Opinions of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott Case.
Albany, New York Evening Journal
(7 March 1857)
WASHINGTON, March 6.
Chief Justice Taney delivered to-day the opinion of the U.
S. Supreme Court in the Dred Scott case. The points are that
Scott is not a citizen; that he was not manumitted by being taken
by his master when a slave into the then Territory of Illinois, and
that the Missouri Compromise was an act unconstitutionally passed
by Congress.
Justice Nelson, of New York, dissented. Five
Judges, Taney, Campbell, Catron,
Wayne, and Daniel, concur on the constitutional point
against the Missouri Compromise. Nelson and
Grier dodge by adopting the Missouri decisions for
their justification in joining the majority. McLean and
Curtis meet the issue squarely and sustain the jurisdiction of the
Court, with the constitutionality of the Compromises.
It is no novelty to find the Supreme Court
following the lead of the Slavery Extension party, to which most of its members
belong. Five of the Judges are slaveholders, and two of the other four owe
their appointments to their facile ingenuity in making State laws bend to
Federal demands in behalf of "the Southern institution."