Ex parte Merryman,
17 F.
Cas. 144 (1861), is a well-known
U.S. federal court case
which arose out of the
American Civil
War.
Against President Abraham Lincoln's wishes, Chief Justice Roger Taney, sitting as a judge of the United States Circuit Court for
the District
of Maryland
, ruled:
"1. That the president [...] cannot suspend the privilege of
the
writ of habeas corpus, nor
authorize a military officer to do it. 2. That a military officer
has no right to arrest and detain a person not subject to the rules
and articles of war [...] except in aid of the judicial authority,
and subject to its control."
Circumstances
Shortly
after the April 12–April 14, 1861 bombardment of
Fort
Sumter
in South
Carolina
by Confederate forces, President Lincoln called for
volunteer troops to reinforce the capital city of Washington, DC
. The troops were to protect Washington against
possible hostilities originating in nearby Virginia
.
Virginia declared for the Confederacy on April 17.
On
April 19, when the Sixth Massachusetts
Regiment responded to the call and entered Baltimore,
Maryland
as they transferred between train stations on their
way to the capital, a riot broke
out. Several civilians and soldiers were killed when
shooting began. That same day, Lincoln wrote to
Attorney General Edward Bates, requesting an opinion on the
suspension of the writ of
habeas
corpus. Also in response to the riots, Baltimore's Mayor
George William Brown and
Maryland Governor
Thomas Holliday
Hicks declared that they would allow no more troop transfers to
go through their territory..."(Poole)
Lincoln refused.
"You would have me break my oath and surrender the
Government without a blow," he replied sternly.
"There is no Washington in that—no Jackson in that—no
manhood or honor in that."
He reminded them that Union soldiers were neither birds
who could fly over Maryland nor moles who could burrow
underground…"Go home and tell your people that if they do not
attack us, we will not attack them; but if they do attack us, we
will return it, and that severely."
Lieutenant
John Merryman, an officer
in the Maryland miltia, used his position to recruit and train
soldiers for service in support of the Confederacy. After the
Baltimore Riot he was involved in cutting telegraph wires and
burning railroad bridges in order to isolate Washington D. C. from
the rest of the North.
While reluctant to do so, Lincoln eventually took the advice of his
staff and wrote a letter to General
Winfield Scott on
April
27,
1861. In it, he allowed Scott (or an
empowered subordinate) to suspend habeas corpus within the vicinity
of the "military line" (Lincoln). This suspension was not
announced, and was in fact carefully kept secret at first. Still,
the suspension was not explicitly acknowledged.
Merryman was at about
this time also arrested and imprisoned at Fort McHenry
. He swiftly protested this imprisonment and
filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to release him from
arbitrary imprisonment.
The case
Merryman's complaints went to the circuit judge of the area.
The
justices of the Supreme Court
traditionally sat as circuit judges while the
Supreme Court was not in session. (This practice, known as
circuit riding, was
effectively ended in 1869.) (Hall 145) For this reason, Merryman's
complaint was heard by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney. (Poole)
The clash between Taney and the various generals who essentially
represented Lincoln is a good example of the conflict between
idealism and
pragmatism that characterizes much of the debate
on this topic. Taney went by the lawbooks (although Taney was also
a partisan opponent of Lincoln's Republican administration) and
raged against Lincoln unconstitutionally granting himself easily
abused powers. Taney showed that Lincoln's actions were contrary to
written law. The real question, which Taney addressed, was whether
or not it was practically permissible for a President to take such
actions. He argued that it was not, observing that none of the
Kings of England exercised such
power, and that therefore in this respect Lincoln was proving more
monarchical and despotic than any actual English monarch. He closed
his argumentation with the following fiery language
(Merryman):
- These great and fundamental laws, which congress itself
could not suspend, have been disregarded and suspended, like the
writ of habeas corpus, by a military order, supported by force of
arms. Such is the case now before me, and I can only say
that if the authority which the constitution has confided to the
judiciary department and judicial officers, may thus, upon any
pretext or under any circumstances, be usurped by the military
power, at its discretion, the people of the United States are no
longer living under a government of laws, but every citizen holds
life, liberty and property at the will and pleasure of the army
officer in whose military district he may happen to be
found.
Lincoln, citing Andrew Jackson before him, simply disregarded the
ruling. Relying upon an 1880's manuscript from Lincoln's close
friend
Ward Hill Lamon, some
scholars have contended that the President authorized then quickly
aborted an arrest warrant against Taney in retaliation for the
Merryman ruling. The manuscript and evidence are a relatively new
discovery in the historical literature and the story's authenticity
is hotly contested and controversial (see the
Taney Arrest Warrant
controversy).
Lincoln responded to the Merryman decision by asking his Attorney
General
Edward Bates for an opinion
supporting his suspension. It formed the basis for Lincoln's
July 4 speech to Congress in which he
rhetorically asked "Are all the laws, but one, to go unexecuted,
and the government itself go to pieces, lest that one be violated?"
Lincoln subsequently expanded the zone within which the writ was
suspended. After reconvening on July 4th Congress rejected a bill
favored by Lincoln to sanction his suspensions. Between 1861 and
1863 several additional federal district and circuit court rulings
affirmed Taney's opinion. Lincoln nevertheless continued making
unauthorized suspensions for another two years until the
Habeas Corpus Act 1863 of
March 3,
1863 formally suspended
the writ for him.
The Merryman decision is still among the best known Civil War-era
court cases and also one of Taney's most famous opinions. Its legal
argument holding that Congress alone may suspend the writ is noted
for reiterating the opinion of
John
Marshall and the court in
Ex
Parte Bollman (1807) and was recently restated by the
Supreme Court in
Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld (2004).
Notes
- Simon, James F., "Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery,
Secession, and the President's War Powers",(Simon & Shuster,
2006)p. 185
- Paludan (1994) p. 75
References
- Hall, Kermit L. (Ed.) (1992). The Oxford Companion to the
Supreme Court of the United States. Oxford University
Press.
- Lincoln, Abraham (April 27, 1861). Letter to
Winfield Scott. Cited in (1989) Lincoln: Speeches and
Writings 237. New York: Library
of America. —This is the letter in which Lincoln suspended
habeas corpus.
- Paludan, Phillip Shaw. The Presidency of Abraham
Lincoln. (1994) ISBN 0-7006-0671-8
- Poole, Patrick S. (1994). An Examination of Ex Parte Merryman.
- Rehnquist, William, Chief Justice (1997). Civil Liberty and the Civil War.
- Taney, Roger B., Chief Justice (1861). Ex parte
Merryman. ( alternate source) —Note that while Taney is named as
Chief Justice, this was not properly a Supreme Court case. [Not an
en banc Supreme Court Case. Taney himself notes in the
decision that it was "[b]efore the Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States, at Chambers." In the case itself it's
noted that "a writ of habeas corpus was issued by the chief justice
of the United States, sitting at chambers" - not as a judge of the
Circuit Court. Taney then orders the case to be "filed and recorded
in the circuit court of the United States for the district of
Maryland". If he was sitting as Circuit judge there would have been
no need to order the decision filed in Baltimore.]
See also
http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=lhbcb&fileName=03453//lhbcb03453.db&recNum=4&itemLink=r%3Fammem%2Flhbcbbib%3A@field%28NUMBER%2B@od1%28lhbcb%2B03453%29%29&linkText=0