th the acts ofCongress . . . ." The statement made by John Marshall is correct by sayingthat the territorial boundries and land of the Cherokee Indians is soverignto the Cherokee Indians. Marshall announced that the laws of Georgia arenot applicable within the Cherokee Lands, and the constitution acknowlegesthe soverignty of it's bordering territories. Since the Supreme Courtcouldn't enforce this opinion, Jackson carried through his act of movingthe Indians west of the Mississippi. All in all, from the early 1790's to the late 1830's, the policy thatJackson set forth reinforced the precedent which shaped national Indianpolicy between 1789 and mid 1830's. ...