The Reconstruction Justice of Salmon P. Chase
In Re Turner and Texas v. White
Harold M. Hyman
232 pages, 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
Landmark Law Cases and American Society
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0835-5, $16.95
The demise of
the Confederacy left a legacy of legal arrangements that raised
fundamental and vexing questions regarding the legal rights and
status of former slaves and the status of former Confederate
states. As Harold Hyman shows, few individuals had greater impact
on resolving these difficult questions than Salmon P. Chase,
chief justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1865 to
1873.
Hyman argues that in two cases--In Re Turner (1867)
and Texas v. White (1869)--Chase combined his abolitionist
philosophy with an activist jurisprudence to help dismantle once
and for all the deposed machineries of slavery and the Confederacy.
In these cases, Chase sought to consolidate the gains of the
Civil War era, while demonstrating that the war had both preserved
the precious core characteristics of the federal union of states
and fundamentally improved the nature of both private and public
law.
In Re Turner was a private law case decided at the
federal circuit level. It involved a black woman's claim that
she, a recent slave, was being held in involuntary servitude.
Elizabeth Turner's mother had apprenticed Elizabeth to their
former master, who had not abided by his contractual obligations
to provide Elizabeth with training and compensation, substantively
keeping her in slavery. Chase's decision, which relied upon due
process and equal protection implications in the thirteenth amendment
and 1866 Civil Rights Act, confirmed the rights of emancipated
slaves to bargain and contract with employers on a parity with
white workers.
Texas v. White was a public law case decided in the
Supreme Court. It revolved around the issue of whether the holders
of U.S. bonds seized and sold by the Confederate state of Texas
could demand payment after the war from that state's newly reconstructed
government. In effect, Chase and his associate justices were
asked to determine the legality of actions committed by all former
Confederate states and, thus, to define what constituted a state.
Chase's opinion reaffirmed the Union's permanence, and that of
the constituent states in the federal union, and the states'
duty to respect the legal rights and obligations of all citizens
because states were people as well as acreages and institutions.
Hyman's exemplary analysis of these cases reveals how their
political, legal, and constitutional aspects were so inextricably
interwoven. They secured for Chase a rostrum for both moral and
legal reform from which he asserted his strong views on the fundamental
rights of individuals and states in an era of sporadically increasing
federal power. Hyman's study provides a much-needed reevaluation
of those cases both in the context of Chase's life and in terms
of their mark on history.
"This is constitutional history as it should be written,
but seldom is. Combining an excellent sketch of Chase's life
with the social, intellectual, and moral climate of the times,
Hyman provides a brilliant analysis of two landmark decisions.
He also presents a stimulating, original, and provocative treatment
of the Chase Court that sheds new light on our understanding
of the thirteenth and fourteenth amendments."--John Niven,
editor of The Salmon P. Chase Papers
HAROLD M. HYMAN, William P. Hobby Professor of History
at Rice University, is one of the deans of American legal history.
He is the author of A More Perfect Union: Constitutional Impacts
of the Civil War and Reconstruction; Equal Justice under
Law: Constitutional History, 18351875; and numerous
other books.
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