Tony Freyer and Timothy Dixon.
Democracy and Judicial Independence: A History of the Federal Courts of
Alabama, 1820-1994.
Brooklyn, N.Y.: Carlson Publishing, Inc., 1995. xiii + 384 pp.
Bibliographical references and index. $60.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-9260-1986-4 .
Reviewed by:
Barbara Rust , National Archives, Southwest Region, Ft. Worth, Texas.
Published by:
H-Law
(September, 1996)
Following Alabama's entrance into the Union in 1819,
Congress created one federal judicial district for the state and provided
for the United States District Court to exercise both district and circuit
court powers. The court met alternately at
Mobile and Cahawba until
Cahawba was abandoned as a court site six years later. By 1824 the federal
court's workload had increased to the point that two districts, Southern
and Northern, were established. The Northern District met at Huntsville
while the Southern eventually settled at
Mobile. A
third federal judicial district, the Middle District with court sessions
at Tucaloosa, was added in 1839. The headquarters for the Middle District
were later moved to Montgomery, where they remain today.
Early Alabama federal courts wrestled with several
important issues. The courts had to define the relationships between the
national and state governments, particularly in sectional controversies
over slavery. Other concerns involved determining legal sources to be used
in federal courts. During the antebellum period, federal law was not as
voluminous as it would become after the Civil War or, certainly, as in the
twentieth century. Were early federal courts to use state laws, the
limited amount of federal law, legal precedents, constitutional
interpretations, general democratic principles, or all of the above?
The period between the end of the Civil War and the eve of
World War II brought changes for the
Alabama federal courts, as
it did for the federal judiciary throughout the nation. Although civil
rights for freedmen would eventually be eroded by the Compromise of 1877
and Southern states' Black Codes, state sovereignty also took a beating
from the expansion of national law as a source for federal courts.
Economic and demographic realignments within
Alabama,
combined with diversity of citizenship lawsuits and the creation in 1891
of a federal court of appeals leading to a more structured federal
judiciary, accelerated changes within the Alabama federal judiciary. At
the turn of the century, the progressive mood of Congress greatly expanded
federal law by regulating railroads, enacting food and drug requirements,
establishing farm credit programs, regulating large corporations through
antitrust measures, and controlling currency through the Federal Reserve
system.
Alabama
federal courts continued to change following the end of World War II.
While cases involving diversity of citizenship and removals from state
courts declined, the numbers of cases involving federal laws or appeals of
administrative decisions by federal agencies increased. The 1964 Civil
Rights Act and 1965 Voting Rights Act further added to the cases brought
before the federal bench. Procedural changes began to centralize and
standardize many federal court processes. The Justice Department's
administrative role over federal courts was transferred to the
Administrative Office of the Courts, created by the Administrative Office
Act of 1939, and to the Judicial Conference, composed of representatives
from U.S. Courts of Appeal, court clerks, and federal judges. The
Federal Judicial Center, which provides assistance to the federal bench,
was established in 1967. External institutional factors diminished the
roles played by local attorneys in their relations with the Alabama
federal bench. Some federal judges, however, resisted the standardization
being imposed on the Alabama courts by national organizations.
In discussing the changes that occurred within the Alabama
federal judiciary over 170 years, Tony Freyer, who wrote the narrative,
makes some insightful and interesting points. The analyses of factors
influencing selection decisions for new federal judges within the state is
particularly strong. External economic issues at both the national and
state level helped to determine who would be appointed a new federal
judge. Political party affiliation, over time, would prove to be less
important than whether the judicial nominee belonged to the state's social
and economic elite. Sectionalism, particularly during the antebellum
period, was another factor in not only who would be chosen to sit on the
federal court, but in how the judge would decide in slave cases brought
before the courts. Following the Civil War, national law grew as a result
of federal bankruptcy laws and expanded federal criminal jurisdiction, and
Alabama's federal judges began to focus more on federal precedents and
statutes for guidance. Nominees for the federal bench reflected the
changes occurring within the federal judiciary as it moved from the more
localized legal culture found within Alabama to a more national view.
The book, however, suffers from inadequate analysis of
changes occurring in the three Alabama federal districts and the resulting
case loads of the district courts. As economic conditions during the
antebellum period shifted between the northern and southern portions of
the state, did the case load and types of cases in the northern and
southern federal districts reflect the differences? Freyer states that "In
Alabama as in the other [Southern] states, it was the circuit rather than
the district court dockets that were congested ...," but he offers no
comparisons or examples. Early in the book, he indicates that the number
of law and equity (chancery) orders had increased from a total of 23 in
1828 to 1,557 law orders and 27 chancery orders in 1846 with an average of
117 motions being filed annually. While motions and orders indicate levels
of court activity, they are not as reliable measures of increased case
loads as determining the numbers of new cases being filed each year. To
conduct this level of analysis in nineteenth-century court records, a
researcher would achieve better results by sampling the case documents
with their filing dates stamped on endorsement backs of petitions, orders,
and so forth than by using rather incomplete docket books. Unlike some
Southern federal courts, antebellum case files from the three Alabama
districts do exist and can be sampled to determine whether the case load
in 1828 had increased dramatically by 1846 and any variances in cases
heard by the three Alabama federal districts. As a result of the
increasing standardization found in federal courts during the twentieth
century, a court's dockets provide excellent summaries about cases,
because they indicate when the initial petition, complaint, or indictment
was filed and when subsequent documents were filed. Twentieth-century
dockets also indicate if a case was appealed to one of the United States
Courts of Appeals.
It would also have been interesting to see what issues were
confronting the Alabama federal bench during the early days of statehood
in comparison to other periods of Alabama's history. While the Federal
Reporter does report all United States Courts of Appeals cases, the
courts of appeals were not created until 1891. Prior to their creation,
appeals from federal district courts went to circuit courts, which also
had extensive original jurisdiction, particularly in equity (chancery)
matters. Only a small percentage of district and circuit court cases were
ever reported to the Federal Supplement and Federal Reporter,
respectively.
Freyer mentions attempts by Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr., to
enforce the Brown v. Board of Education ruling, but cites only the
Montgomery boycott
decision. Were there other decisions by Johnson in desegregation matters?
Was Johnson consistent in his rulings? While the Montgomery boycott was
perhaps the most newsworthy decision, gems that reflect a judge's attitude
can be found among cases that never get reported. In a court case from the
Western District of Arkansas during the Brown period, a federal
judge reminded the NAACP that he did not require the services of
"outsiders" to determine constitutionality. The Supreme Court's decision
in Brown was issued during the Arkansas case and provided guidance
to the U.S. district court judge, who ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.
The case became insignificant as to constitutional issues, but provided
insights into the mind of a federal judge sitting on a school desegration
case. There is no substitute for viewing a federal court's case files,
dockets, and record books for obtaining a clearer view of how a court
ruled and what it faced on an annual basis. Thousands of feet of records
from the three Alabama federal districts, fortunately, are extant and can
provide researchers with raw data to conduct analyses of federal cases and
anecdotal, but not reported, information about the judges who sit on the
Alabama bench.
Library of Congress
Call Number: KFA515 .F74 1995
Subjects:
* District courts-Alabama-History
* District courts-United States-History
Citation: Barbara Rust . "Review of Tony Freyer and Timothy
Dixon, Democracy and Judicial
Independence:
A History of the Federal Courts of Alabama, 1820-1994," H-Law, H-Net
Reviews, September, 1996. URL:
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=25353855756703.
“This welcome addition to
southern legal studies is unquestionably ambitious… The authors argue…that
the local nature of the federal court’s decision-making process mitigated
conflicts between state and federal authority. In other words, although
federal judicial authority increased during the antebellum period, the
growth was evolutionary and slowed considerably by Alabamians who filled
federal judgeships and practiced law at the federal bar.”
Robert Saunders, Jr.,
review of Democracy and Judicial Independence: A History of the
Federal Courts of Alabama, 1820-1994, by Tony Freyer and Timothy
Dixon, The Alabama Review 51 (October 1998): 293-295.