Nullification, Secession Webster's Argument and the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions Part 2
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Nor is it extravagant to say caprice. South Carolina's nullification and secession acts and resolves in 1832 were on the ground of the unconst.i.tutionality of a protective tariff. There had been a great number of protective tariffs enacted before, which South Carolina had favored by her votes, and the second law of the United States, enacted at the commencement of the government, at the first session of the first Congress, was for the protection and encouragement of manufactures. Its preamble is: "Whereas, it is necessary for the support of government, for the discharge of the debts of the United States, and the encouragement and protection of manufactures, that duties be laid on goods, wares, and merchandise imported." Madison,[10] who was the leader of the House of Representatives in this first Congress, wrote that no one questioned the right of making protective duties. Billions of dollars have been levied by the collection of protective duties from the beginning of the government to the present day. No litigant paying duties even as excessive as those on pearl b.u.t.tons and tin plates, nor lawyer, a cla.s.s not diffident in advancing untenable claims, has been found, as far as we know, to question before the Supreme Court the legality of these duties, because they were protective or paid this slight reverence to a doctrine in support of which South Carolina threatened war and secession.
[10] See 4 Elliot's _Debates_, pp. 345 and 349, showing at the inception and in the early period of our government protective duties were apparently universally approved by Congress and the Presidents.
It seems only necessary to state the viciousness of this doctrine of nullification and secession, that every State could practically put its veto on every law and act of the General Government it questioned, and dissolve it at its pleasure, to prove that no such impracticable government was established. Certainly, reasoning _a priori_, this doctrine has no standing.
Our General Government differs from that of Great Britain and nearly all other governments in that it is created by a written Const.i.tution, and its authority is limited by that Const.i.tution. The power of Parliament is imperial; there is no limit to it; it does what it deems best. There apparently is an almost insurmountable difficulty in the writers of other countries, only knowing unlimited, imperial supreme governments, to comprehend that a government of limited powers can be supreme in the powers granted to it. Knowing that the powers of our General Government are limited, they are apt to draw the conclusion that the fundamental unlimited power must be in the subordinate component parts, the States.
Our States, as well as the General Government, have limited powers granted by written const.i.tutions. The State governments are not only limited in their powers, but the people, who established them in their const.i.tutions, have invariably recognized the supreme power of the General Government; in none of them have they undertaken to confer on the State Legislatures or government powers in conflict with the sovereign national powers of the General Government. The powers given to the State governments are subordinate and local. All the const.i.tutions, State and General, have had the sanction and an adoption by the people.
The argument of Hayne, Calhoun, and his followers, and of all Southern writers--that the United States Const.i.tution is a compact or agreement amongst the several States as independent sovereign nations, and that in every compact between nations, a contracting power, where there is a disagreement, as there is no superior authority over them, has the right to maintain the correctness of its construction--ignores the case where the compact may be one for the making of the several contracting powers one nation.
Compact means an agreement, nothing more or less, whether applied to states or individuals. It cannot be denied that independent sovereign nations can _by compact or agreement_ make themselves into a perpetual, indissoluble nation. The voluntary combination of independent sovereign powers, or nations, or states into one national union _must be by compact_.
The question therefore resolves itself into this, What was the agreement or compact made between the people of the States? Was it for a nation with supreme powers over the subdivisions of States in its territory and all living therein, as far as power was given to it, and for perpetuity, or was it for a confederacy or league for certain purposes, limited by the right of each of the parties to it, to judge whether the government exceeded its authority, and at its pleasure to dissolve it?
In other words, the fundamental question is, Was an indissoluble national power made or a confederacy or league declared by the adopting of the Const.i.tution?
Webster perhaps unfortunately used the word compact in his argument when he said the Const.i.tution was not a compact, meaning it was not a mere agreement amongst the States, a league, or confederacy, but that it was the fundamental declaration of a nation.
Madison agreed with Webster as to secession and nullification and the powers of the General Government, and of its judiciary to define and pa.s.s on them, but he held "that the government with its powers was established by a compact which each of the States had entered into, the authority for it being derived from the same source as that of the State governments--the people."[11] Webster himself, in his speech in answer to Calhoun, recognizes that compact may mean an agreement for a nation.
Speaking of the Const.i.tution, he says: "Founded in or on the consent of the people, it may be said to rest on compact or consent, but it is itself not the compact, but the result."[12] It is necessary to constantly bear in mind that the word compact, used in reference to the Const.i.tution, is consistent with its nationality.
[11] See also, to same effect, _North American Review_, Oct., 1830, p.
537. Madison's letter to Edward Everett.
[12] Webster's _Speeches_, vol. ii., ed. 1850, p. 177.
The prominent writers who maintain the right of nullification and secession, Calhoun, Davis, Stephens, and Bledsoe in his work, _Is Davis a Traitor?_ all a.s.sert to an excessive length that any person or any State that uses the word compact in reference to the Const.i.tution admits their theory of government, which is, that the Union between the States was a mere dissoluble agreement, in which the States retained their sovereignty and right of judgment over the acts done by the United States. They mention the State of Ma.s.sachusetts, Was.h.i.+ngton's, Madison's, and even Webster's subsequent use of that word as evidence of their a.s.sent to this doctrine. The fault in their reasoning is what logicians call the undistributed middle; they a.s.sume that the persons or States using the word compact are speaking of the sort of compact they maintain the Union to be--a league or mere dissoluble agreement, when in fact they may be, and are, speaking of another sort of compact, a compact for a national government.
We propose to show that by the adoption of the Const.i.tution the people of the States formed themselves into a nation.
First: The Const.i.tution declares its perpetuity, and the powers given by it to the government established are those of an indissoluble nation with supreme authority over every one, not of a confederacy of nations.
Second: The members of the convention that made the Const.i.tution intended to make a national government; and that they considered that they had done so is conclusively shown by the contemporary reports of their debates and proceedings. The members of the conventions of the people of the several States that adopted the Const.i.tution without exception also considered and spoke of the government as national.
Third: That the government exercised its supreme national power repeatedly and uniformly over the States and over all the citizens of every State, from the time of its inception to the civil war.
Historically we were a nation.
Fourth: That the general belief that the Virginia resolutions questioned this supremacy and nationality is wholly unfounded.
There is no question of the universal opinion after the termination of the war of the Revolution that the provisions under which the States were a.s.sociated, made on the 15th of November, 1777, had failed essentially in giving to the Confederate Congress government the necessary powers to carry it on.[13] The Confederacy was made by delegates from the Legislatures of the State governments of the different States; the powers of the Confederacy were given to a Congress which consisted of one body or House, and in that Congress each State had one vote, that of Delaware, with a diminutive territory and about one sixteenth of the population, equalling that of Virginia. The Const.i.tution which contains and defines the powers given to the United States Government was made by delegates appointed by the different State Legislatures of the Confederacy, all being represented except Rhode Island. Its members were the most prominent and distinguished men of the country. After the most careful, thorough, and patient examination and discussion, extending through four months, they formed the instrument giving the powers of the new government. They sent it to the existing Congress of the Confederacy, with the request that it might be submitted to a convention of delegates chosen in each State by the people thereof, under the recommendation of its Legislature, for their consideration and a.s.sent if approved of.
[13] The condition of affairs then is well stated in Fiske's _Critical Period of American History_.
The Continental Congress unanimously forwarded the proposed Const.i.tution to the Legislatures of the several States, who each submitted it to a convention of the people called for the purpose of deciding whether they would adopt it.
By necessity the submission was to the people of the States separately.
The acceptation or rejection rested on them, the people; they appointing delegates to carefully consider the matter and to decide for them. Thus the adoption of the Const.i.tution was not only sanctioned by the Congress of the Confederacy, by the separate State governments, but finally by the people themselves of every State acting by virtue of their fundamental, sovereign power, they appointing the delegates who met in convention, and who in each State decided for the people, whether they would or would not enter into this new form of government. A sanction more binding on every one could not have been made.
Mr. Webster's argument that our government is that of a nation and not a confederacy, was in a great measure founded on the Const.i.tution itself.
There are other declarations and powers in the Const.i.tution, besides those he so forcibly presented, which should not be overlooked. The Const.i.tution is a very brief, and, as time has shown, a very perfect instrument. It gives to a general government it establishes, all the powers necessary for the existence and maintenance of a nation.
Its first declaration is, _We, the People_ of the United States, do ordain and establish this Const.i.tution. This is in emphatic contrast to the preamble and articles of the Confederacy. The preamble of the Confederacy is, Articles of confederation and perpetual union between the "States of New Hamps.h.i.+re, Ma.s.sachusetts Bay," etc. Article I. is, "The style of this Confederacy shall be 'The United States of America.'"
Article III., "The said States hereby severally enter into a firm league of friends.h.i.+p with each other for their common defence, the security of their liberties, and their mutual and general welfare."
Not only did the people actually make this great charter, in which they gave to the government they established over them the powers it has, but they declared in the very beginning that it was "we, the people," and not their State governments, that made it, and they also declared its perpetuity. It is "We, the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and _our posterity_, do ordain and establish this Const.i.tution for the United States of America." Here is the express declaration that it is for perpetuity, not for the people making it, but for those succeeding them, for their posterity, for all time.
When, after the civil war, the question of the legality of secession came before the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of the State of Texas against White,[14] Chief-Justice Chase, apparently overlooking this explicit statement, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: "That by the articles of the Confederacy, the union of the States was solemnly declared to be perpetual, and when these articles were found to be inadequate to the exigency of the country, the Const.i.tution was ordained to form a more perfect union," and asks, "what can be more indissoluble if a perpetual union made more perfect is not?"
[14] 7 Wallace _Reports_, p. 700.
Neither the Chief Justice nor those distinguished jurists, Justice Swayne[15] and Justice Bradley,[16] controverted the right of secession when the case came before them, in the manner that Chief-Justice Marshall treated const.i.tutional questions. They, however, declared in the most emphatic terms that there could be no secession, that the Union was an indissoluble one of indestructible States by the very provisions of the Const.i.tution itself.
[15] In case of White _vs._ Hart, 13 Wallace, 646.
[16] Keith _vs._ Clark, 97 _United States Reports_, 476.
If we examine the provisions of the Const.i.tution, we find in the first clause is declared the perpetuity of the Union; in the last clause, excepting that setting forth it shall be established on the ratification by nine States, is stated in language that cannot be mistaken, its supremacy over States and State const.i.tutions.
It is by its very terms, we, the people, do ordain and establish this Const.i.tution, that is the great charter giving powers to our new government, and it is, therefore, we, the people of every State, who declare that this Const.i.tution, this government, and the laws and treaties made under it "shall be the supreme law of the land and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, anything in the const.i.tution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding."
There is no qualification that if we do not deem them legal we can treat them as null and void.
In order to secure and maintain that supremacy the people who made it require that the United States Senators and Representatives, "and _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 Const.i.tution"; stamping, as on its coins, its authority over States and every State officer.
Now when the people of each and every State did "ordain and establish" a new form of government which was to be supreme over the const.i.tution, that is the government of their particular State, and imposed upon every legislative, executive, and judicial officer of their own State an oath to support that government, where is the right of a State to question?
Over what is the United States supreme if not over States? Why should an oath have been required to support that supremacy over State governments unless to make that supremacy certain, and resistance to or question of it criminal?
Those who made and established the government knew of the oath that is required by State governments of their officers to support their const.i.tutions, and they would not have required this additional oath if the two oaths could have conflicted, or if there could have been any doubt that the obligations required by a State government were to be subordinated to the supreme powers and laws of the general government.
Then to prevent the government from being encroached upon by the States the judicial power was given to the United States over all cases arising under this Const.i.tution, the laws of the United States, its treaties, and cases affecting amba.s.sadors, etc. So, as Webster declared, no State law or judicial decision of a State could interfere. By this clause the United States courts had the right, which they have uniformly and very often exercised, from the beginning of our government until this day, of taking from the jurisdiction of the State courts all and every case in which the construction of a United States law came in question or where the legality of the act of any United States official was concerned.
We have seen that the supremacy of the United States over all States and State laws and the right to maintain that supremacy through its own courts and by its own officers was fully established by the Const.i.tution. If we examine further the powers granted to the general government by this Const.i.tution, we find all that can be called sovereign: those of intercourse with foreign nations, of war and peace, of raising and keeping an army and navy, of the currency, of commerce external and internal, of establis.h.i.+ng post-offices and post-roads, and fixing the standard of weights and measures, the exclusive right of making citizens by naturalization, the regulating and command of the militia when in its service, and issuing of copyrights and patents, the making of all laws necessary and proper for carrying into execution the granted powers and all other powers vested by the Const.i.tution in the government of the United States or in any department or office thereof, with prohibitions to the States from entering into any treaty, alliance, or confederation with another State or foreign power, making agreements or _compacts_ with other States, keeping an army or war vessels in the time of peace, or making laws impairing the obligation of a contract, and _ex post facto_ law, coining money, emitting bills of credit--that is making a paper currency (the issuing of paper had been carried to an excess by the States and the Continental Congress during the Revolution), and laying imposts or duties on imports or exports.[17]
There is no sovereignty remaining to a State that has granted all these powers to the government over it, and is so restricted in its acts, and cannot even make an agreement or a compact with a sister State. Indeed, Calhoun, in his argument, seemed hard pushed to specify any sovereign powers left to the States, when he mentioned that the States had the power to appoint the officers of the militia and that Pennsylvania had undertaken to punish treason.
[17] See Const.i.tution of United States, Article I., Sections 8, 9, and 10, for statement of granted powers and restrictions on States.
Though the United States alone have those supreme powers, which by political writers are generally called sovereign, the word sovereign has been also used by American writers and politicians in reference to the powers of a State. The people of every State have supreme powers over their own local affairs, their own territory and citizens where the power has not been given to the United States; they can enact laws making the penalty of stealing a pocket-handkerchief or smoking on the street punishable with death and carry them into effect. If they were, however, to make such laws to take effect for past acts, the United States would interfere, because no State can make an _ex post facto_ law. So, in our separate States, a town or a county can run a road through anybody's land and the State cannot interfere; because the people of the State have given that authority to the town or county. A Board of Health in many States can stop one's factory, destroy his business, or close his house, by reason of its being deleterious to the general health, and there is no appeal. In these matters the town or county or Board of Health have supreme powers in their jurisdiction; but however supreme or however arbitrary they may be in their jurisdiction, they cannot extend them beyond--these supreme local powers are not sovereign powers.
It is a large, local, internal government that each State has over its territory, and the property and the acts of its citizens in that territory. The General Government in our extensive domain, having in addition to the powers it now has those of the States, would from the overwhelming ma.s.s of its duties be a failure.
Indeed, we find that from necessity Great Britain is on the path of giving to her three kingdoms greater powers of local government. If one examines the bill for home rule for Ireland, proposed in 1886 by the Gladstone administration, he will find that the powers it proposed to give to Ireland are far beyond those our separate States have. Ireland, besides the right of taxing, was empowered to levy duties of customs and excise--that is, the right of protecting her own manufactures to the injury of England's. Ireland was to pay over specified contributions to the British Government, some millions of pounds annually, for her proportion of the interest on the national debt, and of the cost of the support of the army and navy, and other expenses. If there were a failure in these contributions the General Government would have been obliged to use coercion--a civil war--a policy considered fatally objectionable in the convention that made our Const.i.tution. Ireland also was to lose her representation in the Imperial Parliament.
As far as secession is concerned, the most important provision in the Const.i.tution is Section 3, of Article III., concerning treason. There is no such thing as treason except where allegiance is due. The citizen of an independent sovereign State owes his allegiance to it, and not to a confederacy or a league the State has joined. There can be no treason except against a government proper. The establis.h.i.+ng by the Const.i.tution of the punishment of treason, implies the nationality of the Union, and that every inhabitant of its domain is a citizen. In the articles of the old Confederacy there was no punishment of treason; on the contrary, each State agreed in those articles to deliver up to its sister States any one that it might claim had committed treason.
The first part of the two clauses of Section 3 are "Treason against the United States shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort," and "The Congress shall have the power to declare the punishment of treason."
The peculiarity of the introduction of this first clause is to be noticed: it is taken for granted that there is treason against the United States, and that it is expedient to limit it. The founders of our new government did not intend to have rash speech, or plots, or mere resistance to its authority punishable as the high crime of treason.
They knew from the experience of their mother country the danger to personal liberty from constructive treason; so they limited the power to punish that offence, and gave it only in case of levying of war, or aiding and adhering to enemies.
Nullification, Secession Webster's Argument and the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions Part 2
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