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"Commerce power" includes not only the exchange of goods but also all commercial intercourse, and it comprehends navigation within its scope. - Chief Justice John Marshall
The authority of Congress extends to every part of the Union and to all subjects over which the Constitution grants it power. - Chief Justice John Marshall
The Constitution grants to Congress the power to regulate commerce, not to create it. - Chief Justice John Marshall
ruling* Gibbons v. Ogden*
the court defined interstate
the court defined interstate
The US Supreme Court made a decision in the case of Gibbons v. Ogden, (1824). See Related Questions, below, for a discussion of that decision.
The commerce clause
Gibbons believed that Congress had exclusive power over interstate commerce, which is the reason for why he appealed to the Supreme Court after other courts issued an injunction restricting Gibbons' boat operations.
Gibbons v. Ogden was argued before the US Supreme Court on February 5, 1924, and the Court released its decision on March 2, 1824. Gibbons established Congress had sole constitutional authority to regulate interstate commerce.Case Citation:Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 US 1 (1824)
John Marshall was the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court during the Gibbons vs Ogden Case. This landmark decision invoked that the power to regulate interstate trade was granted via the constitution.
Gibbons v. Ogden is the name of the case that resulted in the Supreme Court in a ruling that grants Congress board powers over interstate commerce.
The 1954 Gibbons versus Wright case was tried by the Australian Supreme Court, not the US Supreme Court. The case was a familial dispute, in which Gibbons believed her sisters in law were mentally incompetent, thus rendering the paperwork they had drawn up on a shared parcel of land void. The justices ruled in favor of the sisters in law, declaring that they only needed to be mentally sound enough to understand the contracts they were signing.
Commerce power to include all commercial interactions
Gibbons v. Ogden -- interstate commerce