The Judiciary Act of 1801University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1959 - 752 páginas |
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Página 13
... considered accordingly . 33 Article I gave the new Congress powers to make certain demands . Article III provided the means of enforcing them . This article should be read , I think , as one of the major compromises of the Constitution ...
... considered accordingly . 33 Article I gave the new Congress powers to make certain demands . Article III provided the means of enforcing them . This article should be read , I think , as one of the major compromises of the Constitution ...
Página 49
... considered legally defective or inconsis- tent with the intention of the Constitution . Mention of personal inc on- venience caused by circuit riding , the relative merits of stationary or rotating allotments of the judges to the ...
... considered legally defective or inconsis- tent with the intention of the Constitution . Mention of personal inc on- venience caused by circuit riding , the relative merits of stationary or rotating allotments of the judges to the ...
Página 132
... considered that Ingersoll might be persuaded to take a seat on the court should a vacancy occur . December 23 , the President , then awaiting word from Jay , wrote again to " I have appointed Mr. Jay chief Justice . He may refuse , if ...
... considered that Ingersoll might be persuaded to take a seat on the court should a vacancy occur . December 23 , the President , then awaiting word from Jay , wrote again to " I have appointed Mr. Jay chief Justice . He may refuse , if ...
Índice
The Passage of the Judiciary Act of 1801 1 | 71 |
APPENDICES | 345 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 357 |
Direitos de autor | |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Adams Papers administration admiralty amendment American Annals appointment Associate Justice Attorney Aurora Bayard Beveridge Boston Charles Chief Justice circuit courts circuit judge claimed committee common law Connecticut Constitution Cranch debate December decision district courts district judge duties Fairfax February February 18 federal courts federal judiciary Federalist party Gazette Georgia Hillhouse Historical Society History House Humphrey Marshall Ibid Ingersoll James Iredell January John Adams John Jay John Marshall judicial power Judiciary Act judiciary bill judiciary system jurisdiction jury Kentucky land Law Review legislation legislature letter litigation March Marshall's Massachusetts ment nomination North Carolina Oliver Wolcott Otis Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pinckney political President Adams proposed provision question reported Republican resignation Richard Bassett Robert Goodloe Harper Robert Treat Paine Rufus King Samuel selection session Sixth Congress suits Theodore Sedgwick Thomas Jefferson tion Treat Paine Papers United Virginia vols vote Warren Washington William Cushing William Paterson wrote York