fflF?yfijgm,m jgi"' DECEMBER Z9, IfYl The Commoner. JUDGES FOR RECALL OF. JUDGES Exp ressidhs of Opinion from a Number of Well Known TurW nn R.ll f A- T...i:: j 0 vvhii v ujv. juuiv.juiy . uaiirorma recentlv fldnnforl fliM ntttn4-t.. referendum and recall, Including the judiciary. 5?S Jhe camPaign the California Outlook published at Los Angeles, printed the following: Many of the anxious friends of the judiciary are rushing to their defense in the matter of the recall of judges. That this is in great measure "love's labor lost" is evidenced by the opinions of some of the prominent jurists of southern California on this subject. Many are the members of tho bench who see nothing in herently wrong in the proposal to make the recall of judges a part of this state's constitu tion. That the judge who does his duty need nave no fear of the recall is made plain by the views given below: Superior Court Judge, W. A. Sloane, San Diego County: "The whole recall proposition is based upon the fact that the people are the ultimate judges of what is good for them. They place a man in official position, and have a right to make it a condition of his tenure of office that he may be removed by a majority vote if he fails to make good. "As to the argument that the independence and fair deliberation of the courts would be destroyed or materially affected by the fear of the recall, I do not believe it. Cowardice in the lino of duty is not an American characteristic. An upright, honest judge would be stimulated by the existence of the recall provision to a closer scrutiny of his own motives in dediding JSTOP' D?fore hIm t0 avoId even the suspicion that he was influenced by mere public-sentiment." Judge N. P. Conrey, superior court, Los Angeles county: "I think that the people of our state never would use the recall to change the complexion of a court for the purpose of affect ing its decisions upon any subject. It would only be used in those unusual instances where personal unfitness has made the officer con spicuously unworthy of public confidence" or respect. ' "Our voting population is not a mob. I can not perceive that it would be possible, in a free and enlightened state, for the people to vote in favor of ousting judges from office in order to force a court to change its decision upon any question of either fact or law." Judge James C. Rives, superior court, Los Angeles county: "There is nothing inherently wrong in the proposal, and nothing as far as I can see which conflicts with the principles upon which our government is founded. The power which a judge wields comes from the people. The people have the right to take it away from those who may be deemed unfit. ". "A real enactment, coupled with a tenure of office during good behavior, seems to me to be the logical way to apply the principle. It would remove the bench from the stress of politics, and would mean security to the judge as long as he fills his office efficiently and conscien-oMo-;' Curtis D. Wilbur, judge of superior court, Los Angeles county: "I am in favor of vest ing in the people of the state of California the right to recall judges, "First Because it accords in theory with that' fundamental declaration upon which this government is based; namely, that governments derive all just powers from the consent of those governed. "Second Because the people of California have demonstrated to their own satisfaction that they are to be trusted with the selection of judges, and are unwilling to return to an ap pointive system. "Third Because the right .of recall would make the. people more willing to entrust judges W.lth certain powers necessary to the better administration of justice, which are now wlth- "Fourth Because the powor of recall would probably remove the objection now existing to long terms for the judiciary, and there would be less danger than at present of efficient judges being ousted for purely political or partisan reasons." would bo of any disadvantage to tho Judiciary. There Is much to be said on both sides of tho question, but, on tho wholo, I think a recall law which would include judges would work out all right. "I do not think that the right of tho peoplo to recall at any time would in any way interfere with the freedom of tho judge. If ho goes straight ahead with his work and does it as well as ho can, there will bo little to fear from tho people." George H. Hutton, presiding judge, superior court, Los AngeleB county: "I share with President Taft, an inclination to use violent language when I reflect on the methods and procedure in vogue in the courts of our state and union. In many cases they are relics of the seventeenth-century procedure and tend to magnify technicalities and minimize justice. "T believe that the cure for this procedure lies largely in the judges themselves and tho most likely way to bring about that cure is to invoke recall, under somewhat stricter condi tions than will apply to public officers in general. "There is no divine right of judges by which they should bo allowed to judicially rule a country. The power .of a judge, like a stream, can not (except by a'fttficial means) rise above its source, and the source of tho judge's power is the will of the majority and when the will of the majority Is withdrawn his power is and by .right ought to be, withdrawn. "I firmly believe, that when the people give a matter so serious as the mental or moral fit ness or unfitness of a judge, their sober second thought, that the people are to be "trusted to decide it rights and until they are to be so trusted, our dream of 'a government of the people, for the people and by the people' will never come true." Judge Gavin W. Craig, superior court, Los Angeles county: "I do. not think tho recall "A DANIEL COME TO JUDGMENT" Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, addressing a gather ing representative of the financial and Industrial interests of tho country, and including J. P. Morgan, Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, jr., and other leaders of so-called "big business" in the United States, recently in the Waldorf Astoria sounded a warning against the tendency of the day to lawlessness. The occasion, was the one hundred and forty third banquet of tho chamber of commerce. Seated on either side of President A. Barton Hepburn were James Bryce, British ambassa dor; Senator Elihu Root, J. Pierpont Morgan, Rabbi Wise, Rt. Rev. David H. Greer, Governor John A. Dix, General Frederick .D. Grant, Thomas A. Edison, Andrew Carnegie, Chauncey M. Depew, St. Clair McKelway, Governor Em met O'Neal, of Alabama; Mayor Gaynor, Alfred Mosoley, General Horace Porter, James J. Hill and Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary. Speaking to the topic "The Conscience of the Nation," Rabbi Wise said he was not unmindful that.in the. .assemblage were some who, "like the notorious Lord Melbourne', are afraid that 'this damned morality will ruin everything,' " but urged ,that "the newly quickened conscience of tho nation demands that business, which has become too largely impersonal, needs to be re personalized, and that articles of incorporation are not to be offered as a substitute for the man dates of the decalogue." He continued. "Instead of ceaseless and senseless clamor against the department of law at Washington, we are to see to it that our business be so regulated and administered that it shall not be- in constant collision with the law. In a word, the nation and commerce must cease to war upon each other, but they can only co operate upon the basis of the government's inflexible insistence upon the supremacy of the law, however inconvenient and unprofitable be conformity thereto, and the acquiescence of com merce in tho ideal of obedience to tho spirit as well as the letter of the law, lest too, spoliation by the few be at last replaced by expropriation by the many. "One of the tendencies against which the American people must battle earnestly and steadfastly is the tendency to lawlessness, as dangerous to our democracy today as tho Greeks believed it to be twenty-five hundred years ago. "We must do battle against the anarchy of lynching, against the anarchy of "endless homi- cidism, against tho anarchy which inheres in tho not loss deadly homicides that aro tho daily incidents of Industry. "Not only Is democracy Incompatible with tho violent lawlessness of tho Inflamed nnd un reasonable, but with tho lawlessness of techni cal conformity with tho letter and actual viola tion of tho spirit of tho law. LawlossnciHs In not less menacing when It clothos Itself In tho forms of law. Tho practlso of tho law 1fnot to bo a shield and covert for lawlesa practMoa. Tho ends of justice aro too ofton defeated by moans of tho law. There Is llttlo to ehoono botweon tho anarchist .who believes In tho break ing of the law bocauso It is law, and bocauso all laws are oppressive, and tho lawlessness which breaks tho law bocauso It Is unjust. Tho one honestly aims at Justlco without law and the roally lawloss anarchist Is the man of plaoo and powor who ainod at law without juHtlco." Now York American. ECHOES OF 11)01 Columbus, 0., Dec. 18, 1911. Editor Com moner: Tho editorial statement of tho Wall Street Journal, quoted In tho Commonor of Nov. 10th, that tho Interests (therein called tho "buslnoss community") controlled tho election in 1908 and that Mr. Taft owed IWb oloctlon to them Is absolutely true. Tho reason, however, assigned by the Journal for their intervention covertly hides the true ono and doos not stato tho wholo truth. It says: "If President Taft was stronger than his party in 1908 It was bo cause tho business community gavo him their confidence. Tho alternative was Mr. Bryaj -nd Mr. Bryan's policies, which it was not bolfovcd President Taft would adopt." Tho Intorcsts took fright when Mr. Bryan said to President Roosevelt: "Show mo a trust officer or dlroctor who is supporting rao, and I will Inform him that I will, If elected, enforce tho penal sections of tho Sherman anti-trust law against him." That statement In my judgment, was decisive of the election. From that time on tho intorcsts got busy. Mr. Rockefeller camo out for Taft and tho interests made up a largo part of tho campaign fund, which Hitchcock sworo amounted to over $1,700,000, contributed, as the list shows, almost entirely by trust officers, directors or beneficiaries. The nowspapora stato that when the United States marshal served the summons in tho United States company dissolution suit upon Mr. Carnegie, the latter gave the marshal an autographed photograph as a souvenir, that Mr. Morgan received him gruffly without comment, and that Mr. Rockefeller, 1r., greeted him With, "I am glad to see you." How different would have been his reception if ho had gone after them with a warrant of arrest! In answer to Mr. Bryan, President Roose velt replied that Judge Henry S. Priest of St. Louis was for his (Bryan's) election. What hyprocrisy! Judge Priest on his return from Europe had replied to a reporter that he was a democrat and expected to voto for Mr. Bryan. He was acting as attorney for Plerco of tho Waters-Pierce Oil Co., a subsidiary of the Stand ard Oil company, endeavoring to defeat the efforts of tho state of Texas In Its attempt to take Pierce back to the state In order to try him for violating the anti-trust law of that state. Roosevelt would have Mr. Bryan'n state ment Include the imprisonment of tho ..&ifete dant's attorney for his client's- .criminal act'. If the attorney should be compelled to go to Jail along with his client upon the latter receiving sentence, the business of tho criminal lawyer would surely be extra-hazardous. The Journal also correctly says that the in terests decided tho election of 1896, it might also add that of 1900. The railway companies of the country were as effective in 189G in secur ing our defeat on account of the anti-Injunction plank as were the banks. The will of the peoplo was stifled in both these campaigns by the use of tho interest's boodle. In the present state of tho public mind it Is to be hoped that the democratic party shall not be compelled in 1912 to try over again the disastrous experiment of 1904, that of nominat ing a candidate to please the Interests. If it should, the verdict against It will be even more pronounced. JOHN C. L. PUGH. 00 WILL YOU JOIN IN THE EFFORT TO INCREASE THE COMMONER'S CIRCULATION FOR 1912? TAKE IT UP AT ONCE WITH YOUR ' NEIGHBOR. 0 0 I 4 m i . i A- yillg kiu.- iJbu3mldLMite&