Antinomy
Movement claim: Ogden v. Saunders establishes that upon entering a state of society natural obligations become civil obligations the State 'construes, applies, controls, and decides' — and positive law can modify, restrain, and override natural law. The passage is from the MAJORITY (Johnson, J.), not Marshall's dissent: the structural observation is supported and drawn from the controlling side; the natural-law remedy the framework builds on it is foreclosed by the same passage.
Ogden v. Saunders, 25 U.S. (12 Wheat.) 213 (1827), is the most heavily cited case in the Byron Beers corpus. Beers cites it for the proposition that upon entering a state of society, natural obligations are converted into civil obligations: 'the State construes them, the State applies them, the State controls them, and the State decides how far the social exercise of the rights they give us over each other can be justly asserted,' and that positive law can modify, restrain, and even nullify natural obligations entirely. Across three prior triage cycles (Treatise 3, Treatise 5, and this one), the critical question carried pending status: was the positivist passage from the majority or from Marshall's dissent? Ogden was a deeply divided 4-3 decision — the only constitutional case in which Chief Justice Marshall dissented, and the first time the Supreme Court failed to reach a single majority opinion on a constitutional question. The verification result resolves it: the passage is from Justice William Johnson's MAJORITY seriatim opinion, not Marshall's dissent and not counsel argument. The 4-3 majority (Washington, Johnson, Thompson, Trimble) upheld state insolvency laws as applied to prospective contracts on exactly this positivist reasoning; Marshall (joined by Story and Duvall) dissented. Beers's most-heavily-cited authority is drawn from the controlling side of the case — an unusual result for the corpus, whose recurring pattern is real-text-from-the-wrong-opinion. The structural observation is therefore supported: the Supreme Court majority does describe the system in positivist terms that validate the framework's structural claim. But the same passage forecloses the natural-law remedy the framework builds on it: if positive law has the power to modify and restrain natural obligation within civil society, natural-law arguments raised within that system have no operative force. The framework has real teeth, and the same teeth explain why the remedy cannot work. Partially supported.
The Negative Side of Positive Law: Treatise #6 and the Ogden v. Saunders Antinomy the System Cannot Resolve
Treatise #6 completes the structural layer of the Beers corpus: T4 established sovereignty, T5 the legal system's tools, T6 positive law operating through presumed consent. After three triage cycles of pending verification, Beers's most-heavily-cited authority resolves cleanly — the Ogden v. Saunders 'the State construes, applies, controls, and decides' passage is from Justice Johnson's controlling majority opinion, not Marshall's dissent and not counsel argument. That produces a genuine antinomy: the Supreme Court describes the system in positivist terms that validate Beers's structural framework and, in the same passage, foreclose his natural-law remedy. Three supporting findings address the Dred Scott, mala prohibita, and Thirteenth Amendment grounding. Verdict: partially-supported — the framework has real teeth; the same teeth explain why the remedy cannot work.