American slave with heavily scarred back. In 1825 the United States Supreme Court decided that slavery was against the natural law.
A United States Supreme Court case, theoretically good precedent under in general, but on a topic that's obviously been addressed by Constitutional Amendment and hence the basic problem presented is now contrary to statutory law, is provided by The Antelope. Slavery, thankfully, and far too late, was made illegal by amendment to the United States Constitution, so whatever The Antelope says about the legality of that abomination is no longer the law. But the case's other points, about the existence of natural law, and potentially the state's relation to it, remain potentially valid. Should they?
It raises some interesting questions for us today, is this era of much poorer jurisprudence (see last week's item where Judge Posner is quoted on the poor quality of legal education and of the refugee status of law professors in some instances).
First, consider
The Antelope.
.
Syllabus
The Diana, 1 Dodson 95, was a Swedish vessel captured with a
cargo of slaves by a British cruiser and condemned in the Court of Vice
Admiralty at Sierra Leone. This sentence was reversed on appeal, and
Sir William Scott, in pronouncing the sentence of reversal, said "The condemnation also took place on a principle which this Court
cannot in any manner recognize, inasmuch as the sentence affirms 'that
the slave trade, from motives of humanity, hath been abolished by most
civilized nations and is not at the present time legally authorized by
any.' This appears to me to be an assertion by no means sustainable."
John Marshall, author of the opinion in The Antelope. He's regarded, justifiably, as one of the greatest of American jurists, but did he get this right?
So, there you have the sad story of the ship, The Antelope, and its sad charges. Africans carried away from home against their will and condemned to live out the balance of their lives as slaves, far from their homes and their desires.
And a legal case with surprising language, and to some extent, a surprising result. What does the Supreme Court decision tell us?
Well, it tells us the following.
1. In 1825, a full forty years prior to the end of the Civil War, a war we fought principally over slavery (yes, I know, states rights, etc., well that isn't what the war was about. . . it was about human bondage) the United States Supreme Court acknowledged the slavery was:
A. Contrary to Natural Law, and;
B. Immoral but;
C. Legal under the laws of men.
Note what's significant in that. At that point in time, when the knowledge of lawyers included not only the law, but the origin and nature of law, the Supreme Court acknowledged a natural law. Not some mushy evolving standard of law based upon some vague octogenarian's discerning of public intent, but a real basis in nature.
Only slightly less significant, the Justices found that the laws of nations could and in this case did override that natural law.
German defendants at the Nuremberg trials, each of whom could claim that their actions, no matter how heinous, were authorized by law. Their claims were rejected.
Let's leap forward to 1945. And the Nuremberg Trials.
Now a person may ask why, but again, there's a good reason. We're now dealing with natural law again, but on a national scale.
During the Nuremberg trials, the victorious Allies tried individuals who had served the Axis powers for various crimes against humanity. The fact that these crimes were legal under the laws of those nations did not a provide a defense. That is, a person could not claim, in their defense (although they frequently tried to do so, that "I was ordered to do it". That defense was actually a legally sufficient one up until that time, for the most part, and squares well with the holding of The Antelope. Yes, mass murder and imprisonment of millions based on their race or behavior is immoral, but it wasn't illegal under the laws of the state. It was illegal, rather, as it failed to comport with the principals of Natural Law.
So, starting in 1945, we reversed the view held by the United States Supreme Court in 1825. That is, we started saying that Natural Law is the highest law, where as the Supreme Court had said that Natural Law is the highest law, but a Court could not base a decision upon it in the face of contrary statutory law.
So what does that have to do with anything today?
How do you feel?
Was the U.S. Supreme Court wrong in 1825? It could have held that a Natural Law was supreme against all other law, and a law contrary to nature was no law at all. Politically, that would have been problematic in 1825 to say the least, as it would have feed the slaves throughout the country, and the Supreme Court likely knew that it couldn't effect that in 1825. Still, as a moral and legal proposition, it could have said that.
The Allies did say that in 1945. Where they right? Is a person bound by the Natural Law above all other law?
It's an interesting and relevant question today. In Obegefell Justice Kennedy and his fellows ignored any discussion of Natural Law, even though its clearly relevant to the topic they had at hand, and the most frequently discussed aspect of the topic that decision addresses in serious circles of debate. Indeed, he didn't really hold to anything much than a mushy standards of "we know where things are headed". But that doesn't make the Natural Law question go away, and now it places it in the forefront.
Has the Nuremberg Defense, "following orders", now been adopted by the American judiciary as a mandate. I.e., you must follow orders, as we've decreed, even if you have serious Natural Law objections? And if so, where does that lead us in the future. Will future Syrian butchers be able to avoid trial, as "my state ordered me to do this?".
Was The Antelope wrongly decided, and for those with moral convictions on the topic did the decision resolve them because it was a legal decision?
"The Lord Is My Shepherd", painting of an American slave.
Interesting questions, directly impacting real people's lives. At the end of the day, the subject of The Antelope was people. And the decision essentially overrode an acknowledged superior body of law in favor of what the Court seemed to acknowledge was an immoral national law. The Court went for statutory law over a great Natural Law. In 1945, we decided that a greater Natural Law bound all others. What position do we hold now?