Thomas Jefferson on Politics & Government |

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17. Interpreting the Constitution
The purpose of a written constitution is entirely defeated if,
in interpreting it as a legal document, its provisions are manipulated and
worked around so that the document means whatever the manipulators wish.
Jefferson recognized this danger and spoke out constantly for careful
adherence to the Constitution as written, with changes to be made by
amendment, not by tortured and twisted interpretations of the text.
"Our peculiar security is in the possession of a written Constitution. Let
us not make it a blank paper by construction." --Thomas Jefferson to Wilson
Nicholas, 1803. ME 10:419
"Where a constitution, like ours, wears a mixed aspect of monarchy and
republicanism, its citizens will naturally divide into two classes of
sentiment, according as their tone of body or mind, their habits, connections
and callings, induce them to wish to strengthen either the monarchical or the
republican features of the constitution. Some will consider it as an elective
monarchy, which had better be made hereditary, and therefore endeavor to lead
towards that all the forms and principles of its administration. Others will
view it as an energetic republic, turning in all its points on the pivot of
free and frequent elections." --Thomas Jefferson to James Sullivan, 1797. ME
9:377
"The Constitution to which we are all attached was meant to be republican,
and we believe to be republican according to every candid interpretation. Yet
we have seen it so interpreted and administered, as to be truly what the
French have called, a monarchie masque." --Thomas Jefferson to Robert
R. Livingston, 1800. ME 10:177
With Plain, Ordinary Understanding
"Laws are made for men of ordinary understanding and should, therefore, be
construed by the ordinary rules of common sense. Their meaning is not to be
sought for in metaphysical subtleties which may make anything mean everything
or nothing at pleasure." --Thomas Jefferson to William Johnson, 1823. ME
15:450
"Common sense [is] the foundation of all authorities, of the laws
themselves, and of their construction." --Thomas Jefferson: Batture at New
Orleans, 1812. ME 18:92
"The Constitution on which our Union rests, shall be administered by me [as
President] according to the safe and honest meaning contemplated by the plain
understanding of the people of the United States at the time of its
adoption--a meaning to be found in the explanations of those who advocated,
not those who opposed it, and who opposed it merely lest the construction
should be applied which they denounced as possible." --Thomas Jefferson: Reply
to Address, 1801. ME 10:248
"I do then, with sincere zeal, wish an inviolable preservation of our
present federal Constitution, according to the true sense in which it was
adopted by the States, that in which it was advocated by its friends, and not
that which its enemies apprehended, who therefore became its enemies."
--Thomas Jefferson to Elbridge Gerry, 1799. ME 10:76
When Two Meanings Are Possible
"It is a rule, where expressions are susceptible of two meanings, to recur
to other explanations. Good faith is in favor of this recurrence." --Thomas
Jefferson to William Short, 1791. ME 8:186
"Whenever the words of a law will bear two meanings, one of which will give
effect to the law, and the other will defeat it, the former must be supposed
to have been intended by the Legislature, because they could not intend that
meaning, which would defeat their intention, in passing that law; and in a
statute, as in a will, the intention of the party is to be sought after."
--Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin, 1808. ME 12:110
"It was understood to be a rule of law that where the words of a statute
admit of two constructions, the one just and the other unjust, the former is
to be given them." --Thomas Jefferson to Isaac McPherson, 1813. ME 13:326
"When an instrument admits two constructions, the one safe, the other
dangerous, the one precise, the other indefinite, I prefer that which is safe
and precise. I had rather ask an enlargement of power from the nation, where
it is found necessary, than to assume it by a construction which would make
our powers boundless." --Thomas Jefferson to Wilson Nicholas, 1803. ME 10:418
"Where a phrase is susceptible of two meanings, we ought certainly to adopt
that which will bring upon us the fewest inconveniences." --Thomas Jefferson:
Opinion on Apportionment Bill, 1792. ME 3:208
"The general rule [is] that an instrument is to be so construed as to
reconcile and give meaning and effect to all its parts." --Thomas Jefferson to
-----, 1816. ME 14:445
"In every event, I would rather construe so narrowly as to oblige the
nation to amend, and thus declare what powers they would agree to yield, than
too broadly, and indeed, so broadly as to enable the executive and the Senate
to do things which the Constitution forbids." --Thomas Jefferson: The Anas,
1793. ME 1:408
The Intention of the Lawgivers
"The government will certainly decide for itself on whose counsel they will
settle the construction of the laws they are to execute. We are to look at the
intention of the Legislature, and to carry it into execution while the lawyers
are nibbling at the words of the law." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin,
1808. ME 12:168
"The [legislature's] laws have always some rational object in view; and are
so to be construed as to produce order and justice." --Thomas Jefferson:
Batture at New Orleans, 1812. ME 18:122
"In the construction of a law, even in judiciary cases of meum et
tuum, where the opposite parties have a right and counterright in the very
words of the law, the Judge considers the intention of the lawgiver as his
true guide, and gives to all the parts and expressions of the law, that
meaning which will effect, instead of defeating, its intention. But in laws
merely executive, where no private right stands in the way, and the public
object is the interest of all, a much freer scope of construction, in favor of
the intention of the law, ought to be taken, and ingenuity ever should be
exercised in devising constructions which may save to the public the benefit
of the law. Its intention is the important thing: the means of attaining it
quite subordinate." --Thomas Jefferson to William H. Cabell, 1807. ME 11:318
"The true key for the construction of everything doubtful in a law is the
intention of the law-makers. This is most safely gathered from the words, but
may be sought also in extraneous circumstances provided they do not contradict
the express words of the law." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin, 1808. ME
12:59
"On every question of construction carry ourselves back to the time when
the Constitution was adopted, recollect the spirit manifested in the debates
and instead of trying what meaning may be squeezed out of the text or invented
against it, conform to the probable one in which it was passed." --Thomas
Jefferson to William Johnson, 1823. ME 15:449
"Strained constructions... loosen all the bands of the Constitution."
--Thomas Jefferson to George Ticknor, 1817. FE 10:81
"One single object... [will merit] the endless gratitude of society: that
of restraining the judges from usurping legislation." --Thomas Jefferson to
Edward Livingston, 1825. ME 16:113
Furthering the Principal Object
"It often happens that, the Legislature prescribing details of execution
[of a law], some circumstance arises, unforeseen or unattended to by them,
which would totally frustrate their intention, were their details scrupulously
adhered to and deemed exclusive of all others. But constructions must not be
favored which go to defeat instead of furthering the principal object of their
law, and to sacrifice the end to the means. It being as evidently their
intention that the end shall be attained as that it should be effected by any
given means, if both cannot be observed, we are equally free to deviate from
the one as the other, and more rational in postponing the means to the end."
--Thomas Jefferson to William H. Cabell, 1807. ME 11:319
"It is not honorable to take a mere legal advantage, when it happens to be
contrary to justice." --Thomas Jefferson: Opinion on Debts due to Soldiers,
1790. ME 3:25
"[There are] cases which, though within the words of the law, [are]
notoriously not within its intention, and are therefore relievable by an
equitable exercise of discretionary power." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert
Gallatin, 1808. ME 12:173
"It is a maxim of our municipal law, and, I believe, of universal law, that
he who permits the end, permits of course the means, without
which the end cannot be effected." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin,
1808. ME 12:18
Limited by the Separation of Powers
"The capital and leading object of the Constitution was to leave with the
States all authorities which respected their own citizens only and to transfer
to the United States those which respected citizens of foreign or other
States; to make us several as to ourselves, but one as to all others. In the
latter case, then, constructions should lean to the general jurisdiction if
the words will bear it, and in favor of the States in the former if possible
to be so construed." --Thomas Jefferson to William Johnson, 1823. ME 15:448
"Among the purposes to which the Constitution permits [Congress] to apply
money, the granting premiums or bounties is not enumerated, and there has
never been a single instance of their doing it, although there has been a
multiplicity of applications. The Constitution has left these encouragements
to the separate States." --Thomas Jefferson to Dr. Maese, 1809. ME 12:231
"[The Constitution] specifies and delineates the operations permitted to
the federal government and gives all the powers necessary to carry these into
execution. Whatever of these enumerated objects is proper for a law, Congress
may make the law; whatever is proper to be executed by way of a treaty, the
President and Senate may enter into the treaty; whatever is to be done by a
judicial sentence, the judges may pass the sentence." --Thomas Jefferson to
Wilson Nicholas, 1803. ME 10:419
"In giving to the President and Senate a power to make treaties, the
Constitution meant only to authorize them to carry into effect, by way of
treaty, any powers they might constitutionally exercise." --Thomas Jefferson:
The Anas, 1793. ME 1:408
"Surely the President and Senate cannot do by treaty what the whole
government is interdicted from doing in any way." --Thomas Jefferson:
Parliamentary Manual, 1800. ME 2:442
"We conceive the constitutional doctrine to be, that though the President
and Senate have the general power of making treaties, yet wherever they
include in a treaty matters confided by the Constitution to the three branches
of Legislature, an act of legislation will be requisite to confirm these
articles, and that the House of Representatives, as one branch of the
Legislature, are perfectly free to pass the act or to refuse it, governing
themselves by their own judgment whether it is for the good of their
constituents to let the treaty go into effect or not." --Thomas Jefferson to
James Monroe, 1796. ME 9:329
"I was glad... to hear it admitted on all hands, that laws of the United
States, subsequent to a treaty, control its operation, and that the
Legislature is the only power which can control a treaty. Both points are
sound beyond doubt."--Thomas Jefferson to James Madison, 1798. ME 10:41
"According to the rule established by usage and common sense, of construing
one part of the instrument by another, the objects on which the President and
Senate may exclusively act by treaty are much reduced, but the field on which
they may act with the sanction of the Legislature is large enough; and I see
no harm in rendering their sanction necessary, and not much harm in
annihilating the whole treaty-making power, except as to making peace."
--Thomas Jefferson to James Madison, 1796. ME 9:330
Limited vs. Universal Powers
"I say... to the opinion of those who consider the grant of the
treaty-making power as boundless: If it is, then we have no Constitution. If
it has bounds, they can be no others than the definitions of the powers which
that instrument gives." --Thomas Jefferson to Wilson Nicholas, 1803. ME 10:419
"The construction applied... to those parts of the Constitution of the
United States which delegate to Congress a power "to lay and collect taxes,
duties, imports, and excises, to pay the debts, and provide for the common
defence and general welfare of the United States," and "to make all laws which
shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the powers vested by
the Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department
or officer thereof," goes to the destruction of all limits prescribed to [the
General Government's] power by the Constitution... Words meant by the
instrument to be subsidiary only to the execution of limited powers ought not
to be construed as themselves to give unlimited powers, nor a part to be so
taken as to destroy the whole residue of that instrument." --Thomas Jefferson:
Draft Kentucky Resolutions, 1798. ME 17:385
"To lay taxes to provide for the general welfare of the United States, that
is to say, "to lay taxes for the purpose of providing for the general
welfare." For the laying of taxes is the power, and the general welfare
the purpose for which the power is to be exercised. They are not to lay
taxes ad libitum for any purpose they please; but only to pay the
debts or provide for the welfare of the Union." --Thomas Jefferson:
Opinion on National Bank, 1791. ME 3:147
"Aided by a little sophistry on the words "general welfare," [the federal
branch claim] a right to do not only the acts to effect that which are
specifically enumerated and permitted, but whatsoever they shall think or
pretend will be for the general welfare." --Thomas Jefferson to William Branch
Giles, 1825. ME 16:147
"They are not to do anything they please to provide for the general
welfare, but only to lay taxes for that purpose. To consider the latter
phrase not as describing the purpose of the first, but as giving a distinct
and independent power to do any act they please which might be for the good of
the Union, would render all the preceding and subsequent enumerations of power
completely useless. It would reduce the whole instrument to a single phrase,
that of instituting a Congress with power to do whatever would be for the good
of the United States; and, as they would be the sole judges of the good or
evil, it would be also a power to do whatever evil they please... Certainly no
such universal power was meant to be given them. It was intended to lace them
up straitly within the enumerated powers and those without which, as means,
these powers could not be carried into effect." --Thomas Jefferson: Opinion on
National Bank, 1791. ME 3:148
"It is an established rule of construction where a phrase will bear either
of two meanings, to give it that which will allow some meaning to the other
parts of the instrument, and not that which would render all the others
useless." --Thomas Jefferson: Opinion on National Bank, 1791. ME 3:148
"The general rule, in the construction of instruments, [is] to leave no
words merely useless, for which any rational meaning can be found." --Thomas
Jefferson: Opinion on the Tonnage Payable, 1791. ME 3:290
"For authority to apply the surplus [of taxes] to objects of improvement,
an amendment of the Constitution would have been necessary." --Thomas
Jefferson to John W. Eppes, 1813. ME 13:354
"[If] it [were] assumed that the general government has a right to exercise
all powers which may be for the 'general welfare,' that [would include] all
the legitimate powers of government, since no government has a legitimate
right to do what is not for the welfare of the governed." --Thomas Jefferson
to George Washington, 1792. ME 8:397
"Our tenet ever was... that Congress had not unlimited powers to provide
for the general welfare, but were restrained to those specifically enumerated,
and that, as it was never meant that they should provide for that welfare but
by the exercise of the enumerated powers, so it could not have been meant they
should raise money for purposes which the enumeration did not place under
their action; consequently, that the specification of powers is a limitation
of the purposes for which they may raise money." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert
Gallatin, 1817. ME 15:133
"Congress are authorized to defend the nation. Ships are necessary for
defence; copper is necessary for ships; mines necessary for copper; a company
necessary to work mines; and who can doubt this reasoning who has ever played
at 'This is the House that Jack built?' Under such a process of filiation of
necessities the sweeping clause makes clean work." --Thomas Jefferson to
Edward Livingston, 1800. ME 10:165
"If, wherever the Constitution assumes a single power out of many which
belong to the same subject, we should consider it as assuming the whole, it
would vest the General Government with a mass of powers never contemplated. On
the contrary, the assumption of particular powers seems an exclusion of all
not assumed." --Thomas Jefferson to Joseph C. Cabell, 1814. ME 14:83
"I hope our courts will never countenance the sweeping pretensions which
have been set up under the words 'general defence and public welfare.' These
words only express the motives which induced the Convention to give to the
ordinary legislature certain specified powers which they enumerate, and which
they thought might be trusted to the ordinary legislature, and not to give
them the unspecified also; or why any specification? They could not be so
awkward in language as to mean, as we say, 'all and some.' And should this
construction prevail, all limits to the federal government are done away."
--Thomas Jefferson to Spencer Roane, 1815. ME 14:350
"This phrase,... by a mere grammatical quibble, has countenanced the
General Government in a claim of universal power. For in the phrase, 'to lay
taxes, to pay the debts and provide for the general welfare,' it is a mere
question of syntax, whether the two last infinitives are governed by the first
or are distinct and coordinate powers; a question unequivocally decided by the
exact definition of powers immediately following." --Thomas Jefferson to
Albert Gallatin, 1817. ME 15:133
"Although the power to regulate commerce does not give a power to build
piers, wharves, open ports, clear the beds of rivers, dig canals, build
warehouses, build manufacturing machines, set up manufactories, cultivate the
earth, to all of which the power would go if it went to the first, yet a power
to provide and maintain a navy is a power to provide receptacles for it, and
places to cover and preserve it." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin, 1802.
ME 10:337
"While we pursue, then, the construction of the Legislature, that the
repairing and erecting lighthouses, beacons, buoys, and piers, is authorized
as belonging to the regulation of commerce, we must take care not to go ahead
of them and strain the meaning of the terms still further to the clearing out
the channels of all the rivers, etc., of the United States. The removing a
sunken vessel is not the repairing of a pier." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert
Gallatin, 1803. ME 10:379
"I suppose an amendment to the Constitution, by consent of the States,
necessary [for certain objects of public improvement], because the objects now
recommended are not among those enumerated in the Constitution, and to which
it permits the public moneys to be applied." --Thomas Jefferson: 6th Annual
Message, 1806. ME 3:424
"The interests of commerce place the principal object [i.e., a western
exploring expedition] within the constitutional powers and care of Congress,
and that it should incidentally advance the geographical knowledge of our own
continent, can not but be an additional gratification." --Thomas Jefferson:
Confidential Message on Western Exploration, 1803. ME 3:493
Unauthorized Assumptions of Power
"Where powers are assumed which have not been delegated, a nullification of
the act is the rightful remedy." --Thomas Jefferson: Draft Kentucky
Resolutions, 1798. ME 17:386
"[The States] alone being parties to the [Federal] compact... [are] solely
authorized to judge in the last resort of the powers exercised under it,
Congress being not a party but merely the creation of the compact and subject
as to its assumptions of power to the final judgment of those by whom and for
whose use itself and its powers were all created and modified." --Thomas
Jefferson: Draft Kentucky Resolutions, 1798. ME 17:387
"The government created by this compact was not made the exclusive or final
judge of the extent of the powers delegated to itself, since that would have
made its discretion and not the Constitution the measure of its powers; but...
as in all other cases of compact among powers having no common judge, each
party has an equal right to judge for itself, as well of infractions as of the
mode and measure of redress." --Thomas Jefferson: Draft Kentucky Resolutions,
1798. ME 17:380
"I think it important... to set an example against broad construction by
appealing for new power to the people. If, however, our friends shall think
differently, certainly I shall acquiesce with satisfaction, [confident] that
the good sense of our country will correct the evil of construction whenever
it shall produce ill effects." --Thomas Jefferson to Wilson Nicholas, 1803. ME
10:420
"It is a happy circumstance in human affairs that evils which are not cured
in one way will cure themselves in some other." --Thomas Jefferson to John
Sinclair, 1791. ME 8:231
"As to [the giving to Congress the power of internal improvement on
condition that each State's federal proportion of the moneys so expended shall
be employed within the State], there is probably not a State in the Union
which would not grant the power on the condition proposed, or which would
grant it without that." --Thomas Jefferson to Robert J. Garnett, 1824. ME
16:15
"An express grant of the power [for internal improvements]... would render
its exercise smooth and acceptable to all and insure to it all the facilities
which the States could contribute to prevent that kind of abuse which all will
fear, because all know it is so much practiced in public bodies: I mean the
bartering of votes. It would reconcile everyone, if limited by the proviso
that the federal proportion of each State should be expended within the State.
With this single security against partiality and corrupt bargaining, I suppose
there is not a State, perhaps not a man in the Union, who would not consent to
add this to the powers of the General Government." --Thomas Jefferson to
Edward Livingston, 1824. ME 16:25
"One precedent in favor of power is stronger than an hundred against it."
--Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia Q.XIII, 1782. ME 2:172
"The utility of the thing [shall sanction] the infraction [of the
Constitution]. But if on that infraction we build a second, and on that second
a third, etc., any one of the powers in the Constitution may be made to
comprehend every power of government." --Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin,
1802. ME 10:338
"On every unauthoritative exercise of power by the legislature must the
people rise in rebellion or their silence be construed into a surrender of
that power to them? If so, how many rebellions should we have had already?"
--Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia Q.XIII, 1782. ME 2:171
"The Constitution of the United States is a compact of independent nations
subject to the rules acknowledged in similar cases, as well that of amendment
provided within itself, as, in case of abuse, the justly dreaded but
unavoidable ultimo ratio gentium [the final argument of nations, i.e.,
war]." --Thomas Jefferson to Edward Everett, 1826. ME 16:163
"[The Louisiana Purchase was] laid before both Houses [of Congress],
because both [had] important functions to exercise respecting it. They...
[saw] their duty to their country in ratifying and paying for it so as to
secure a good which would otherwise probably be never again in their power.
The Constitution has made no provision for our holding foreign territory,
still less for incorporating foreign nations into our Union. The Executive, in
seizing the fugitive occurrence which so much advances the good of their
country, have done an act beyond the Constitution. The Legislature in casting
behind them metaphysical subtleties and risking themselves like faithful
servants, must ratify and pay for it and throw themselves on their country for
doing for them unauthorized what we know they would have done for themselves
had they been in a situation to do it. It is the case of a guardian investing
the money of his ward in purchasing an important adjacent territory and saying
to him when of age, I did this for your good; I pretend to no right to bind
you. You may disavow me, and I must get out of the scrape as I can. I thought
it my duty to risk myself for you. But we [were] not disavowed by the nation,
and their act of indemnity [confirmed] and [did] not weaken the Constitution
by more strongly marking out its lines." --Thomas Jefferson to John
Breckenridge, 1803. (*) ME 10:410
Cross References
To other sections in Thomas
Jefferson on Politics & Government:
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