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'''Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward''',
17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 518 (
1819), was an important
United States Supreme Court case dealing with the application of the
Contract Clause of the
United States Constitution to private corporations.
Background
The landmark case ''Dartmouth v. William H. Woodward'' is not without precedent. Earlier in the first instance of the Court invalidating a state legislative act the
Supreme Court had ruled in ''
Fletcher v. Peck'', , that contracts no matter how they were procured (in the case of ''Fletcher'', a land contract had been illegally obtained), cannot be invalidated by state legislation. Thus, the court, though working in an early era, was treading on familiar ground when it handed down ''Dartmouth.''
Case
In
1815, over thirty years after the conclusion of the
American Revolution, the legislature of
New Hampshire attempted to invalidate or alter Dartmouth's charter in order to reinstate the College's deposed president, effectively converting the school from a private to a public institution. The
trustees of the College objected and sought to have the actions of the legislature declared unconstitutional.

Painting by Robert Clayton Burns (1962) depicting Daniel Webster and the ''Dartmouth College Case''.
The trustees retained Dartmouth alumnus
Daniel Webster, a New Hampshire native who would later become a
U.S. Senator from
Massachusetts and
Secretary of State under
President Millard Fillmore. Webster argued the college's case against
William H. Woodward, the state-approved secretary of the new board of trustees. Webster's speech in support of Dartmouth (which he described as "a small college," adding, "and yet there are those who love it") was so moving that it reportedly brought tears to Webster's eyes and apparently helped convince
Chief Justice Marshall.
Decision
The decision, handed down on
February 2,
1819, ruled in favor of the College and invalidated the act of the New Hampshire legislature, which in turn allowed Dartmouth to exist as a private institution and take back its buildings, seal, and charter. The majority opinion was, predictably, written by Marshall. The opinion reaffirmed Marshall's belief in the sanctity of a contract (also seen in ''Fletcher v. Peck'').
''Dartmouth'' was not a popular decision at the time, and a public outcry ensued.
Thomas Jefferson's earlier commiseration with New Hampshire Governor Plumer stated essentially that the earth belongs to the living. Popular opinion influenced some state courts and legislatures to declare that state governments had an absolute right to amend or repeal a
corporate charter. Today, however, ''Dartmouth'' is viewed positively as one of the most important Supreme Court rulings, strengthening the
Contract Clause and limiting the power of the States to interfere with private charters, including those of commercial enterprises.
See also
★
List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 17
★
Dartmouth College
★
John Marshall
★
Contract Clause