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Making Sense of Madison: Nedelsky on Private Property
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 December 2018
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- Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1993
References
1 See Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787 ch. 10 (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1969) (“Wood, American Republic”); Julius Goebel, Jr., ed., 1 The Law Practice of Alexander Hamilton 197–543 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1964).Google Scholar
2 See Wood, American Republic chs. 11–13; Richard Ellis, The Jeffersoniun Crisis: Courts and Politics in the Young Republic (New York: Oxford University Press, 1971); Edward S. Convin, “The Progress of Constitutional Theory between the Declaration of Independence and the Meeting of the Philadelphia Convention,” 30 Am. Hist. Rev, 511, 517–20 (1924); Robert F. Williams, “‘Experience Must Be Our Only Guide’: The State Constitutional Experience of the Framers of the Federal Constitution,” 15 Hustings Const. L Q. 403, 413–21 (1988); Isaac Kramnick, “The ‘Great National Discussion’: The Discourse of Politics in 1787,” 45 Wm & Mary Q. (3d ser.) 3, 6–8 (1988); Janet A. Riesman, “Money, Credit, and Federalist Political Economy,” in Richard Beernan, Stephen Botein, & Edward Carter II, eds., Beyond Confederation: Origins of the Constitution and American National Identity 150–51 (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1987) (“Beeman et al., Beyond Confederation”).Google Scholar
3 These attitudes are typically associated, not with the Federalists, but with their Anti-federalist opponents and with such later observers of American political culture as Toc-queville. See Wood, American Republic ch. 11; Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America (New York: Vintage Books, 1945).Google Scholar
4 For example, large electoral districts to multiply the number of competing factions and minimize the risk that demagogues would be elected, bicameralism, and a novel conception of the separation of powers. See at 52–66.Google Scholar
5 See Bruce Ackerman, “The Storrs Lectures: Discovering the Constitution,” 93 Yale L.J. 1013 (1984); Ackerman, We the People: Foundations (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1991.Google Scholar
6 See, e.g., Wood, American Republic ch. 13.Google Scholar
7 See Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 112 S. Ct. 2886 (1992). For discussions of the origins and likely impact of Lucas, see the symposium on the case forthcoming in 45 Stanford Law Review no. 5 (1993).Google Scholar
8 The few statements by Madison that Nedelsky does point to—e.g., an ambiguous reference in a veto message to the public's duty to provide poor relief and an even more cryptic expression of support for “laws, which, without violating the rights of property, reduce extreme wealth towards a state of mediocrity, and raise extreme indigence towards a state of comfort” (at 44, 45)—all seem to have been made after the ratification of the Constitution.Google Scholar
9 Even this aspect of Nedelsky‘s account is, however, oversimplified. Although the courts continued until 1937 erecting barriers against legislative interferences against property rights, the nature of those barriers changed fundamentally. Roughly speaking, prior to the Civil War, the courts were most concerned with preventing the state and federal governments from abridging “vested rights”—entitlements acquired by private parties either from government grants or from other parties in reliance on a body of private law rules. After the War, the courts were less hostile toward impairments of vested rights but more protective of substantive economic freedoms (such as liberty of contract and the ability to make a profit from one's investments) unrelated to prior governmental commitments. The shift in orientation both drew on and amplified a radical change in lawyers' views on political economy— (again, roughly speaking) from a mercantilist or “commonwealth” vision to a classical vision. See Kainen, James L., “Nineteenth-Century Interpretations of the Federal Contract Clause: The Transformation from Vested to Substantive Rights Against the State,” 31 Buff. L Rev. 381 (1982); Herbert Hovencamp, Enterprise and American Law, 1836–1937 at 17–35 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991) (“Hovencamp, Enterprise and Law”). In short, Nedelsky is straining a bit when she asserts that there was “a consistent vision of constitutionalism throughout the nineteenth century. It was essentially Marshall's version of Madisonian Federalism” (at 229).Google Scholar
10 The source of these insights is Morton J. Horwitz, The Transformation of American Law, 1780–1860 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1976) (“Horwitz, Transformation”).Google Scholar
11 William Novak, “The Police Power of the State: The Legal Roots of Regulation in America, 1791–1940” at 29–58 (Ph.D. diss., Brandeis University, 1990) (“Novak, ‘Police Power’”.Google Scholar
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17 Hydraulics Works v. Orr, 83 Penn. St. 332, 334, 335–36 (1877) (emphasis in original). Less evocative, perhaps, but similar in orientation are the following remarks by the Supreme Court of Kentucky:.Google Scholar
As a general rule, the owner of land may retain to himself the sole and exclusive use and occupation of it; but as property in lands depends upon municipal law for its recognition and protection, the individual use and enjoyment of it are subject to conditions and restraints imposed for the public good, and from a reasonable and humane regard for the welfare and rights of others. Hence, according to the maxim, sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas, a party may be made liable for the negligent use of his property, whereby the person or property of another has been injured.Google Scholar
Bransom's Executor v. Labrot, 81 Ken. 638, 641 (1884).Google Scholar
18 7 Cush. (61 Mass.) 53, 84–85 (1851).Google Scholar
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60 LaCapra, , 11 Intell. Hist. Newsl. at 9. In the recent essay from which this quotation is drawn, LaCapra goes on—in an uncharacteristically conciliatory vein—to acknowledge that “contextualization and dialogic exchange … supplement one another in a number of important and, at crucial moments, tense or even conflict-ridden ways in our attempts to read and interpret texts.” Too much of either, he suggests, is a bad thing. Id. at 10.Google Scholar
61 I explore some of those issues (and their implications for legal history) in a forthcoming essay, “Ways of Reading (Old) Legal Texts”.Google Scholar
62 Nedelsky does not offer us a sustained discussion of the Antifederalists until page 163, and her purpose in bringing them forward is not to establish the intellectual context within which the Federalists moved but rather “to reinforce the implicit critique of Morris and Wilson by making it explicit” and to “show that the weaknesses Morris and Wilson indirectly reveal were in fact incorporated into the Constitution”.Google Scholar
63 See notes 9 and 11 supra.Google Scholar
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72 See James Kloppenberg, “Why Intellectual History Matters to Legal History, and Vice Versa”; Joan Williams, “Supple Structuralism and Radical Contextualism: History as the Study of Certainty”; and Fisher, “Ways of Reading (Old) Legal Texts” (all forthcoming).Google Scholar
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