At 7:00 in the evening of January 4, 1939, Prof. Felix Frankfurter was annoyed to have to take a phone call. Frankfurter was in his underwear, trying to dress hurriedly to receive dinner guests who had already arrived and whom he was keeping waiting.
But the caller was President Roosevelt. And to make matters worse, Roosevelt’s message seemed as unwelcome as his timing: Roosevelt went on at some length explaining why he didn’t think he could nominate Frankfurter to the open seat on the United States Supreme Court. Frankfurter did his best to express his understanding and acceptance of Roosevelt’s position, and to terminate the call – his wife Marian kept shouting up the staircase, “Hurry up! You are always late!”
Just as it seemed that the president was willing to hang up, however, he stated, “But wherever I turn, wherever I turn and to whomever I talk, I am made to realize that you are the only person fit to succeed Holmes and Cardozo. Unless you give me an insurmountable objection I’m going to send your name in for the Court tomorrow at twelve o’clock.”
Stunned, Frankfurter whispered in a voice so low that Roosevelt wasn’t sure he was intended to hear it, “I wish only that my mother were still alive.”
Very interesting and well written! Its the details that make history come alive. Keep them coming.
ReplyDeleteOutstanding addition to the blog, Rumpole.
ReplyDeleteUncle Miltie at his finest!
ReplyDeleteI'm down with my legal beagle dog Hirsch.
ReplyDeleteIn another famous opinion, you should include the recent kick in the ass that he received from the 3d DCA about declaring the feds' actions on immigrant detainers unconstitutional. About as inglorious a putdown as has ever been delivered by an appellate court to the unlawful meanderings of a trial court judge. Leslie pours salt in the wound in her concurring opinion.
ReplyDeleteA great addition to the blog!
ReplyDeleteWe shall acquire an erudite vocabulary with these emails.
ReplyDeleteJudge Hirsch's constitutional blogs are really excellent. Thank you for adding them to your blog. (He also knows something about baseball)
ReplyDeleteDon't be so struthious
ReplyDelete