In my last, I showed, that the judicial power of the United States
under the first clause of the second section of article eight, would
be authorised to explain the constitution, not only according to its
letter, but according to its spirit and intention; and having this
power, they would strongly incline to give it such a construction as
to extend the powers of the general government, as much as possible,
to the diminution, and finally to the destruction, of that of the
respective states.
I shall now proceed to show how this power will operate in its
exercise to effect these purposes. . . . First, let us inquire how
the judicial power will effect an extension of the legislative
authority.
Perhaps the judicial power will not be able, by direct and
positive decrees, ever to direct the legislature, because it is not
easy to conceive how a question can be brought before them in a
course of legal discussion, in which they can give a decision,
declaring, that the legislature have certain powers which they have
not exercised, and which, in consequence of the determination of the
judges, they will be bound to exercise. But it is easy to see, that
in their adjudication they may establish certain principles, which
being received by the legislature will enlarge the sphere of their
power beyond all bounds.
It is to be observed, that the supreme court has the power, in the
last resort, to determine all questions that may arise in the course
of legal discussion, on the meaning and construction of the
constitution. This power they will hold under the constitution, and
independent of the legislature. The latter can no more deprive the
former of this right, than either of them, or both of them together,
can take from the president, with the advice of the senate, the power
of making treaties, or appointing ambassadors.
In determining these questions, the court must and will assume
certain principles, from which they will reason, in forming their
decisions. These principles, whatever they may be, when they become
fixed by a course of decisions, will be adopted by the legislature,
and will be the rule by which they will explain their own powers.
This appears evident from this consideration, that if the legislature
pass laws, which, in the judgment of the court, they are not
authorised to do by the constitution, the court will not take notice
of them; for it will not be denied, that the constitution is the
highest or supreme law. And the courts are vested with the supreme
and uncontrollable power, to determine in all cases that come before
them, what the constitution means. They cannot, therefore, execute a
law, which in their judgment, opposes the constitution, unless we can
suppose they can make a superior law give way to an inferior. The
legislature, therefore, will not go over the limits by which the
courts may adjudge they are confined. And there is little room to
doubt but that they will come up to those bounds, as often as
occasion and opportunity may offer, and they may judge it proper to
do it. For as on the one hand, they will not readily pass taws which
they know the courts will not execute, so on the other, we may be
sure they will not scruple to pass such as they know they will give
effect, as often as they may judge it proper.
From these observations it appears, that the judgment of the
judicial, on the constitution, will become the rule to guide the
legislature in their construction of their powers.
What the principles are, which the courts will adopt, it is
impossible for us to say. But taking up the powers as I have
explained them in my last number, which they will possess under this
clause, it is not difficult to see, that they may, and probably will,
be very liberal ones.
We have seen, that they will be authorized to give the
constitution a construction according to its spirit and reason, and
not to confine themselves to its letter.
To discover the spirit of the constitution, it is of the first
importance to attend to the principal ends and designs it has in
view. These are expressed in the preamble, in the following words,
viz., "We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more
perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility,
provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and
secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do
ordain and establish this constitution," etc. If the end of the
government is to be learned from these words, which are clearly
designed to declare it, it is obvious it has in view every object
which is embraced by any government. The preservation of internal
peace-the due admission of justice-and to provide for the defense of
the community-seems to include all the objects of government. But if
they do not, they are certainly comprehended in the words, "to
provide for the general welfare." If it be further considered, that
this constitution, if it is ratified, will not be a compact entered
into by states, in their corporate capacities, but an agreement of
the people of the United States as one great body politic, no doubt
can remain but that the great end of the constitution, if it is to be
collected from the preamble, in which its end is declared, is to
constitute a government which is to extend to every case for which
any government is instituted, whether external or internal. The
courts, therefore, will establish this as a principle in expounding
the constitution, and will give every part of it such an explanation
as will give latitude to every department under it, to take
cognizance of every matter, not only that affects the general and
national concerns of the union, but also of such as relate to the
administration of private justice, and to regulating the internal and
local affairs of the different parts.
Such a rule of exposition is not only consistent with the general
spirit of the preamble, but it will stand confirmed by considering
more minutely the different clauses of it.
The first object declared to be in view, is "To form a more
perfect union." It is to be observed, it is not an union of states or
bodies corporate; had this been the case the existence of the state
governments might have been secured. But it is a union of the people
of the United States considered as one body, who are to ratify this
constitution if it is adopted. Now to make a union of this kind
perfect, it is necessary to abolish all inferior governments, and to
give the general one complete legislative, executive and judicial
powers to every purpose. The courts therefore will establish it as a
rule in explaining the constitution; to give it such a construction
as will best tend to perfect the union or take from the state
governments every power of either making or executing laws. The
second object is "to establish justice." This must include not only
the idea of instituting the rule of justice, or of making laws which
shall be the measure or rule of right, but also of providing for the
application of this rule or of administering justice under it. And
under this the courts will in their decisions extend the power of the
government to all cases they possibly can, or otherwise they will be
restricted in doing what appears to be the intent of the constitution
they should do, to wit, pass laws and provide for the execution of
them, for the general distribution of justice between man and man.
Another end declared is "to insure domestic tranquility." This
comprehends a provision against all private breaches of the peace, as
well as against all public commotions or general insurrections; and
to attain the object of this clause fully, the government must
exercise the power of passing laws in these subjects, as well as of
appointing magistrates with authority to execute them. And the courts
will adopt these ideas in their expositions. I might proceed to the
other clause, in the preamble, and it would appear by a consideration
of all of them separately, as it does by taking them together, that
if the spirit of this system is to be known from its declared end and
design in the preamble, its spirit is to subvert and abolish all the
powers of the state governments, and to embrace every object to which
any government extends.
As it sets out in the preamble with this declared intention, so it
proceeds in the different parts with the same idea. Any person, who
will peruse the 5th section with attention, in which most of the
powers are enumerated, will perceive that they either expressly or by
implication extend to almost every thing about which any legislative
power can be employed. If this equitable mode of construction is
applied to this part of the constitution, nothing can stand before
it.
This will certainly give the first clause in that article a
construction which I confess I think the most natural and grammatical
one, to authorise the Congress to do any thing which in their
judgment will tend to provide for the general welfare, and this
amounts to the same thing as general and unlimited powers of
legislation in all cases.
This same manner of explaining the constitution, will fix a
meaning, and a very important one too, to the 12th clause of the same
section, which authorises the Congress to make all laws which shall
be proper and necessary for carrying into effect the foregoing
powers, etc. A voluminous writer in favor of this system, has taken
great pains to convince the public, that this clause means nothing:
for that the same powers expressed in this, are implied in other
parts of the constitution. Perhaps it is so, but still this will
undoubtedly be an excellent auxiliary to assist the courts to
discover the spirit and reason of the constitution, and when applied
to any and every of the other clauses granting power, will operate
powerfully in extracting the spirit from them.
I might instance a number of clauses in the constitution, which,
if explained in an equitable manner, would extend the powers of the
government to every case, and reduce the state legislatures to
nothing. But, I should draw out my remarks to an undue length, and I
presume enough has been said to show, that the courts have sufficient
ground in the exercise of this power, to determine, that the
legislature have no bounds set to them by this constitution, by any
supposed right the legislatures of the respective states may have to
regulate any of their local concerns.
I proceed, 2nd, to inquire, in what manner this power will
increase the jurisdiction of the courts.
I would here observe, that the judicial power extends, expressly,
to all civil cases that may arise save such as arise between citizens
of the same state, with this exception to those of that description,
that the judicial of the United States have cognizance of cases
between citizens of the same state, claiming lands -under grants of
different states. Nothing more, therefore, is necessary to give the
courts of law, under this constitution, complete jurisdiction of all
civil causes, but to comprehend cases between citizens of the same
state not included in the foregoing exception.
I presume there will be no difficulty in accomplishing this.
Nothing more is necessary than to set forth in the process, that the
party who brings the suit is a citizen of a different state from the
one against whom the suit is brought and there can be little doubt
but that the court will take cognizance of the matter. And if they
do, who is to restrain them? Indeed, I will freely confess, that it
is my decided opinion, that the courts ought to take cognizance of
such causes under the powers of the constitution. For one of the
great ends of the constitution is, "to establish justice." This
supposes that this cannot be done under the existing governments of
the states; and there is certainly as good reason why individuals,
living in the same state, should have justice, as those who live in
different states. Moreover, the constitution expressly declares, that
"the citizens of each state shall be entitled to all the privileges
and immunities of citizens in the several states," It will therefore
be no fiction, for a citizen of one state to set forth, in a suit,
that he is a citizen of another; for he that is entitled to all the
privileges and immunities of a country, is a citizen of that country.
And in truth, the citizen of one state will, under this constitution,
be a citizen of every state.
It is obvious that these courts will have authority to decide upon
the validity of the laws of any of the states, in all cases where
they come in question before them. Where the constitution gives the
general government exclusive jurisdiction, they will adjudge all laws
made by the states, in such cases, void ab inilio. Where the
constitution gives them concurrent jurisdiction, the laws of the
United States must prevail, because they are the supreme law. In such
cases, therefore, the laws of the state legislatures must be
repealed, restricted, or so construed, as to give full effect to the
laws of the union on the same subject. From these remarks it is easy
to see, that in proportion as the general government acquires power
and jurisdiction, by the liberal construction which the judges may
give the constitution, those of the states will lose their rights,
until they become so trifling and unimportant, as not to be worth
having. I am much mistaken, if this system will not operate to effect
this with as much celerity, as those who have the administration of
it will think prudent to suffer it. The remaining objections of the
judicial power shall be considered in a future paper. The second
paragraph of sect. 2, art. 3, is in these words: "In all cases
affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and those
in which a state shall be a party, the supreme court shall have
original jurisdiction. In all the other cases before mentioned, the
supreme court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and
fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the
Congress shall make."
Although it is proper that the courts of the general government
should have cognizance of all matters affecting ambassadors, foreign
ministers, and consuls, yet I question much the propriety of giving
the supreme court original jurisdiction in all cases of this
kind.
Ambassadors, and other public ministers, claim, and are entitled
by the law of nations, to certain privileges, and exemptions, both
for their persons and their servants. The meanest servant of an
ambassador is exempted by the law of nations from being sued for
debt. Should a suit be brought against such an one by a citizen,
through inadvertency or want of information, he will be subject to an
action in the supreme court. All the officers concerned in issuing or
executing the process will be liable to like actions. Thus may a
citizen of a state be compelled, at great expense and inconveniency,
to defend himself against a suit, brought against him in the supreme
court, for inadvertently commencing an action against the most menial
servant of an ambassador for a just debt.
The appellate jurisdiction granted to the supreme court, in this
paragraph, has justly been considered as one of the most
objectionable parts of the constitution. Under this power, appeals
may be had from the inferior courts to the supreme, in every case to
which the judicial power extends, except in the few instances in
which the supreme court will have original jurisdiction.
By this article, appeals will lie to the supreme court, in all
criminal as well as civil causes. This I know, has been disputed by
some; but I presume the point will appear clear to any one, who will
attend to the connection of this paragraph with the one that precedes
it. In the former, all the cases, to which the power of the judicial
shall extend, whether civil or criminal, are enumerated. There is no
criminal matter, to which the judicial power of the United States
will extend, but such as are included under some one of the cases
specified in this section. For this section is intended to define all
cases, of every description, to which the power of the judicial shall
reach. But in all these cases it is declared, the supreme court shall
have appellate jurisdiction, except in those which affect
ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and those in which a
state shall be a party. If then this section extends the power of the
judicial, to criminal cases, it allows appeals in such cases. If the
power of the judicial is not extended to criminal matters by this
section, I ask, by what part of this system does it appear, that they
have any cognizance of them?
I believe it is a new and unusual thing to allow appeals in
criminal matters. It is contrary to the sense of our laws, and
dangerous to our lives and liberties. . . . As our taw now stands, a
person charged with a crime has a right to a fair and impartial trial
by a jury of his country, and their verdict is final. If be is
acquitted no other court can call upon him to answer for the same
crime. But by this system, a man may have had ever so fair a trial,
have been acquitted by ever so respectable a jury of his country, and
still the officer of the government who prosecutes may appeal to the
supreme court. The whole matter may have a second hearing. By this
means, persons who may have disobliged those who execute the general
government, may be subjected to intolerable oppression. They may be
kept in long and ruinous confinement, and exposed to heavy and
insupportable charges, to procure the attendance of witnesses, and
provide the means of their defense, at a great distance from their
places of residence.
I can scarcely believe there can be a considerate citizen of the
United States that will approve of this appellate jurisdiction, as
extending to criminal cases, if they will give themselves time for
reflection.
Whether the appellate jurisdiction as it respects civil matters,
will not prove injurious to the rights of the citizens, and
destructive of those privileges which have ever been held sacred by
Americans, and whether it will not render the administration of
justice intolerably burdensome, intricate, and dilatory, will best
appear, when we have considered the nature and operation of this
power.
It has been the fate of this clause, as it has of most of those
against which unanswerable objections have been offered, to be
explained different ways, by the advocates and opponents to the
constitution. I confess I do not know what the advocates of the
system would make it mean, for I have not been fortunate enough to
see in any publication this clause taken up and considered. It is
certain however, they do not admit the explanation which those who
oppose the constitution give it, or otherwise they would not so
frequently charge them with want of candor, for alleging that it
takes away the trial by jury. Appeals from an inferior to a superior
court, as practised in the civil law courts, are well understood. In
these courts, the judges determine both on the law and the fact; and
appeals are allowed from the inferior to the superior courts, on the
whole merits; the superior tribunal will re-examine all the facts as
well as the law, and frequently new facts will be introduced, so as
many times to render the cause in the court of appeals very different
from what it was in the court below.
If the appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court, be understood
in the above sense, the term is perfectly intelligible. The meaning
then is, that in an the civil case enumerated, the supreme court
shall have authority to reexamine the whole merits of the case, both
with respect to the facts and the law which may arise under it,
without the intervention of a jury; that this is the sense of this
part of the system appears to me clear, from the express words of it,
"in all the other cases before mentioned, the supreme court shall
have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, etc." Who are
the supreme court? Does it not consist of the judges? . . . They will
therefore have the same authority to determine the fact as they will
have to determine the law, and no room is left for a jury on appeals
to the supreme court.
If we understand the appellate jurisdiction in any other way, we
shall be left utterly at a loss to give it a meaning. The common law
is a, stranger to any such jurisdiction: no appeals can lie from any
of our common law courts, upon the merits of the case. The only way
in which they can go up from an inferior to a superior tribunal is by
habeas corpus before a hearing, or by certiorari, or writ of error,
after they are determined in the subordinate courts. But in no case,
when they are carried up, are the facts re-examined, but they are
always taken as established in the inferior court
BRUTUS
Antifederalist No. 82
The Power Of The Judiciary Part 4
From the 11th essay of "Brutus" taken from The
New-York Journal, January 31, 1788.
It may still be insisted that this clause [on appellate
jurisdiction] does not take away the trial by jury on appeals,
but that this may be provided for by the legislature, under that
paragraph which authorises them to form regulations and restrictions
for the court in the exercise of this power.
The natural meaning of this paragraph seems to be no more than
this, that Congress may declare, that certain cases shall not be
subject to the appellate jurisdiction, and they may point out the
mode in which the court shall proceed in bringing up the causes
before them, the manner of their taking evidence to establish the
facts, and the method of the court's proceeding. But I presume they
cannot take from the court the right of deciding on the fact, any
more than they can deprive them of the right of determining on the
law, when a cause is once before them; for they have the same
jurisdiction as to fact, as they have as to the law. But supposing
the Congress may under this clause establish the trial by jury on
appeals. It does not seem to me that it will render this article much
less exceptionable. An appeal from one court and jury, to another
court and jury, is a thing altogether unknown in the laws of our
state [New York], and in most of the states in the union. A
practice of this kind prevails in the eastern states: actions are
there commenced in the inferior courts, and an appeal lies from them
on the whole merits to the superior courts. The consequence is well
known. Very few actions are determined in the lower courts; it is
rare that a case of any importance is not carried by appeal to the
supreme court, and the jurisdiction of the inferior courts is merely
nominal; this has proved so burdensome to the people in
Massachusetts, that it was one of the principal causes which excited
the insurrection in that state, in the year past. [There are]
very few sensible and moderate men in that state but what will admit,
that the inferior courts are almost entirely useless, and answer very
little purpose, save only to accumulate costs against the poor
debtors who are already unable to pay their just debts.
But the operation of the appellate power in the supreme judicial
of the United States, would work infinitely more mischief than any
such power can do in a single state.
The trouble and expense to the parties would be endless and
intolerable. No man can say where the supreme court are to hold their
sessions; the presumption is, however, that it must be at the seat of
the general government. In this case parties must travel many hundred
miles, with their witnesses and lawyers, to prosecute or defend a
suit. No man of middling fortune, can sustain the expense of such a
law suit, and therefore the poorer and middling class of citizens
will be under the necessity of submitting to the demands of the rich
and the lordly, in cases that will come under the cognizance of this
court. If it be said, that to prevent this oppression, the supreme
court will sit in different parts of the union, it may be replied,
that this would only make the oppression somewhat more tolerable, but
by no means so much as to give a chance of justice to the poor and
middling class. It is utterly impossible that the supreme court can
move into so many different parts of the Union, as to make it
convenient or even tolerable to attend before them with witnesses to
try causes from every part of the United States. If to avoid the
expense and inconvenience of calling witnesses from a great distance,
to give evidence before the supreme court, the expedient of taking
the deposition of witnesses in writing should be adopted, it would
not help the matter. It is of great importance in the distribution of
justice that witnesses should be examined face to face, that the
parties should have the fairest opportunity of cross examining them
in order to bring out the whole truth. There is something in the
manner in which a witness delivers his testimony which can not be
committed to paper, and which yet very frequently gives a complexion
to his evidence, very different from what it would bear if committed
to writing. Besides, the expense of taking written testimony would
be, enormous. Those who are acquainted with the costs that arise in
the courts, where all the evidence is taken in writing, well know
that they exceed beyond all comparison those of the common law
courts, where witnesses are examined viva voce.
The costs accruing in courts generally advance with the grade of
the courts. Thus the charges attending a suit in our common pleas, is
much less than those in the supreme court, and these are much lower
than those in the court of chancery. Indeed, the costs in the last
mentioned court, are in many cases so exorbitant and the proceedings
so dilatory that the suitor had almost as well give up his demand as
to prosecute his suit. We have just reason to suppose, that the costs
in the supreme general court will exceed either of our courts. The
officers of the general court will be more dignified than those of
the states, the lawyers of the most ability will practice in them,
and the trouble and expense of attending them will be greater. From
all these considerations, it appears, that the expense attending
suits in the supreme court will be so great, as to put it out of the
power of the poor and middling class of citizens to contest a suit in
it.
From these remarks it appears, that the administration of justice
under the powers of the judicial will be dilatory; that it will be
attended with such an heavy expense as to amount to little short of a
denial of justice to the poor and middling class of people who in
every government stand most in need of the protection of the law; and
that the trial by jury, which has so justly been the boast of our
forefathers as well as ourselves is taken away under them.
These extraordinary powers in this court are the more
objectionable, because there does not appear the least necessity for
them, in order to secure a due and impartial distribution of
justice.
The want of ability or integrity, or a disposition to render
justice to every suitor, has not been objected against the courts of
the respective states. So far as I have been informed, the courts of
justice in all the states have ever been found ready to administer
justice with promptitude and impartiality according to the laws of
the land. It is true in some of the states, paper money has been
made, and the debtor authorised to discharge his debts with it, at a
depreciated value; in others, tender laws have been passed, obliging
the creditor to receive on execution other property than money in
discharge of his demand; and in several of the states laws have been
made unfavorable to the creditor and tending to render property
insecure.
But these evils have not happened from any defect in the judicial
departments of the states. The courts indeed are bound to take notice
of these laws, and so will the courts of the general government be
under obligation to observe the laws made by the general legislature
not repugnant to the constitution. But so far have the judicial been
from giving undue latitude of construction to laws of this kind, that
they have invariably strongly inclined to the other side. All the
acts of our legislature, which have been charged with being of this
complexion, have uniformly received the strictest construction by the
judges, and have been extended to no cases but to such as came within
the strict letter of the law. In this way, have our courts, I will
not say evaded the law, but so limited its operation as to work the
least possible injustice. The same thing has taken place in
Rhode-Island, which has justly rendered herself infamous, by
tenaciously adhering to her paper money system. The judges there gave
a decision, in opposition to the words of the statute, on this
principle: that a construction according to the words of it would
contradict the fundamental maxims of their laws and constitution.
No pretext therefore can be formed, from the conduct of the
judicial courts [of the states], which will justify giving
such powers to the supreme general court. For their decisions have
been such as to give just ground of confidence in them, that they
will finally adhere to the principles of rectitude; and there is no
necessity of lodging these powers in the [federal] courts, in
order to guard against the evils justly complained of, on the subject
of security of property under this constitution. For it has provided,
"that no state shall emit bills of credit, or make any thing but gold
and silver coin a tender in payment of debts." It has also declared,
that "no state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of
contracts." These prohibitions give the most perfect security against
those attacks upon property which I am sorry to say some of the
states have but too wantonly made, . . . For "this constitution will
be the supreme law of the land, and the judges in every state will be
bound thereby; any thing in the constitution and laws of any state to
the contrary notwithstanding."
The courts of the respective states might therefore have been
securely trusted with deciding all cases between man and man, whether
citizens of the same state or of different states, or between
foreigners and citizens. Indeed, for ought I see, every case that can
arise under the constitution or laws of the United States ought in
the first instance to be tried in the court of the state, except
those which might arise b@tween states, such as respect ambassadors,
or other public ministers, and perhaps such as call in question the
claim of lands under grants from different states. The state courts
would be under sufficient control, if writs of error were allowed
from the state courts to the supreme court of the union, according to
the practice of the courts in England and of this state, on all cases
in which the laws of the union are concerned, and perhaps to all
cases in which a foreigner is a party.
This method would preserve the good old way of administering
justice, would bring justice to every man's door, and preserve the
inestimable right of trial by jury. It would be following, as near as
our circumstances will admit, the practice of the courts in England,
which is almost the only thing I would wish to copy in their
government.
But as this system now stands, there is to be as many inferior
courts as Congress may see fit to appoint, who are to be authorised
to originate and in the first instance to try all the cases falling
under the description of this article. There is no security that a
trial by jury shall be had in these courts, but the trial here will
soon become, as it is in Massachusetts' inferior courts, [a]
mere matter of form; for an appeal may be had to the supreme court on
the whole merits. This court is to have power to determine in law and
in equity, on the law and the fact, and this court is exalted above
all other power in the government, subject to no control; and so
fixed as not to be removable, but upon impeachment, which is much the
same thing as not to be removable at all.
To obviate the objections made to the judicial power, it has been
said, that the Congress, in forming the regulations and exceptions
which they are authorised to make respecting the appellate
jurisdiction, will make provision against all the evils which are
apprehended from this article. On this I would remark, that this way
of answering the objection made to the power, implies an admission
that the power is in itself improper without restraint; and if so,
why not restrict it in the first instance.
The just way of investigating any power given to a government, is
to examine its operation supposing it to be put in exercise. If upon
inquiry, it appears that the power, if exercised, would be
prejudicial, it ought not to be given. For to answer objections made
to a power given to a government, by saying it will never be
exercised, is really admitting that the power ought not to be
exercised, and therefore ought not to be granted.
I have, in the course of my observation on this constitution,
affirmed and endeavored to show, that it was calculated to abolish
entirely the state governments, and to melt down the states into one
entire government, for every purpose as well internal and local, as
external and national. In this opinion the opposers of the system
have generally agreed - and this has been uniformly denied by its
advocates in public. Some individuals indeed, among them, will
confess that it has this tendency, and scruple not to say it is what
they wish; and I will venture to predict, without the spirit of
prophecy, that if it is adopted without amendments, or some such
precautions as will insure amendments immediately after its adoption,
that the same gentlemen who have employed their talents and abilities
with such success to influence the public mind to adopt this plan,
will employ the same to persuade the people, that it will be for
their good to abolish the state governments as useless and
burdensome.
Perhaps nothing could have been better conceived to facilitate the
abolition of the state governments than the constitution of the
judicial. They will be able to extend the limits of the general
government gradually, and by insensible degrees, and to accommodate
themselves to the temper of the people. Their decisions on the
meaning of the constitution will commonly take place in cases which
arise between individuals, with which the public will not be
generally acquainted. One adjudication will form a precedent to the
next, and this to a following one. These cases will immediately
affect individuals only, so that a series of determinations will
probably take place before even the people will be informed of them.
In the meantime all the art and address of those who wish for the
change will be employed to make converts to their opinion. The people
will be told that their state officers, and state legislatures, are a
burden and expense without affording any solid advantage; that all
the laws passed by them might be equally well made by the general
legislature. If to those who will be interested in the change, be
added those who will be under their influence, and such who will
submit to almost any change of government which they can be persuaded
to believe will ease them of taxes, it is easy to see the party who
will favor the abolition of the state governments would be far from
being inconsiderable. In this situation, the general legislature
might pass one law after another, extending the general and abridging
the state jurisdictions, and to sanction their proceedings would have
a course of decisions of the judicial to whom the constitution has
committed the power of explaining the constitution. If the states
remonstrated, the constitutional mode of deciding upon the validity
of the law is with the supreme court; and neither people, nor state
legislatures, nor the general legislature can remove them or reverse
their decrees. Had the construction of the constitution been less
[more?] with the legislature, they would have explained it at
their peril. If they exceed[ed] their powers, or sought to
find in the spirit of the constitution, more than was expressed in
the letter, the people from whom they derived their power could
remove them, . . . Indeed, I can see no other remedy that the people
can have against their rulers for encroachments of this nature. A
constitution is a compact of a people with their rulers; if the
rulers break the compact, the people have a right and ought to remove
them and do themselves justice. But in order to enable them to do
this with the greater facility, those whom the people choose at
stated periods should have the power in the last resort to determine
the sense of the compact. If they determine contrary to the
understanding of the people, an appeal will lie to the people at the
period when the rulers are to be elected, and they will have it in
their power to remedy the evil. But when this power is lodged in the
hands of men independent of the people, and of their representatives,
and who are not constitutionally accountable for their opinions, no
way is left to control them but with a high hand and an outstretched
arm.
BRUTUS
in all those cases, where the general government has
jurisdiction in civil questions, the proposed Constitution not only
makes no provision for the trial by jury in the first instance, but,
by its appellate jurisdiction, absolutely takes away that inestimable
privilege, since it expressly declares the Supreme Court shall have
appellate jurisdiction both as to law and fact. Should, therefore, a
jury be adopted in the inferior court, it would only be a needless
expense, since, on an appeal, the determination of that jury, even on
questions of fact, however honest and upright, is to be of no
possible effect. The Supreme Court is to take up all questions of
fact; to examine the evidence relative thereto; to decide upon them,
in the same manner as if they had never been tried by a jury. Nor is
trial by jury secured in criminal cases. It is true that, in the
first instance, in the inferior court, the trial is to be by jury. In
this, and in this only, is the difference between criminal and civil
cases. But, sir, the appellate jurisdiction extends, as I have
observed, to cases criminal, as well as civil, and on the appeal the
court is to decide not only on the law but on the fact. If,
therefore, even in criminal cases, the general government is not
satisfied with the verdict of the jury, its officer may remove the
prosecution to the Supreme Court; and there the verdict of the jury
is to be of no effect, but the judges of this court are to decide
upon the fact as well as the law, the same as in civil cases.
Thus, sir, jury trials, which have ever been the boast of the
English constitution-which have been by our several state
constitutions so cautiously secured to us-jury trials, which have so
long been considered the surest barrier against arbitrary power, and
the palladium of liberty, with the loss of which the loss of our
freedom may be dated, are taken away by the proposed form of
government, not only in a great variety of questions between
individual and individual, but in every case, whether civil or
criminal, arising under the laws of the United States, or the
execution of those laws. It is taken away in those very cases where,
of all others, it is most essential for our liberty to have it
sacredly guarded and preserved: in every case, whether civil or
criminal, between government and its officers on the one part, and
the subject or citizen on the other. Nor was this the effect of
inattention, nor did it arise from any real difficulty in
establishing and securing jury trials by the proposed Constitution if
the Convention had wished to do so; but the same reason influenced
here as in the case of the establishment of the inferior courts. As
they could not trust state judges, so would they not confide in state
juries. They alleged that the general government and the state
governments would always be at variance-that the citizens of the
different states would enter into the views and interests of their
respective states, and therefore ought not to be trusted in
determining causes in which the general government was any way
interested, without giving the general government an opportunity, if
it disapproved the verdict of the jury, to appeal, and to have the
facts examined into again, and decided upon by its own judges, on
whom it was thought a reliance might be had by the general
government, they being appointed under its authority. Thus, sir, in
consequence of this appellate jurisdiction, and its extension to
facts as well as to law, every arbitrary act of the general
government, and every oppression of all that variety of officers
appointed under its authority for the collection of taxes, duties,
impost, excise, and other purposes, must be submitted to by the
individual, or must be opposed with little prospect of success, and
almost a certain prospect of ruin, at least in those cases where the
middle and common class of citizens are interested. Since, to avoid
that oppression, or to obtain redress, the application must be made
to one of the courts of the United States-by good fortune, should
this application be in the first instance attended with success, and
should damages be recovered equivalent to the injury sustained, an
appeal lies to the Supreme Court, in which case the citizen must at
once give up his cause, or he must attend to it at the distance,
perhaps, of more than a thousand miles from the place of his
residence, and must take measures to procure before that court, on
the appeal, all the evidence necessary to support his action, which,
even if ultimately prosperous, must be attended with a loss of time,
a neglect of business, and an expense, which will be greater than the
original grievance, and to which men in moderate circumstances would
be utterly unequal.
Luther Martin of Maryland
When a building is to be erected which is intended to stand for
ages, the foundation should be firmly laid. The Constitution proposed
to your acceptance is designed, not for yourselves alone, but for
generations yet unborn. The principles, therefore, upon which the
social compact is founded, ought to have been clearly and precisely
stated, and the most express and full declaration of rights to have
been made. But on this subject there is almost an entire silence.
If we may collect the sentiments of the people of America, from
their own most solemn declarations, they hold this truth as
self-evident, that all men are by nature free. No one man, therefore,
or any class of men, have a right, by the law of nature, or of God,
to assume or exercise authority over their fellows. The origin of
society, then, is to be sought, not in any natural right which one
man has to exercise authority over another, but in the united consent
of those who associate. The mutual wants of men at first dictated the
propriety of forming societies: and when they were established,
protection and defense pointed out the necessity of instituting
government. In a state of nature every individual pursues his own
interest; in this pursuit it frequently happened, that the
possessions or enjoyments of one were sacrificed to the views and
designs of another; thus the weak were a prey to the strong, the
simple and unwary were subject to impositions from those who were
more crafty and designing. In this state of things, every individual
was insecure; common interest, therefore, directed that government
should be established, in which the force of the whole community
should be collected, and under such directions, as to protect and
defend every one who composed it. The common good, therefore, is the
end of civil government, and common consent, the foundation on which
it is established. To effect this end, it was necessary that a
certain portion of natural liberty should be surrendered, in order
that what remained should be preserved. How great a proportion of
natural freedom is necessary to be yielded by individuals, when they
submit to government, I shall not inquire. So much, however, must be
given, as will be sufficient to enable those to whom the
administration of the government is committed, to establish laws for
the promoting the happiness of the community, and to carry those laws
into effect. But it is not necessary, for this purpose, that
individuals should relinquish all their natural rights. Some are of
such a nature that they cannot be surrendered. Of this kind are the
rights of conscience, the right of enjoying and defending life, etc.
Others are not necessary to be resigned in order to attain the end
for which government is instituted; these therefore ought not to be
given up. To surrender them, would counteract the very end of
government, to wit, the common good. From these observations it
appears, that in forming a government on its true principles, the
foundation should be laid in the manner I before stated, by expressly
reserving to the people such of their essential rights as are not
necessary to be parted with. The same reasons which at first induced
mankind to associate and institute government, will operate to
influence them to observe this precaution. If they had been disposed
to conform themselves to the rule of immutable righteousness,
government would not have been requisite. It was because one part
exercised fraud, oppression and violence, on the other, that men came
together, and agreed that certain rules should be formed to regulate
the conduct of all, and the power of the whole community lodged in
the hands of rulers to enforce an obedience to them. But rulers have
the same propensities as other men; they are as likely to use the
power with which they are vested, for private purposes, and to the
injury and oppression of those over whom they are placed, as
individuals in a state of nature are to injure and oppress one
another. It is therefore as proper that bounds should be set to their
authority, as that government should have at first been instituted to
restrain private injuries.
This principle, which seems so evidently founded in the reason and
nature of things, is confirmed by universal experience. Those who
have governed, have been found in all ages ever active to enlarge
their powers and abridge the public liberty. This has induced the
people in all countries, where any sense of freedom remained, to fix
barriers against the encroachments of their rulers. The country from
which we have derived our origin, is an eminent example of this.
Their magna charta and bill of rights have long been the boast, as
well as the security of that nation. I need say no more, I presume,
to an American, than that this principle is a fundamental one, in all
the Constitutions of our own States; there is not one of them but
what is either founded on a declaration or bill of rights, or has
certain express reservation of rights interwoven in the body of them.
From this it appears, that at a time when the pulse of liberty beat
high, and when an appeal was made to the people to form Constitutions
for the government of themselves, it was their universal sense, that
such declarations should make a part of their frames of government.
It is, therefore, the more astonishing, that this grand security to
the rights of the people is not to be found in this Constitution. It
has been said, in answer to this objection, that such declarations of
rights, however requisite they might be in the Constitutions of the
States, are not necessary in the general Constitution, because, "in
the former case, every thing which is not reserved is given; but in
the latter, the reverse of the proposition prevails, and every thing
which is not given is reserved." It requires but little attention to
discover, that this mode of reasoning is rather specious than solid.
The powers, rights and authority, granted to the general government
by this Constitution, are as complete, with respect to every object
to which they extend, as that of any State government-it reaches to
every thing which concerns human happiness-life, liberty, and
property are under its control. There is the same reason, therefore,
that the exercise of power, in this case, should be restrained within
proper limits, as in that of the State governments. To set this
matter in a clear light, permit me to instance some of the articles
of the bills of rights of the individual States, and apply them to
the case in question.
For the security of life, in criminal prosecutions, the bills of
rights of most of the States have declared, that no man shall be held
to answer for a crime until he is made fully acquainted with the
charge brought against him; he shall not be compelled to accuse, or
furnish evidence against himself-the witnesses against him shall be
brought face to face, and he shall be fully heard by himself or
counsel. That it is essential to the security of life and liberty,
that trial of facts be in the vicinity where they happen. Are not
provisions of this kind as necessary in the general government, as in
that of a particular State? The powers vested in the new Congress
extend in many cases to life; they are authorized to provide for the
punishment of a variety of capital crimes, and no restraint is laid
upon them in its exercise, save only, that "the trial of all crimes,
except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury; and such trial
shall be in the State where the said crimes shall have been
committed." No man is secure of a trial in the county where he is
charged to have committed a crime; he may be brought from Niagara to
New York, or carried from Kentucky to Richmond for trial for an
offense supposed to be committed. What security is there, that a man
shall be furnished with a full and plain description of the charges
against him? That he shall be allowed to produce all proof he can in
his favor? That he shall see the witnesses against him face to face,
or that he shall be fully heard in his own defense by himself or
counsel?
For the security of liberty it has been declared, "that excessive
bail should not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel
or unusual punishments inflicted. That all warrants, without oath or
affirmation, to search suspected places, or seize any person, his
papers or property, are grievous and oppressive."
These provisions are as necessary under the general government as
under that of the individual States; for the power of the former is
as complete to the purpose of requiring bail, imposing fines,
inflicting punishments, granting search warrants, and seizing
persons, papers, or property, in certain cases, as the other.
For the purpose of securing the property of the citizens, it is
declared by all the States, "that in all controversies at law,
respecting property, the ancient mode of trial by jury is one of the
best securities of the rights of the people, and ought to remain
sacred and inviolable."
Does not the same necessity exist of reserving this right under
their national compact, as in that of the States? Yet nothing is said
respecting it. In the bills of rights of the States it is declared,
that a well regulated militia is the proper and natural defense of a
free government; that as standing armies in time of peace are
dangerous, they are not to be kept up, and that the military should
be kept under strict subordination to, and controlled by, the civil
power.
The same security is as necessary in this Constitution, and much
more so; for the general government will have the sole power to raise
and to pay armies, and are under no control in the exercise of it;
yet nothing of this is to be found in this new system.
I might proceed to instance a number of other rights, which were
as necessary to be reserved, such as, that elections should be free,
that the liberty of the press should be held sacred; but the
instances adduced are sufficient to prove that this argument is
without foundation. Besides, it is evident that the reason here
assigned was not the true one, why the framers of this Constitution
omitted a bill of rights; if it had been, they would not have made
certain reservations, while they totally omitted others of more
importance. We find they have, in the ninth section of the first
article declared, that the writ of habeas corpus shall not be
suspended, unless in cases of rebellion,-that no bill of attainder,
or ex post facto law, shall be passed,-that no title of nobility
shall be granted by the United States, etc. If every thing which is
not given is reserved, what propriety is there in these exceptions?
Does this Constitution any where grant the power of suspending the
habeas corpus, to make ex post facto laws, pass bills of attainder,
or grant titles of nobility? It certainly does not in express terms.
The only answer that can be given is, that these are implied in the
general powers granted. With equal truth it may be said, that all the
powers which the bills of rights guard against the abuse of, are
contained or implied in the general ones granted by this
Constitution.
So far is it from being true, that a bill of rights is less
necessary in the general Constitution than in those of the States,
the contrary is evidently the fact. This system, if it is possible
for the people of America to accede to it, will be an original
compact; and being the last wilt, in the nature of things, vacate
every former agreement inconsistent with it. For it being a plan of
government received and ratified by the whole people, all other forms
which are in existence at the time of its adoption, must yield to it.
This is expressed in positive and unequivocal terms in the sixth
article: "That this Constitution, and the laws of the United States
which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or
which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall
be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every State shall
be bound thereby, any thing in the Constitution, or laws of any
State, to the contrary notwithstanding."
"The senators and representatives before-mentioned, and the
members of the several State legislatures, and all executive and
judicial officers, both of the United States, and of the several
States, shall be bound, by oath or affirmation, to support this
Constitution."
It is therefore not only necessarily implied thereby, but
positively expressed, that the different State Constitutions are
repealed and entirely done away, so far as they are inconsistent with
this, with the laws which shall be made in pursuance thereof, or with
treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the
United States. Of what avail will the Constitutions of the respective
States be to preserve the rights of its citizens? Should they be
pled, the answer would be, the Constitution of the United States, and
the laws made in pursuance thereof, is the supreme law, and all
legislatures and judicial officers, whether of the General or State
governments, are bound by oath to support it. No privilege, reserved
by the bills of rights, or secured by the State governments, can
limit the power granted by this, or restrain any laws made in
pursuance of it. It stands, therefore, on its own bottom, and must
receive a construction by itself, without any reference to any other.
And hence it was of the highest importance, that the most precise and
express declarations and reservations of rights should have been
made.
This will appear the more necessary, when it is considered, that
not only the Constitution and laws made in pursuance thereof, but alt
treaties made, under the authority of the United States, are the
supreme law of the land, and supersede the Constitutions of all the
States. The power to make treaties, is vested in the president, by
and with the advice and consent of two-thirds of the senate. I do not
find any limitation or restriction to the exercise of this power. The
most important article in any Constitution may therefore be repealed,
even without a legislative act. Ought not a government, vested with
such extensive and indefinite authority, to have been restricted by a
declaration of rights? It certainly ought.
So clear a point is this, that I cannot help suspecting that
persons who attempt to persuade people that such reservations were
less necessary under this Constitution than under those of the
States, are wilfully endeavoring to deceive, and to lead you into an
absolute state of vassalage.
BRUTUS
It is agreed, the plan is defective-that some of the powers
granted are dangerous-others not well defined-and amendments are
necessary why then not amend it? Why not remove the cause of danger,
and, possible, even the apprehension of it? The instrument is yet in
the hands of the people; it is not signed, sealed, and delivered, and
they have power to give it any form they please.
But it is contended, adopt it first, and then amend it. I ask, why
not amend, and then adopt it? Most certainly the latter mode of
proceeding is more consistent with our ideas of prudence in the
ordinary concerns of life If men were about entering into a contract
respecting their private concerns it would be highly absurd in them
to sign and seal an instrument containing stipulations which are
contrary to their interests and wishes, under the expectation, that
the parties, after its execution, would agree to make alteration
agreeable to their desire. They would insist upon the exceptionable
clause being altered before they would ratify the contract. And is a
compact for the government of ourselves and our posterity of less
moment than contract between individuals? Certainly not. But to this
reasoning, which at first vie would appear to admit of no reply, a
variety of objections are made, and number of reasons urged for
adopting the system, and afterwards proposing amendments. Such as
have come under my observation, I shall state, an remark upon.
It is insisted, that the present situation of our country is such,
as not t admit of a delay in forming a new government, or of time
sufficient t deliberate and agree upon the amendments which are
proper, without involving ourselves in a state of anarchy and
confusion.
On this head, all the powers of rhetoric, and arts of description,
ar employed to paint the condition of this country, in the most
hideous an frightful colors. We are told, that agriculture is without
encouragement trade is languishing; private faith and credit are
disregarded, and public credit is prostrate; that the laws and
magistrates are condemned and set at naught; that a spirit of
licentiousness is rampant, and ready to break over every bound set to
it by the government; that private embarrassments and distresses
invade the house of every man of middling property, and insecurity
threatens every man in affluent circumstances: in short, that we are
in a state of the most grievous calamity at home, and that we are
contemptible abroad, the scorn of foreign nations, and the ridicule
of the world. From this high wrought picture, one would suppose that
we were in a condition the most deplorable of any people upon earth.
But suffer me, my countrymen, to call your attention to a serious and
sober estimate of the situation in which you are placed, while I
trace the embarrassments under which you labor, to their true
sources, What is your condition? Does not every man sit under his own
vine and under his own fig-tree, having none to make him afraid? Does
not every one follow his calling without impediments and receive the
reward of his well-earned industry? The farmer cultivates his land,
and reaps the fruit which the bounty of heaven bestows on his honest
toil. The mechanic is exercised in his art, and receives the reward
of his labor. The merchant drives his commerce, and none can deprive
him of the gain he honestly acquires; all classes and callings of men
amongst us are protected in their various pursuits, and secured by
the laws in the possession and enjoyment of the property obtained in
those pursuits. The laws are as well executed as they ever were, in
this or any other country. Neither the hand of private violence, nor
the more to be dreaded hand of legal oppression, are reached out to
distress us.
It is true, many individuals labor under embarrassments, but these
are to be imputed to the unavoidable circumstances of things, rather
than to any defect in our governments. We have just emerged from a
long and expensive war. During its existence few people were in a
situation to increase their fortunes, but many to diminish them.
Debts contracted before the war were left unpaid while it existed,
and these were left a burden too heavy to be home at the commencement
of peace. Add to these, that when the war was over, too many of us,
instead of reassuming our old habits of frugality, and industry, by
which alone every country must be placed in a prosperous condition,
took up the profuse use of foreign commodities. The country was
deluged with articles imported from abroad, and the cash of the
country has been sent to pay for them, and still left us laboring
under the weight of a huge debt to persons abroad. These are the true
sources to which we are to trace all the private difficulties of
individuals. But will a new government relieve you from these? ...
Your present condition is such as is common to take place after the
conclusion of a war. Those who can remember our situation after the
termination of the war preceding the last, will recollect that our
condition was similar to the present, but time and industry soon
recovered us from it. Money was scarce, the produce of the country
much lower than it has been since the peace, and many individuals
were extremely embarrassed with debts; and this happened although we
did not experience the ravages, desolations, and loss of property,
that were suffered during the late war.
With regard to our public and national concerns, what is there in
our condition that threatens us with any immediate danger? We are at
peace with all the world; no nation menaces us with war; nor are we
called upon by any cause of sufficient importance to attack any
nation. The state governments answer the purposes of preserving the
peace, and providing for present exigencies. Our condition as a
nation is in no respect worse than it has been for several years
past. Our public debt has been lessened in various ways, and the
western territory, which has been relied upon as a productive fund to
discharge the national debt has at length been brought to market, and
a considerable part actually applied to its reduction. I mention
these things to show, that there is nothing special, in our present
situation, as it respects our national affairs, that should induce us
to accept the proffered system, without taking sufficient time to
consider and amend it. I do not mean by this, to insinuate, that our
government does not stand in need of reform. It is admitted by all
parties, that alterations are necessary in our federal constitution,
but the circumstances of our case do by no means oblige us to
precipitate this business, or require that we should adopt a system
materially defective. We may safely take time to deliberate and
amend, without in the meantime hazarding a condition, in any
considerable degree, worse than the present.
But it is said that if we postpone the ratification of this system
until the necessary amendments are first incorporated, the
consequence will be a civil war among the states. . . . The idea of
[New York] being attacked by the other states, will appear
visionary and chimerical, if we consider that tho' several of them
have adopted the new constitution, yet the opposition to it has been
numerous and formidable. The eastern states from whom we are told we
have most to fear, should a civil war be blown up, would have full
employ to keep in awe those who are opposed to it in their own
governments. Massachusetts, after a long and dubious contest in their
convention, has adopted it by an inconsiderable majority, and in the
very act has marked it with a stigma in its present form. No man of
candor, judging from their public proceedings, will undertake to say
on which side the majority of the people are. Connecticut, it is
true, have acceded to it, by a large majority of their convention;
but it is a fact well known, that a large proportion of the yeomanry
of the country are against it. And it is equally true, that a
considerable part of those who voted for it in the convention, wish
to see it altered. In both these states the body of the common
people, who always do the fighting of a country, would be more likely
to fight against than for it. Can it then be presumed, that a country
divided among themselves, upon a question where even the advocates
for it, admit the system they contend for needs amendments, would
make war upon a sister state? . . . The idea is preposterous.
The reasonings made use of to persuade us, that no alterations can
be agreed upon previous to the adoption of the system, are as curious
as they are futile. It is alleged, that there was great diversity of
sentiments in forming the proposed constitution; that it was the
effect of mutual concessions and a spirit of accommodation, and from
hence it is inferred, that further changes cannot be hoped for. I
should suppose that the contrary inference was the fair one. If the
convention, who framed this plan, were possessed of such a spirit of
moderation and condescension, as to be induced to yield to each other
certain points, and to accommodate themselves to each other's
opinions, and even prejudices, there is reason to expect, that this
same spirit will continue and prevail in a future convention, and
produce an union of sentiments on the points objected to. There is
more reason to hope for this, because the subject has received a full
discussion, and the minds of the people much better known than they
were when the convention sat. Previous to the meeting of the
convention, the subject of a new form of government had been little
thought of, and scarcely written upon at all. It is true, it was the
general opinion, that some alterations were requisite in the federal
system. This subject had been contemplated by almost every thinking
man in the union. It had been the subject of many well- written
essays, and it was the anxious wish of every true friend to America.
But it was Dever in the contemplation of one in a thousand of those
who had reflected on the matter, to have an entire change in the
nature of our federal government-to alter it from a confederation of
states, to that of one entire government, which will swallow up that
of the individual states. I will venture to say, that the idea of a
government similar to the one proposed, never entered the minds of
the legislatures who appointed the convention, and of but very few of
the members who composed it, until they had assembled and heard it
proposed in that body: much less had the people any conception of
such a plan until after it was promulgated, While it was agitated,
the debates of the convention were kept an impenetrable secret, and
no opportunity was given for well informed men to offer their
sentiments upon the subject. The system was therefore never publicly
discussed, nor indeed could be, because it was not known to the
people until after it was proposed. Since then, it has been the
object of universal attention-it has been thought of by every
reflecting man-been discussed in a public and private manner, in
conversation and in print; its defects have been pointed out, and
every objection to it stated; able advocates have written in its
favor, and able opponents have written against it. And what is the
result? It cannot be denied but that the general opinion is, that it
contains material errors, and requires important amendments. This
then being the general sentiment, both of the friends and foes of the
system, can it be doubted, that another convention would concur in
such amendments as would quiet the fears of the opposers, and effect
a great degree of union on the subject? -- An event most devoutly to
be wished. But it is further said, that there can be no prospect of
procuring alterations before it is acceded to, because those who
oppose it do not agree among themselves with respect to the
amendments that are necessary. To this I reply, that this may be
urged against attempting alterations after it is received, with as
much force as before; and therefore, if it concludes anything, it is
that we must receive any system of government proposed to us, because
those who object to it do not entirely concur in their objections.
But the assertion is not true to any considerable extent. There is a
remarkable uniformity in the objections made to the constitution, on
the most important points. It is also worthy of notice, that very few
of the matters found fault with in it, are of a local nature, or such
as affect any particular state; on the contrary, they are such as
concern the principles of general liberty, in which the people of New
Hampshire, New York and Georgia are equally interested.
It has been objected too that the new system . . . is calculated
to and will effect such a consolidation of the States, as to supplant
and overturn the state governments.
It has been said that the representation in the general
legislature is too small to secure liberty, or to answer the
intention of representation. In this there is an union of sentiments
in the opposers.
The constitution has been opposed, because it gives to the
legislature an unlimited power of taxation both with respect to
direct and indirect taxes, a right to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts and excises of every kind and description, and to any amount.
In this there has been as general a concurrence of opinion as in the
former.
The opposers to the constitution have said that it is dangerous,
because the judicial power may extend to many cases which ought to be
reserved to the decision of the State courts, and because the right
of trial by jury is not secured in the judicial courts of the general
government, in civil cases. All the opposers are agreed in this
objection.
The power of the general legislature to alter and regulate the
time, place and manner of holding elections, has been stated as an
argument against the adoption of the system. The opposers to the
constitution universally agree in this objection.
The mixture of legislative, judicial, and executive powers in the
Senate; the little degree of responsibility under which the great
officers of government will be held; and the liberty granted by the
system to establish and maintain a standing army without any
limitation or restriction, are also objected to the constitution; and
in these there is a great degree of unanimity of sentiment in the
opposers.
You have heard that both sides on this great question, agree, that
there are in it great defects; yet the one side tell you, choose such
men as will adopt it, and then amend it-while the other say, amend
previous to its adoption. I have stated to you my reasons for the
latter, and I think they are unanswerable. Consider, you the common
people, the yeomanry of the country, for to such I principally
address myself, you are to be the principal losers, if the
constitution should prove oppressive. When a tyranny is established,
there are always masters as well as slaves; the great and well-born
are generally the former, and the middling class the latter. Attempts
have been made, and will be repeated, to alarm you with the fear of
consequences; but reflect there are consequences on both sides, and
none can be apprehended more dreadful, than entailing on ourselves
and posterity a government which will raise a few to the height of
human greatness and wealth, while it will depress the many to the
extreme of poverty and wretchedness. Consequences are under the
control of that all-wise and all-powerful being, whose providence
conducts the affairs of all men. Our part is to act right, and we may
then have confidence that the consequences will be favorable. The
path in which you should walk is plain and open before you; be united
as one man, and direct your choice to such men as have been uniform
in their opposition to the proposed system in its present form, or
without proper alterations. In men of this description you have
reason to place confidence, while on the other hand, you have just
cause to distrust those who urge the adoption of a bad constitution,
under the delusive expectation of making amendments after it is
acceded to. Your jealousy of such characters should be the more
excited, when you consider that the advocates for the constitution
have shifted their ground. When men are uniform in their opinions, it
affords evidence that they are sincere. When they are shifting, it
gives reason to believe, they do not change from conviction. It must
be recollected, that when this plan was first announced to the
public, its supporters cried it up as the most perfect production of
human wisdom, It was represented either as having no defects, or if
it had, they were so trifling and inconsiderable, that they served
only, as the shades in a fine picture, to set off the piece to the
greater advantage. One gentleman in Philadelphia went so far in the
ardor of his enthusiasm in its favor, as to pronounce, that the men
who formed it were as really under the guidance of Divine Revelation,
as was Moses, the Jewish lawgiver. Their language is now changed; the
question has been discussed; the objections to the plan ably stated,
and they are admitted to be unanswerable. The same men who held it
almost perfect, now admit it is very imperfect; that it is necessary
it should be amended. The only question between us, is simply
this@hall we accede to a bad constitution, under the uncertain
prospect of getting it amended, after we have received it, or shall
we amend it before we adopt it? Common sense will point out which is
the most rational, which is the most secure line of conduct. May
heaven inspire you with wisdom, union, moderation and firmness, and
give you hearts to make a proper estimate of your invaluable
privileges, and preserve them to you, to be transmitted to your
posterity unimpaired, and may they be maintained in this our country,
while Sun and Moon endure.
A PLEBEIAN
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