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As a judge, Coke defended the Common Law as interpreted by Parliament and he viewed Common Law as being superior to any law laid down by ecclesiastical or prerogative courts such as the High Commission and the Council of the North
In the United States, Coke's decision in the case of Dr. Bonham was used to justify the annulment of the Stamp Act of 1765 and the writs of assistance, which led to the American War of Independence. After the establishment of the United States, Coke also profoundly influenced the decisions and writings in the Third and Fourth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States and demanded the Sixteenth.
During the legal and public campaigns against the writs of assistance and Stamp Act 1765, the Bonham case was presented as a justification for nullifying the legislation.
Marbury v. Madison, the American case that forms the basis for the judicial review exercise in the United States under Article III of the Constitution, uses the words "empty" and "disgusting", seen as a direct reference to Coke. Some scholars, such as Edward Samuel Corwin, have argued that Coke's work in the Bonham case forms the basis of judicial review and declaring legislation unconstitutional in the United States.
Coke was particularly influential in the United States both before and after the American War of Independence. During the legal and public campaigns against assistance resources and the Stamp Act 1765, the case of Bonham was presented as a justification to annul the legislation and in the case of the income tax of 1895, Joseph Hodges Choate used the argument of Coke that a property income tax is a property tax in itself for the Supreme Court of the United States to declare the Wilson-Gorman Fee Act unconstitutional. This decision eventually led to the approval of the Sixteenth Amendment. The doctrine of the castle originates from the declaration of Coke in the Third Institutes that "the house of a man is his castle, because where will he be safe if he is not in his house?", Which also profoundly influenced the Fourth United States Constitution Amendment; The Third Amendment, on the other hand, was influenced by the Petition for Law.
Coke was also a great influence and mentor to Roger Williams, an English theologian who founded the colony of Rhode Island in North America and was one of the first advocates of the doctrine of the separation of church and state.