and, writing to Madison in 1798, had said that his
"lax, lounging manners have made him popular with
the bulk of the people of Richmond, and a profound
hypocrisy, with many thinking men of our country.
But, having come forth in the plenitude of his English
principles, the latter will see that it is high time to
make him known.” To Monroe he had written in 1800
that "nothing should be spared to eradicate this
spirit of Marshallism."[1] Moreover, Jefferson had
an especial ground for distrust of Marshall at this
particular time; for the report had become widely
circulated, during the contest in Congress between
Burr and Jefferson for the Presidency, that Marshall
had given a legal opinion that Congress under certain
contingencies might appoint a President, and it was
rumored that the Chief Justice of the United States
was to be selected. "We are told that the intention is
to place the Chief Justice in the Presidential Chair
and that John Jay was recommended in the spirit and body of this plan," said one newspaper.[2] "There
- ↑ Jefferson, letter to Madison, Nov. 26, 1798; Works of Thomas Jefferson (ed. by A. G. Lipscomb, 1903), XIX, letter to James Monroe, April 12, 1800. Judge Story reported Jefferson as saying: “When conversing with Marshall, I never admit anything. So sure as you admit any position to be good, no matter how remote from the conclusion he seeks to establish, you are gone. So great is his sophistry you must never give him an affirmative answer or you will be forced to grant his conclusion. Why, if he were to ask me if it were daylight or not, I'd reply, 'Sir, I don't know, I can't tell.'" Life of Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1914), by Charles R. Williams, diary entry of Sept. 20, 1843.
- ↑ Salem Gazette, Jan. 16, 1801. The Aurora, Jan. 10, 15, 1801, stated that in the event that the House of Representatives were unable to arrive at a choice by March 4, 1801, some of the chief Federalists who had assembled at the house of Judge Chase in Baltimore had devised a plan to retain possession of the Government by a bill to put the Chief Justice in the Presidential Chair. Monroe wrote from Richmond, Jan. 6, 1801, to Jefferson: "Strange reports circulatory here . . . that Federalism means to commit the power by a Legislative act to John Marshall, Samuel A. Otis, or some other person till another election." On Jan. 18, 1801, he wrote: "It is said here that Marshall has given an opinion in conversation with Stoddard that in case 9 States should not unite in favor of one of the persons chosen, the Legislature may appoint a President till another election is made, and that intrigues are carrying to place us in that situation. This is stated in a letter from