Last modified on March 8, 2011, at 15:47

William R. Day

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iduan (Talk | contribs) at 15:47, March 8, 2011. It may differ significantly from current revision.

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
William Rufus Day
Former Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
From: February 23, 1903 – November 13, 1922
Nominator Theodore Roosevelt
Predecessor George Shiras, Jr.
Successor Pierce Butler
36th United States Secretary of State
From: April 28, 1898 – September 16, 1898
President William McKinley
Predecessor John Sherman
Successor John Hay
Information
Party Republican
Spouse(s) Mary Elizabeth Schaefer
Religion Lutheran

William Rufus Day was a politician and jurist from Ohio. He helmed the United States Peace Commission to sign the 1898 Treaty of Paris - which ended the Spanish-American War. As a member of the United States Supreme Court, Day wrote 439 opinions - only 18 of which were dissents: these opinions advanced state power and generally sided with antitrust laws.[1] He also sided with the government in the Standard Oil, American Tobacco, and both Union Pacific cases. He sided against government in Hammer v. Dagenhart - which ruled that the federal government could not use the Commerce Clause to regulate labor conditions, in this case a child labor law.[2] This decision would be overturned by United States v. Darby Lumber Co.

Day dissented in Lochner v. New York - the case that began the "Lochner Era" - arguing that the federal government could promote public welfare over liberty of contract. Day also wrote the opinion for the exclusionary rule in Weeks v. United States - saying that the 4th Amendment barred evidence seized illegally from being admitted at trial.

References

  1. You must specify title = and url = when using {{cite web}}. Available parameters:

    {{cite web
    |url = 
    |title = 
    |accessdate = 
    |accessdaymonth = 
    |accessmonthday = 
    |accessyear = 
    |author = 
    |last = 
    |first = 
    |authorlink = 
    |coauthors = 
    |date = 
    |year = 
    |month = 
    |format = 
    |work = 
    |publisher = 
    |pages = 
    |language = 
    |doi = 
    |archiveurl = 
    |archivedate = 
    |quote = 
    }}
    (English) (HTML). The Ohio Judicial Center.
  2. William Rufus Day (English) (HTML). law.jrank.