1787 Constitution as ratified in 1789. The fact that this substitution, and the
dramatically narrower view of national authority it represented, lasted for less
sible explanation doesn’t in itself prove that the majority in 1918 was wrong. It
Justice Black’s dissent insisted, to fall entirely outside the category of banned
100 [1941]).
The complex jurisprudential currents – and the politics of judicial appointments – that led to
power during that roughly half-century – long era is beyond the scope of this chapter. For
competing views on this period of doctrinal history, compare Edward S. Corwin, The Com-
merce Power Versus States Rights (1936), with Randy E. Barnett, Restoring the Lost Constitution
Soundings and Silences
31
government intrusions into the “right of the people to be secure in their per-
sons, houses, papers, and effects” – the right that the Fourth Amendment
expressly protects from “unreasonable searches and seizures.”
62
As the dissent
said, citing Blackstone’s famous eighteenth-century
Commentaries, “eaves-
dropping . . . was . . . ‘an ancient practice which at common law was condemned
as a nuisance’.”
63
“In those days,” Justice Black observed, “the eavesdropper lis-
tened by naked ear under the eaves of houses or their windows, or beyond their
walls seeking out private discourse,”
64
and enhancing the ear’s listening power
technologically, Black insisted, made no difference as a matter of principle:
because “the Framers were aware of [physical eavesdropping]” and could eas-
ily have “used the appropriate language” to subject all eavesdropping to the
Constitution’s constraints (of having to obtain a warrant and the like), Justice
Black treated the silence the Framers chose on the matter as decisive.
65
In so
doing, he overlooked the far-greater threat to freedom of undeterred “private
communication”
66
posed by potentially ubiquitous and undiscoverable elec-
tronic surveillance than by occasional government agents lurking under the
“eaves of houses or their windows” where observant occupants might detect
their presence.
67
At least, with respect to such forms of surveillance, treating
the silence of those who made the Constitution and its amendments the law of
the land as preclusive punishes all of us for the fact that the Framers were not
endowed with the gift of prophecy. It is indefensible to treat all constitutional
silences as though they reflected strategic choices with respect to something
different in kind from what could have been anticipated. Sometimes, as the
saying goes, a cigar is just a cigar.
Justice Black was certainly smart enough to understand all that. The driv-
ing force behind his approach was not a misguided belief that his insistence
on a narrow and time-bound reading of the protective words of the Bill of
Rights would best capture the Constitution’s underlying purposes notwith-
standing changed scientific or social conditions. Rather, the driving force
behind Black’s approach was institutional in character. It was a long-standing
hostility to judicial extrapolation from a constitutional provision’s underlying
purposes as translated to “keep the Constitution up to date” or “to bring it into
harmony with the times.”
68
That view, reflective of Black’s deep belief that the
62
Ibid.
, at 365 (Black, J., dissenting) (quoting U.S. Const. amend. IV).
63
Ibid.
, at 366 (quoting Berger v. New York 388 U.S. 41, 45 [1967]).
64
Ibid.
(quoting
Berger, 388 U.S. at 45).
65
Ibid.
66
Ibid.
, at 352.
67
Ibid.
, at 366 (Black, J., dissenting).
68
Ibid.
, at 373.