congress was hopelessly deadlocked. The

Senate would not approve any provision or law which denied the right

of Congress to prohibit slavery in the territories. The House did not

approve any package which included the right of Congress to prohibit

slavery in the territories. The situation was completely inflexible .

It appeared as though nothing would change the situation in

Congress.It was decided by the South and agreed upon by the North that

there was but one solution to the mess that the Union had gotten

itself into: getting the judiciary involved.

At that time the Supreme Court seemed to be incapable of doing

anything wrong. With the supreme leadership ability of John Marshall

and now Roger Taney, all problems seemed to be solved, and solved

correctly. Southerners saw that nothing was happening to change the

fact that Congress could prohibit slavery in the territories. After a

while everyone seemed to feel that the judicial system was their only

hope for a solution. Even the loud Senator from Illinois, by the name

of Abraham Lincoln said:"The Supreme Court of the United States is the

tribunal to decide such questions and we will submit to its decision."

So there it is. It is all up to the courts, through the trials

of a few cases, to decide upon the complex and heavily debated issue

of slavery. This is why the case of Dred Scott played such an

important role in American history.

In the first trial in l846, the St. Louis Circuit Court denied

Dred's plea for freedom. However, his lawyer set up a retrial in 1850.

Scott claimed freedom because of his stay in Minnesota and llinois.

After Dr. Emerson died, Scott became the property of Mrs. Emerson.

When she remarried she gave Dred to her brother, Sanford , who

regarded Dred as his property. Sanford said that even though Dred

Scott had been in territories that prohibited slavery, his voluntary

return to St. Louis, a slave bearing state, made him a slave once

again. In the retrial Scott prevailed, but two years later, in l852,

Scott lost in the Missouri Supreme Court. At this point the case began

to attract a lot of public attention.

The case became a Federal case when Scott claimed that he was

a citizen of Missouri and that Sanford, a citizen of New York, had

assaulted him. Sanford replied with a plea of abatement on the grounds

that Dred Scott was not a citizen of Missouri because his ancestors

came to the United States as slaves. Since Dred is not a citizen, he

cannot file a claim in a federal court. The plea of abatement was

denied because the judge claimed that Scott was a citizen. After the

trial the judge secretly informed the jury to vote against Scott; this

is what the jury did.

Dred Scott's lawyers filed a Writ of Error to the United

States Supreme Court. With a very heavy docket, the Supreme Court

planned to hear the Dred Scott vs. Sanford case two years later, in

the year of l856. Legal experts joined both sides of the case as the

attention of the entire country became focused on this trial. The fact

that Sanford had entered a plea of abatement claiming that blacks were

not citizens, gave the entire case an added dimension of importance.

Not only was it involved with the vital question of Congress' right to

prohibit slavery in the territories, it called into question the very

right of Negroes to be citizens . What is the use of Congress

prohibiting slavery in the territories if those freed from slavery

could not become citizens? The whole country realized that this was

the case they had all been waiting for. This was the case that would

make the ultimate decision.

It would be very hard for Dred Scott to win this case. The

court was Southern and pro slavery. There were nine justices. Taney,

the Chief Justice, and four others were from the South. Two of the

Northern judges were for state rights and one was pro slavery. Only

one judge was against slavery.

After hearing the case, the judges wanted to rule in favor of

Sanford. This is an example of using the law to get the results that

you want. The judges wanted to use the law to promote the view of the

United States that they considered most desirable. They could not

decide on what legal principle their decision should be based. Some

judges wanted to override Scott's status as a citizen. Justice Nelson

said that since this case was so controversial, and the election of

l856 was so controversial, they should wait until after the election

to hear new arguments. This request was granted.

More arguments were heard and the judges decided upon a

verdict. The decision, which Justice Taney presented, had three main

points: Negroes, even those who were not slaves, could not be citizens

of the United States, according to the meaning of the Constitution.

Scott's claim that he had become a free man because he lived in a

territory from which slavery had been prohibited as a result of the

Missouri Compromise, was not valid. This was because the Missouri

Compromise which excluded slavery went beyond the constitutional power

of Congress. Finally, Scott was not free because he had lived in

Illinois. Once he returned to Missouri he was obligated to obey the

laws of Missouri and was bound by the position he held in that state.

In l86l-1862, two very important things happened: Abraham

Lincoln was elected president and Congress prohibited slavery in the

territories without judicial restraint. These two things helped the

North gain power. People were very upset with the Dred Scott ruling,

even after his death. Other cases received similar verdicts and were

not judged by the merits of the individual cases, but by the issue of

slavery. People were not getting fair trials even though they were

insured fair trials by the Constitution of the United States of

America.

Calhoun continued to fight and remained a defender of slavery.

He based his position on the right of states to "regulate their own

domestic institutions." There was still much debate and the issue was

nowhere close to being solved. The hope of having it solved by the

Supreme Court proved to be an illusion. The mood of the country was

angry. Compromise was out of the question.

The Dred Scott case made the common folk aware of slavery and

its horrors. It added much more depth to the newly formed Free Soil

and Republican Parties. But it was also used as a weapon for the

Democrats. Every time the issue of judiciary involvement came up, they

just pointed to the Dred Scott case. Republicans said it was just

proof of Southern unfairness, and a good reason to fight against them.

The South had extremists who stuck to their belief in their absolute

sovereignty. This further isolated and separated the South from the

rest of the country.

The Dred Scott case bears directly on the Civil War. It not

only strengthened the Republican Party but it also angered them to

the point that they were ready to fight in a war. There was a war and

the North prevailed. This war marked the end of slavery, but was one

of the most traumatic events in the history of the United States.

The Dred Scott decision was a major factor in dividing the

nation beyond repair. It was the moving force for the Civil War that

followed it. The Supreme Court's consideration of the case represented

the last chance for a peaceful and legal solution to the issue of

slavery. All prior political solutions proposed by Congress proved

futile. Having exhausted both political and legal means for a

solution, the fanatics took over and the bloodshed of war became

inevitable.

---

Bibliography

Fehrenbacher, Don E. The Dred Scott Case, Its Significance in American

Law and Politics New York: Oxford University Press, l978.

Hopkins, Vincent C. Dred Scott's Case New York: Atheneum, l967.

Kutler, Stanley,I. The Dred Scott Decision, Law or Politics? Boston:

Houghton Mifflin, l967.

Schwartz, Bernard. A History of the Supreme Court New York: Oxford

University Press, l993.



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