Home >
Galleries > Chasing the Devil Around the S... > The Mystery of Justice Dougla
Chasing the Devil Around the Stump: Securities Regulation, the SEC and the Courts
The Minds of the Justices
The Mystery of Justice Douglas
- April 17, 1939 William O. Douglas with his son
Given Justice William O. Douglas’s strong stint as SEC Chairman and his academic background in corporate and securities law, a casual observer would expect his tenure on the Supreme Court to be distinguished with the authorship of major SEC decisions. Yet, even after his early recusal policy which kept him from sitting on cases in which he had government-sector involvement, Douglas did not exert the influence on the Supreme Court in securities cases that one would expect. An examination of the justices’ public archives before 1972 shows that it was lesser-known justices, such as Stanley Reed, Wiley Rutledge, Frank Murphy and Arthur Goldberg, who led the Court decision writing in favor of an expansive interpretation of the Securities Acts.44
What explains this anomaly? Inside the Supreme Court, deliberations are secret and the only evidence we have is the personal papers and notes of the justices. Those archives help answer the mystery of why Justice Douglas appears only occasionally as the author of the majority opinion. Supreme Court internal rules provide that the longest serving justice on the winning side of the case has the right to assign the opinion writing. After 1938, when the Court switched dramatically to permit broadened administrative powers within the SEC to regulate interstate commerce in securities, the controversy about the authority of the SEC to make administrative rules became settled law. When Justice Douglas, and others such as Justices Hugo Black and Robert Jackson, who had fought the battle during the New Deal for passage and the constitutionality of the Securities Acts were on the winning sides of many cases, they simply chose to assign the opinions to fellow justices.
In addition, other justices on the Court took special interest in securities and administrative law cases. Justice Reed, who had taught corporate and securities law as a professor, remained a student of securities law while on the court. His papers reflect a deep passion for understanding and implementing complicated legislation regulating the securities industry. Justice Rutledge was a strong academic lawyer, serving as dean of the University of Iowa College of Law. His private archives show an acute academic mind with wide interests in corporation, administrative law and securities fields. Justices Murphy and Goldberg, somewhat by default, also became interested in the intricate and complicated arguments about the manner in which the SEC interpreted and implemented Congressional legislation. Justice Tom Clark, after he was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1949, often joined them.45
These justices took on securities cases and fashioned a strong legal regimen that balanced their role as reviewers of the law, while permitting reasonable administrative rule making. As Justice Goldberg wrote, “It is necessary to bear the limitations of the judicial process in mind. Judicial law can help us ensure compliance by government and by our citizenry with the Bill of Rights and valid laws and regulations -- matters of transcendent importance. Judges can invalidate unconstitutional law and unauthorized executive actions… But judges cannot, however, establish social and economic justice by judicial fiat.”46 These lesser-known justices adopted a conscientious fidelity to judicial review and statutory interpretation that promoted the power of the Congress and the SEC to regulate the national securities and financial markets.
This is not to say that Douglas, Frankfurter, Black and Jackson were not interested or influential. Where necessary, they exerted their influence behind the scenes, drafting memos, gentle reminders, firm rejoinders, and complimentary missives to their colleagues in their own attempts to win arguments among “the brethren,” as the justices referred to each other. They did most of their work winning securities cases out of public sight, with consensus building and persuasion, as they focused their decision-writing skills on other cases and issues, such as emerging civil and criminal rights matters, about which they felt more passionate.
<<Previous Next>>
Footnotes:
(44) William M. Wiecek, The Birth of the Modern Constitution: The United States Supreme Court, 1941-1953, (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 2006), Chapter 2.
(45) Nathaniel L. Nathanson, “Statutory Interpretation and Mr. Justice Rutledge,” 10 Vand. Law Review 35 (1949-50): 584-624; Albert S. Abel, “The Commerce Power: An Instrument of Federalism,” 10 Vand. Law Review 35 (1949; 50): 625-662; Mary Frances Berry, Stability, Security and Continuity: Mr. Justice Burton and Decision-Making in the Supreme Court, 1945-1958 (Greenwood Press: Westport, CT, 1978), 30-34.
Related Museum Resources
Papers
- March 21, 1939
-
transcript
pdf
(Harlan Fiske Stone Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 7, 1939
-
transcript
pdf
(Harlan Fiske Stone Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 1940
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 16, 1940
-
transcript
pdf
(Harlan Fiske Stone Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 16, 1940
-
transcript
pdf
(Harlan Fiske Stone Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 24, 1940
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 25, 1942
-
image
pdf
(Harlan Fiske Stone Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 16, 1942
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 17, 1942
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 18, 1942
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 17, 1942
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 21, 1942
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- January 23, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collection, University of Kentucky)
- January 27, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- January 29, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collection, University of Kentucky)
- January 30, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 1943
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 2, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 3, 1943
-
image
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 4, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 4, 1943
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 27, 1944
-
image
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 29, 1944
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 21, 1944
-
transcript
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collection, University of Kentucky)
- January 11, 1945
-
image
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- December 18, 1945
-
transcript
pdf
(Harlan Fiske Stone Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 7, 1946
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 1946
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 15, 1946
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- November 23, 1946
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- January 28, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley B. Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 1, 1947
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 31, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 18, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 18, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 18, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collection, University of Kentucky)
- June 23, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- October 8, 1947
-
image
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- October 20, 1947
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 20, 1948
-
image
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- October 24, 1948
-
image
pdf
(Wiley B. Rutledge Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
- December 3, 1948
-
transcript
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collection, University of Kentucky)
- January 17, 1949
-
image
pdf
(Wiley B. Rutledge Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
- May 13, 1949
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 2, 1949
-
transcript
pdf
(Wiley Rutledge Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 22, 1949
-
transcript
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collection, University of Kentucky)
- February 7, 1950
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 16, 1950
-
transcript
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collection, University of Kentucky)
- Summer 1950
-
image
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collection, University of Kentucky)
- January 12, 1951
-
image
pdf
(Harold H. Burton Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- January 12, 1951
-
image
pdf
(Harold H. Burton Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- 1953
-
transcript
pdf
(Robert H. Jackson Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 1, 1953
-
image
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- June 3, 1953
-
transcript
pdf
(Frederick Moore Vinson Collection, University of Kentucky)
- December 5, 1953
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 21, 1953
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 22, 1953
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 30, 1953
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- May 29, 1954
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 12, 1955
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- April 8, 1955
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- April 26, 1957
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- April 29, 1957
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- June 10, 1957
-
image
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- May 9, 1958
-
image
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- February 14, 1959
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 16, 1959
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 5, 1959
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 14, 1959
-
image
pdf
(William J. Brennan, Jr. Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 14, 1959
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 16, 1959
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 18, 1959
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- March 21, 1959
-
image
pdf
(Earl Warren Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- April 24, 1959
-
image
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- October 8, 1959
-
image
pdf
(Stanley Forman Reed Collections, courtesy University of Kentucky)
- April 1965
-
transcript
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 6, 1965
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- April 1966
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- April 19, 1966
-
image
pdf
(William O. Douglas Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 23, 1968
-
transcript
pdf
(William J. Brennan, Jr. Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- December 16, 1968
-
image
pdf
(Thurgood Marshall Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- January 8, 1969
-
transcript
pdf
(William J. Brennan, Jr. Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- February 17, 1971
-
image
pdf
(William J. Brennan, Jr. Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
- January 8, 1986
-
image
pdf
(Harry A. Blackmun Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
Photos
- August 5, 1937
-
(Courtesy Library of Congress )
- January 18, 1938
-
(Courtesy Library of Congress )
- March 20, 1939
-
(standing, left to right) Robert E. Healy, Jerome Frank, Edward C. Eicher and George C. Mathews
(Courtesy Library of Congress )
- March 27, 1939
-
(Courtesy Library of Congress )
- February 1940
-
(Courtesy Library of Congress )