That left everyone hanging with the question: which one was to be upheld? Which one was the “real” law, Congress’s or New York’s? Which was the “higher” law that should actually have legitimate force behind it?
Here is where we see how strange and anachronistic the legal values we share today would be compared to those of an extensive class of Revolutionary Era patriots in the 1700s.
The standard on which so many of the Founding Generation operated was the standard of “legislative supremacy.”
Legislative supremacy was largely the position of politicians like Alexander Hamilton’s rivals Melancton Smith, Marinus Willett, and George Clinton. They, in essence, believed that if the representatives of the sovereign people of New York State passed a law, no court could undo it.
A law written by the legislature and approved by the governor in Albany may have flown in the face of any higher legal principle or precedent. But it was still a law. And if it was a law, then the People had spoken. No unelected judge could do a thing to change it.
To put it another way, “tyranny of the majority” ruled the day. There were no rights, repeal, or recourse for minorities, like the Tories.
Hamilton was fiercely, vituperatively an opponent of this whole legal understanding.
To Hamilton, the Trespass Act and so on—the laws which were enabling the wholesale downwards redistribution of wealth—were even more evidence of what he had observed all along during the war and in its wake: that the state governments were reckless and irresponsible.
Hamilton was ardent in his conviction that too much pure democracy placed power in the hands of money-grubbing hucksters: low-class Have Nots who would only take from the Haves. That such people also almost always proved incompetent with the job of actually administering a government? That only made things worse.
Hamilton yearned for Congress to be anointed power center that could overrule the states. Whip them into shape. Make them to carry through on their responsibilities. Force them to behave like honorable nations do.
Rutgers v. Waddington was therefore, to Hamilton, much more than a case about back rent on a burned-down brewery.
It was a case in which he could throw down a gauntlet over sweeping, all-encompassing, world-historical legal issues.
Rutgers v. Waddington was Hamilton’s chance to argue that Congress, through the Treaty of Paris, was capable of enacting a law superior to the acts of a State legislature. (In certain spheres, anyway, like diplomacy and international affairs).
Hamilton was also in effect declaring that the courtroom—the domain of lawyers and judges—was the proper place to determine which law should carry force: Congress’s, or the state’s.
Hamilton argued the case in late June of 1784 before Mayor James Duane and five aldermen. Representing the plaintiffs, the Rutgers, was attorney general Egbert Benson. Two of Hamilton’s own good friends, Robert Troup (a very close pal never mentioned in the musical) and John Lawrence (not to be confused with John Laurens) were also on as co-counsel for Rutgers.
The 29 year-old Hamilton caused a scandal, a sensation, by defending Loyalists in court. The New York Journal newspaper even published a poem castigating him in the manner of a perilous Roman general, and raking Hamilton over the coals for putting his career as an attorney ahead of all his patriotic acts in the lead-up to the war.