The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation Part 30
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between the ages of eighteen and forty-five. The act reorganized the National Guard, determined its size in proportion to the population of the several States, required that all enlistments be for "three years in service and three years in reserve," limited the appointment of officers to those who "shall have successfully pa.s.sed such tests as to * * *
physical, moral and professional fitness as the President shall prescribe," and authorized the President in certain emergencies to "draft into the military service of the United States to serve therein for the period of the war unless sooner discharged, any and all members of the National Guard and National Guard Reserve," who thereupon should "stand discharged from the militia."
Clause 17. _Congress shall have power_ * * * To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, a.r.s.enals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings;--And
The Seat of Government
The jurisdiction of the United States over the District of Columbia vested on the first Monday of December, 1800.[1334] By the act of February 27, 1801,[1335] the District was divided into two counties and in the following year the city of Was.h.i.+ngton was erected into a munic.i.p.ality.[1336] The present form of government dates from 1876; all legislative powers with respect to District affairs are retained by Congress, while an executive board of three commissioners vested with ordinance powers is appointed by the President.[1337] As a munic.i.p.al corporation, the District has the legal capacity to sue and be sued.[1338] But the District Commissioners are merely administrative officers, having only the ministerial powers given them by statute; accordingly they were found to have no power to submit a claim against the District to arbitration.[1339]
NATURE AND EXTENT OF RIGHTS CEDED TO UNITED STATES
In ceding the territory which became the District of Columbia, both Maryland and Virginia provided that the United States should not acquire any right of property in the soil except by transfer by the individual owner. This proviso was held not to prevent the Federal Government from exercising the power of eminent domain within the District.[1340] Under the agreement made between the original proprietors of the land on which the city of Was.h.i.+ngton was laid out, and the Commissioners appointed by the President to survey, define and locate the district for the seat of government, the United States became the owner in fee of the streets of the city although the trustees never carried out their agreement to convey them.[1341] Both the right of dominion and of property of navigable waters and of the soil under them in the District, which originally had been granted by Charles I, King of England to the Lord Proprietary of Maryland, and to which Maryland succeeded upon the American Revolution, became vested in the United States by the cession from Maryland.[1342]
RETROCESSION OF ALEXANDRIA COUNTY
Originally the District of Columbia embraced the maximum area permitted by the Const.i.tution. In 1846, however, Congress authorized a referendum on the question of retroceding Alexandria County to Virginia, and declared that jurisdiction should be relinquished to that State if a majority of the voters in the county voted in favor of the change. The proposal was approved, whereupon, without any further action by Congress, Virginia declared the county annexed and resumed full jurisdiction over it. Thirty years later, in a suit to recover taxes paid to the State, the Supreme Court called the retrocession "a violation of the Const.i.tution" but held that since Congress had recognized the transfer as a settled fact, a resident of the county was estopped from challenging it.[1343]
CONTINUANCE OF STATE LAWS
Under the act of July 16, 1790,[1344] which provided for the establishment of the seat of government, State laws were continued in operation until Congress created a government for the District. The Supreme Court intimated that this was "perhaps, only declaratory of a principle which would have been in full operation without such declaration."[1345] In 1801 Congress declared that the laws of Virginia and Maryland "as they now exist, shall be and continue in force" in the respective portions of the District ceded by those States.[1346] The only effect of the cession upon individuals was to terminate their State citizens.h.i.+p and the jurisdiction of the State governments over them;[1347] contract obligations were not affected,[1348] and liens on property for debt were continued.[1349]
STATUS OF THE DISTRICT TODAY
Chief Justice Marshall ruled in the early case of Hepburn _v._ Ellzey[1350] that the District of Columbia is not a State within the meaning of the diversity of citizens.h.i.+p clause of article III. This view was consistently adhered to for nearly a century and a half in the interpretation of later acts of Congress regulating the jurisdiction of federal courts.[1351] In 1940, however, Congress expressly authorized those courts to take jurisdiction of nonfederal controversies between residents of the District of Columbia and citizens of a State. By a five-to-four decision that statute was held const.i.tutional, but the Justices who voted to sustain it were not in agreement as to the grounds of the decision.[1352] Three found it to be an appropriate exercise of the power of Congress to legislate for the District of Columbia without reference to article III.[1353] Six members of the Court rejected this theory, but two of the six joined in upholding the act on another ground which seven of their brethren considered untenable,--namely, that Hepburn _v._ Ellzey was erroneously decided and that the District of Columbia should be deemed to be a "State" within the meaning of article III, section 2.[1354]
It is not disputed that the District is a part of "the United States,"
and that its residents are ent.i.tled to the privilege of trial by jury, whether in civil or criminal cases,[1355] and of presentment by a grand jury.[1356] Legislation which is restrictive of the rights of liberty and property in the District must find justification in facts adequate to support like legislation by a State in the exercise of its police power.[1357]
LEGISLATIVE POWER OVER DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Congress possesses over the District of Columbia the blended powers of a local and national legislature.[1358] Even when legislating for the District, Congress remains the legislature of the Union, with the result that it may give its enactments nation-wide operations so far as is "necessary and proper" in order to make them locally effective. As was pointed out in Cohens _v._ Virginia,[1359] if a felon escapes from the State in which the crime was committed, the government of such State cannot pursue him into another State and there apprehend him, "but must demand him from the executive power of that other State." On the other hand, a felon escaping from the District of Columbia or any other place subject to the exclusive power of Congress, may be apprehended by the National Government anywhere in the United States. "And the reason,"
declared Chief Justice Marshall, "is, that Congress is not a local legislature, but exercises this particular power, [of exclusive legislation], like all its other powers, in its high character, as the legislature of the Union."[1360]
TAXATION IN THE DISTRICT
Persons and property within the District of Columbia are subject to taxation by Congress under both the first and seventeenth clauses of this section. A general tax levied throughout the United States may be applied to the District of Columbia upon the same conditions as elsewhere;--e.g., if a direct tax, it must be levied in proportion to the census.[1361] But in laying taxes for District purposes only, "Congress, like any State legislature unrestricted by const.i.tutional provisions, may its discretion wholly exempt certain cla.s.ses of property from taxation, or may tax them at a lower rate than other property."[1362] It is no impediment to the exercise of either power that residents of the District lack the suffrage and have politically no voice in the expenditure of the money raised by taxation.[1363]
DELEGATION OF LEGISLATIVE POWER TO MUNIc.i.p.aL OFFICERS
Congress may delegate to munic.i.p.al authorities legislative functions which are strictly local in character.[1364] It may confer upon them the power to improve or repair streets, to a.s.sess adjacent property therefor,[1365] and to regulate public markets.[1366] It may confirm a.s.sessments previously made by the District government without authority of law.[1367] But in Stoutenburgh _v._ Hennick,[1368] the Court held that Congress would not, and did not intend to, delegate to the District the power to impose a license tax on commercial agents who offered merchandise for sale by sample, since such a license amounted to a regulation of interstate commerce.
COURTS OF THE DISTRICT
In its capacity as a local legislature Congress may create courts for the District of Columbia and may confer upon them powers and duties which lie outside the judicial power vested in "const.i.tutional" courts.
On appeal from an order of the District Public Utilities Commission, a court for the District of Columbia may be empowered to modify valuations, rates and regulations established by the Commission and to make such orders as in its judgment the Commission should have made. But inasmuch as the issuance of such orders is a legislative as distinguished from a judicial function, the provision for an appeal from them to the Supreme Court was held unconst.i.tutional.[1369]
Despite the fact that Congress, acting under this clause, imposed nonjudicial duties upon the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, those tribunals were held to be const.i.tutional courts, established under article III, with the result that the compensation of the judges thereof may not be diminished during their continuance in office.[1370] Since the courts established for the District are courts of the United States, their judgments stand upon the same footing, so far as concerns the obligations created by them, as domestic judgments of the States, wherever rendered and wherever sought to be enforced.[1371]
Authority Over Places Purchased
"PLACES"
This clause has been broadly construed to cover all structures necessary for carrying on the business of the National Government.[1372] It includes post offices,[1373] a hospital and a hotel located in a national park,[1374] and locks and dams for the improvement of navigation.[1375] But it does not cover lands acquired for forests, parks, ranges, wild life sanctuaries or flood control.[1376]
Nevertheless the Supreme Court has held that a State may convey, and that Congress may accept, either exclusive or qualified jurisdiction over property acquired within the geographical limits of a State, for purposes other than those enumerated in Clause 17.[1377]
After exclusive jurisdiction over lands within a State has been ceded to the United States, Congress alone has the power to punish crimes committed within the ceded territory.[1378] Private property located thereon is not subject to taxation by the State,[1379] nor can State statutes enacted subsequent to the transfer have any operation therein.[1380] But the local laws in force at the date of cession which are protective of private rights continue in force until abrogated by Congress.[1381]
DURATION OF FEDERAL JURISDICTION
A State may qualify its cession of territory by a condition that jurisdiction shall be retained by the United States only so long as the place is used for specified purposes.[1382] Such a provision operates prospectively and does not except from the grant that portion of a described tract which is then used as a railroad right of way.[1383] In 1892, the Court upheld the jurisdiction of the United States to try a person charged with murder on a military reservation, over the objection that the State had ceded jurisdiction only over such portions of the area as were used for military purposes, and that the particular place on which the murder was committed was used solely for farming. The Court held that the character and purpose of the occupation having been officially established by the political department of the government, it was not open to the Court to inquire into the actual uses to which any portion of the area was temporarily put.[1384] A few years later, however, it ruled that the lease to a city, for use as a market, of a portion of an area which had been ceded to the United States for a particular purpose, suspended the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.[1385]
Recently the question arose whether the United States retains jurisdiction over a place which was ceded to it unconditionally after it has abandoned the use of the property for governmental purposes and entered into a contract for the sale thereof to private persons.
Minnesota a.s.serted the right to tax the equitable interest of the purchaser in such land, and the Supreme Court upheld its right to do so.
The majority a.s.sumed that "the Government's unrestricted transfer of property to nonfederal hands is a relinquishment of the exclusive legislative power."[1386] In separate concurring opinions Chief Justice Stone and Justice Frankfurter reserved judgment on the question of territorial jurisdiction.[1387]
RESERVATION OF JURISDICTION BY STATES
For more than a century the Supreme Court kept alive, by repeated dicta,[1388] the doubt expressed by Justice Story "whether Congress are by the terms of the Const.i.tution, at liberty to purchase lands for forts, dockyards, etc., with the consent of a State legislature, where such consent is so qualified that it will not justify the 'exclusive legislation' of Congress there. It may well be doubted if such consent be not utterly void."[1389] But when the issue was squarely presented in 1937, the Court ruled that where the United States purchases property within a State with the consent of the latter, it is valid for the State to convey, and for the United States to accept, "concurrent jurisdiction" over such land, the State reserving to itself the right to execute process "and such other jurisdiction and authority over the same as is not inconsistent with the jurisdiction ceded to the United States."[1390] The holding logically renders the second half of Clause 17 superfluous. In a companion case, the Court ruled further that even if a general State statute purports to cede exclusive jurisdiction, such jurisdiction does not pa.s.s unless the United States accepts it.[1391]
Clause 18. _The Congress shall have Power_ * * * To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Const.i.tution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.
The Coefficient or Elastic Clause
SCOPE OF INCIDENTAL POWERS
That this clause is an enlargement, not a constriction, of the powers expressly granted to Congress, that it enables the lawmakers to select any means reasonably adapted to effectuate those powers, was established by Marshall's cla.s.sic opinion in McCulloch _v._ Maryland.[1392] "Let the end be legitimate," he wrote, "let it be within the scope of the Const.i.tution, and all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to that end, which are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the Const.i.tution, are const.i.tutional."[1393]
Moreover, this provision gives Congress a share in the responsibilities lodged in other departments, by virtue of its right to enact legislation necessary to carry into execution all powers vested in the National Government. Conversely, where necessary for the efficient execution of its own powers, Congress may delegate some measure of legislative power to other departments.[1394]
OPERATION OF COEFFICIENT CLAUSE
Practically every power of the National Government has been expanded in some degree by the coefficient clause. Under its authority Congress has adopted measures requisite to discharge the treaty obligations of the nation;[1395] it has organized the federal judicial system and has enacted a large body of law defining and punis.h.i.+ng crimes. Effective control of the national economy has been made possible by the authority to regulate the internal commerce of a State to the extent necessary to protect and promote interstate commerce.[1396] Likewise the right of Congress to utilize all known and appropriate means for collecting the revenue, including the distraint of property for Federal taxes,[1397]
and its power to acquire property needed for the operation of the government by the exercise of the power of eminent domain,[1398] have greatly extended the range of national power. But the widest application of the necessary and proper clause has occurred in the field of monetary and fiscal controls. Inasmuch as the various specific powers granted by article I, section 8, do not add up to a general legislative power over such matters, the Court has relied heavily upon this clause in sustaining the comprehensive control which Congress has a.s.serted over this subject.[1399]
The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation Part 30
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