Search Results
| Case name | Citation | Summary | 
| Ex parte Bollman | 1807 | habeas corpus, definition of treason, Supreme Court's power to issue writs to circuit courts | 
| Strawbridge v. Curtiss | 1806 | federal diversity jurisdiction | 
| Bailiff v. Tipping | 1805 | a citation (a court order for a person to appear) must accompany a writ of error in order for the Supreme Court to hear the case | 
| Little v. Barreme | 1804 | presidential and congressional power | 
| Stuart v. Laird | 1803 | enforceability of rulings issued by judges who have since been removed from office | 
| Marbury v. Madison | 1803 | judicial review of laws enacted by the United States Congress | 
| Talbot v. Seeman | 1801 | Marine salvage rights in time of war | 
| New York v. Connecticut | 1799 | first original jurisdiction suit between two States | 
| Calder v. Bull | 1798 | ex post facto clause applies to criminal, not civil cases | 
| Hollingsworth v. Virginia | 1798 | ratification of Eleventh Amendment, presidential approval is unnecessary for Constitutional amendment | 
| Hylton v. United States | 1796 | tax on carriages | 
| Talbot v. Janson | 1795 | admiralty and citizenship | 
| United States v. Peters | 1795 | Federal district court has no authority over a foreign privateer when the captured ship was not within its jurisdiction. | 
| Georgia v. Brailsford | 1794 | Jury nullification | 
| Chisholm v. Georgia | 1793 | first “major” case; federal jurisdiction over suits vs. states; state sovereign immunity; led to Eleventh Amendment | 
| Hayburn's Case | 1792 | justiciability and separation of powers | 
| West v. Barnes | 1791 | first decision of the Supreme Court, strictly interpreting procedural filing requirements mandated by statute | 
| Van Staphorst v. Maryland | 1791 | first docketed case of the Supreme Court, settled before arguments |