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Justice Matters: Fourth of July is perfect time to celebrate creation of our nation, courts

Justice Matters: Fourth of July is perfect time to celebrate creation of

our nation, courts

26 June 2014

 

The following reflections of Missouri Chief Justice Mary R. Russell make up

her most recent Justice Matters column.

 

It is that time of year for fireworks and picnics and parades with children

waving the American flag. It also is time to honor the birth of our nation

on the Fourth of July, celebrating our nation’s declaration of independence

in 1776 and the creation of a new government in which the people divided

authority among three separate but equal branches – the executive, the

legislative and the judicial. This holiday is special for me for two

reasons. First, as a member of the judiciary, I experience daily the wisdom

of our forefathers in their creation of our government, in particular the

creation of courts in our system of democracy. Second, my

great-great-great-great-grandfather – Samuel W. Rhodes, who later settled

in Callaway County, Missouri – fought in the Revolutionary War while still

a colonist in Virginia.

 

It is important to remember the ideals for which our forefathers fought –

including the ideal of justice. In the Declaration of Independence, our

forefathers complained, among their grievances against Britain’s King

George, that he: obstructed the administration of justice, made judges

dependent on his will alone, deprived the colonists of the benefits of

trial by jury and transported the colonists “beyond Seas to be tried for

pretended offenses.” And so it perhaps is not surprising that, when

establishing the new constitution for the fledgling nation several years

later, our forefathers listed “establish Justice” second only behind “in

Order to form a more perfect Union.”

 

To ensure the abuses of King George would not happen again, the new

government established the constitution – not a king – as the ultimate

authority and divided governmental power among three branches of

government. The founders designed the judiciary as a forum where people

peaceably can resolve their disputes and where impartial judges who are not

beholden to a president or governor can decide the matters before them

based on the law and the facts. In our courts, everyone has to follow the

rules established in our constitution.

 

Thanks to our forefathers declaring their independence from England 238

years ago, we now have fair and impartial courts available to help all

citizens make sure there is equal justice for all. And thanks to the

hundreds of Revolutionary War soldiers buried in Missouri, including my

ancestor, who fought to ensure that we have a superior system of justice in

our country. I am honored to be a member of the judicial branch that my

great-great-great-great-grandfather fought to establish.

 

So let us celebrate together this Fourth of July, as John Adams envisioned

in a letter to his wife, Abigail, about the Declaration of Independence:

“It ought to be commemorated … with pomp and parade, … bells, bonfires and

illuminations from one end of this continent to the other from this time

forward forever more.”

 

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