Skip to main content

Justice & Law Quote by Potter Stewart

"Swift justice demands more than just swiftness"

About this Quote

“Swift justice” is one of those phrases that sounds inherently virtuous until Potter Stewart quietly pulls the rug out from under it. The line works because it treats speed not as a virtue but as a temptation: an easy metric that politicians, prosecutors, and even courts can point to when they want to look decisive. Stewart’s insistence that “more than just swiftness” is required is a judicial warning against confusing efficiency with legitimacy.

Coming from a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, the subtext is procedural and constitutional. American law prizes due process precisely because the state’s power is so lopsided; speeding up the machinery can mean shaving off the very safeguards that make outcomes trustworthy. Stewart is signaling that delay can be corrosive, but haste can be catastrophic. “Demands” matters here: he’s not praising leisurely deliberation, he’s describing a standard that’s harder than a stopwatch. Real justice asks for accuracy, fairness, and transparency, even when that frustrates the public appetite for closure.

The context is a mid-20th-century legal culture wrestling with the promises and burdens of modern constitutional criminal procedure: expanding rights for defendants, managing clogged dockets, and confronting moments of public panic where “do something now” becomes the loudest argument. Stewart’s sentence is a compact rebuke to the idea that the courts exist to deliver emotional satisfaction on schedule. If justice is rushed, it risks becoming theater; if it’s careful, it earns authority.

Quote Details

TopicJustice
Source
Verified source: Henderson v. Bannan (6th Cir. 1958) , Stewart dissent (Potter Stewart, 1958)
Text match: 99.29%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
But swift justice demands more than just swiftness. (Page 390 (as cited by later courts) / Justia HTML shows it within STEWART, Circuit Judge (dissenting)). Primary/original source is Potter Stewart’s dissenting opinion as a Sixth Circuit judge in Henderson v. Bannan, 256 F.2d 363 (6th Cir. 1958). Later secondary sources (e.g., TIME’s Oct. 20, 1958 profile and later court opinions) quote the same sentence and specifically attribute it to this dissent at 256 F.2d 363, 390. The commonly circulated version without the leading “But” is a shortened variant. See also later judicial citations confirming pinpoint page 390. ([law.justia.com](https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F2/256/363/274104/?utm_source=openai))
Other candidates (1)
The Oxford Dictionary of American Quotations (Hugh Rawson, Margaret Miner, 2006)95.0%
... Swift justice demands more than just swiftness . -Potter Stewart , dissenting opinion in Henderson v . Bannan , 6...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Stewart, Potter. (2026, February 10). Swift justice demands more than just swiftness. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/swift-justice-demands-more-than-just-swiftness-89738/

Chicago Style
Stewart, Potter. "Swift justice demands more than just swiftness." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/swift-justice-demands-more-than-just-swiftness-89738/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Swift justice demands more than just swiftness." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/swift-justice-demands-more-than-just-swiftness-89738/. Accessed 27 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Potter Add to List
Swift Justice Demands More Than Swiftness - Potter Stewart
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Potter Stewart

Potter Stewart (January 23, 1915 - December 7, 1985) was a Judge from USA.

11 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Pierre de Coubertin, Leader
Pierre de Coubertin
Benjamin Disraeli, Statesman
Benjamin Disraeli
Alexander Pope, Poet
Alexander Pope
Joseph Joubert, Writer
Joseph Joubert
Learned Hand, Judge