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MELVILLE FULLER


'Melville Weston Fuller' (February 11 1833July 4 1910) was the Chief Justice of the United States between 1888 and 1910.
Fuller was born in Augusta, Maine. Both his maternal grandfather, Nathan Weston and paternal grandfather, Henry Weld Fuller were judges. His father was a well-known lawyer. His parents divorced shortly after his birth, and he was raised by Nathan Weston. He attended college at Harvard University for one year before graduating from Bowdoin College in 1853. He then spent six months at Harvard Law School, leaving without graduating in 1855.
He then studied law under the direction of an uncle. In 1855, he went into partnership with another uncle. He also became the editor of ''The Age,'' a leading Democratic newspaper in Maine. Soon he tired of Maine and moved to Chicago. In 1860, he managed Democrat
Stephen Douglas' campaign for the Presidency of the United States
At the time, Chicago was becoming the gateway to the West. Railroads had just linked it to the east. Fuller built a law practice in Chicago. Within two years, he appeared before the Supreme Court of Illinois in the case of ''Beach v. Derby''. He became a leading attorney in the city. He first appeared before the United States Supreme Court in the case of ''Traders' Bank v. Campbell''. He also argued the case of ''Tappan v. the Merchants' National Bank of Chicago'', which was the first case heard by Chief Justice Morrison Waite, whom he would later replace.
He was a minor figure in Illinois politics. He spent one term in the Illinois House of Representatives and was a delegate at the national Democratic Conventions of 1864, 1872, 1876, and 1880. In 1876, he made the nominating speech for Thomas Hendricks, for the Democratic electoral vote for President. After his inauguration as President, Grover Cleveland tried to make Fuller
chairman of the Civil Service Commission, but he declined. President Grover Cleveland tried to persuade Fuller to be Solicitor General of the United States, but Fuller turned down the second offer for a government
job.
President Grover Cleveland nominated him for the Chief Justice position when Morrison Waite died in 1888. Fuller was not the first man to be mentioned as a possible Supreme Court nominee; the former ambassador to Great Britain, Edward J. Phelps, was perceived as the front-runner for the nomination. Fuller's nomination was tepidly received in the Senate. However, he was eventually confirmed by a vote of 41 to 20, with nine Republicans voting with the Democrats to confirm him.

On the bench, he oversaw a number of memorable or important opinions. The famous phrase "Equal Justice Under Law" apparently paraphrases his opinion in ''Caldwell v. Texas, 137 U.S. 692'' (1891) where Fuller discussed "equal and impartial justice under the law."[1] He also declared the income tax law unconstitutional in ''Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 157 U.S. 429''[2]. In ''Western Union Telegraph Company v. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania'' 128 U.S. 39 [3] he ruled that states could not tax interstate telegraph messages. He struck a blow against government antitrust legislation with the 1895 case ''United States v. E. C. Knight Co.''[4]. In Fuller's majority decision, he found that the refining of sugar by a company within the boundaries of one state could not be held to be in restraint of interstate commerce under the terms of the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act, regardless of the product's final market share. (E.C. Knight Company's owner, the American Sugar Refining Company, controlled more than 90% of sugar production at the time). He sided with the 8-man majority ruling in favor of "separate but equal" segregation in ''Plessy v. Ferguson''. On immigration, Fuller ruled in 1904 that immigrants from Puerto Rico had all the rights and privileges of Americans in Gonzales v. Williams, 192 U. S. 1 (1904)[5]. In this famous immigration case, Isabel Gonzalez arrived from Puerto Rico at Ellis Island in August 1902. Immigration Commissioner William Williams held her as an "illegal" with plans to deport Gonzalez back to San Juan, Puerto Rico. She appealed her case, whereby Fuller ruled in favor of Gonzalez and allowed her to remain in the US. Fuller did not go so far as to claim that she was automatically a US citizen, however, he recognized that Puerto Rico was a territory of the US (as of the 1898 Spanish American War), and therefore Isabel had the right to remain in the US. This paved the way for future Puerto Ricans to freely immigrate to the US. Later, in 1917 the Jones Act was passed by Congress which provided for even more immigration/citizenship rights to Puerto Ricans.
According to one study, while on the Supreme Court, Fuller voted in favor of civil rights for African Americans in 15.15% (5 of 33) of the cases before him and voted voted in favor of civil rights for Asian Americans in 24.14% (7 of 29) of cases before him. Both percentages were below the average for the Supreme Court as a whole.[1]
In 1893, he turned down an offer from President-Elect Grover Cleveland to serve as Secretary of State; it was the third time he turned down a government job offer from Cleveland.
As Chief Justice, he administered the oath of office to five Presidents (Benjamin Harrison, Grover Cleveland, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft)
He also served on the Arbitration Commission in Paris in 1899 to resolve a boundary dispute between the United Kingdom and Venezuela.
He was said to closely resemble Mark Twain. Once, when the humorist was stopped on the street, a passerby demanded the Chief Justice's autograph. Twain supposedly wrote:
:''It is delicious to be full, but it is heavenly to be Fuller. I am cordially yours, Melville W. Fuller.''
He was married twice. He married Calista Reynolds in 1858; she died in 1864. He married Mary Coolbaugh in 1866. He had six daughters.

Contents
See also
Further reading

See also


Fuller Park, a community area of Chicago, which was named for him.

Further reading



★ Melville Weston Fuller Chief Justice of the United States 1888-1910, by Willard L. King, (MacMillan, 1950) B0006ASCMC

★ The Chief Justiceship of Melville W. Fuller, 1888-1910 by James W. Ely (University of South Carolina Press, 1995).



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