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HERE will be general regret at
the vigor of his comparative youth, will make him a most admirable pre siding oflicer for the Court, and on this
the circumstances which have led Mr. Justice Moody to announce his determination to retire under the enab
score alone, in our judgment, Mr. Hughes’ services can be more profitably utilized by the American people by
ling act recently passed by Congress.
He is only fifty-seven years of age, and
giving him the Chief Justiceship than by making him Associate Justice. As
the prospects of his eventual complete recovery appear to be good, so that
for the question of his judicial ability, time alone can supply the answer.
SUPREME COURT CHANGES
Mr. Justice Moody's act of patriotic
Mr. Hughes is hardly the inferior, in
self-renunciation means that the Court will lose the services of an able jurist
intellectual vigor, of any present mem
whose work in time to come would have been likely to prove invaluable. Mr. justice Moody, however, can leave the
ber of the Court. It is still too early to declare, with confidence, that there is no possibility of his intellect being able to dominate the Court, as in the
bench with the feeling that his retire ment has been well earned by conspicu ous public services, and that his judicial labors have already earned him an honored name which will go down in
case
history linked with some important decisions. Rumors that Mr. Justice Hughes will be designated for the Chief Justice
opinion that the President will do best
ship have been persistent.
There have
been some sporadic symtoms of an inclination to criticize such a step, but we believe that the appointment would be supported by the weight of opinion in the profession. It is true that Mr. Hughes‘ experience has been mainly in the field of public administration, and there are doubtless those who
differ with him in his views on consti tutional questions and on electoral re
form. But no one can deny that his marked executive ability, together with
of
some
notable
predecessors.
Time alone will assign him his place in the judicial history of the United States. In filling the two vacancies which remain, we are inclined to hazard the to make his selections from the higher
ranks of the state and federal judiciary. Eligible candidates outside the judiciary, of the cast of Governor Hughes, are the exception and not the rule, and the
most efficient kind of service on the bench does not command that reward of popular fame which leads to the
reiterated mention of candidates less worthy. If the Senate is soon convened in extraordinary session to fill these vacancies, as we hope it will be, the promotion of two of the ablest judges
the President is able to pick from the American bench would certainly be received with marked favor by the bar.