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CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS THEIR NATURE, POWERS, AND LIMITATIONS

HetscCONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

THEIR NATURE, POWERS, AND LIMITATIONS

BY

ROGER SHERMAN HOAR, A.B., LL.B.

FORMER STATE SENATOR AND ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL

MEMBER OF THE COMMISSION TO COMPILE INFORMATION AND DATA

FOR THE USE OF THE MASSACHUSETTS CONVENTION

OF 1917

" A frequent recurrence to fundamental principles is absolutely necessary, to preserve the blessings of liberty."

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LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 1917

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Copyright, 1917, By Little, Brown, and Company.

AU rights reserved. Published, June, 1917

IPrdttero 8. J. Fakkhill & Co., Boston, U.S.A.

TO ELVA STUART HOAR

PREFACE

The Impendency of constitutional conventions in Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska and New Hampshire, has stirred up a vast amount of legal and lay discussion as to the nature and powers of such bodies. The Illinois, Nebraska and New Hampshire conventions are expressly authorized by the constitutions of those States. But the Indiana and Massachu- setts conventions, not being so authorized, are generally re- garded as being revolutionary, and are considered by many to be wholly unconstitutional and void.

Where can one turn for authoritative information on these questions? The only treatise exclusively on Constitutional Con- ventions is the one by Judge Jameson, published in 1867, and to some extent revised in 1887. Even in its day, this book was rendered less valuable by the fact that it was written to support a preconceived theory, in the interests of which theory Judge Jameson freely distorted both law and facts."^ To-day this book is obsolete (most of the judicial decisions on the subject being since 1887), and is out of print.

The fact that there is no modern or even ancient accessible work on the nature and powers of constitutional conventions, has led me to attempt to fill the gap with the present book, which represents no preconceived theory, but rather merely an im- partial collection of all the available law and precedent.

^ "Judge Jameson's work constructed a theory regarding constitutional con- ventions, which conformed more or less closely to the facts, but in which the facts were subordinated to the theory." Dodd, p. vi. But Jameson, speaking from the grave as it were, in reply to Dodd and the present author, says: "which, in substance, is an intimation that this work is what the Germans call a tendenz work, written to maintain a particular thesis, the subordination of the Constitutional Convention to the law of the land. . . . what work upon history or constitutional law was ever written which was not a tendenz work in the same sense; that is, written from some special point of view to establish truths, of which the author is strongly convinced, and to refute errors deemed danger- ous, and, if not combatted, likely to prevail?" Jameson, pp. 656-657.

Vm PREFACE

The best modern treatment of the subject is contained in Dodd's "Revision and Amendment of State Constitutions" (1910), which however is written more from an historical than from a legal point of view, and which deals chiefly with meth- ods of constitutional amendment, other than the convention method. I am greatly indebted to this work. Jameson's book also has been constantly before me, and much that is still valu- able therein has been used.

But, in the main, I have consulted original sources themselves, rather than any author's interpretation of them. For the texts of the various constitutions themselves, I have used Thorp's compilation which was published by Congress in 1909.

My two colleagues on the Commission to Compile Material for the Massachusetts Convention of 1917, namely. Professor William B. Munro^ of Harvard University and Lawrence B. Evans, Esq. ,2 of the Boston Bar, also Honorable Robert Luce^ and my wife, have very kindly read my manuscript and have aided me with many valuable suggestions.

Roger Sherman Hoar. May 1, 1917.

^ Head of the department of government at Harvard; author of several well known works on Canadian and Municipal Government.

2 Author of " Leading Cases on American Constitutional Law," and other legal and historical works.

2 Creator of the Massachusetts direct primary system. Former Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

FAGB

List of Cases Cited xiii

References xvii

CHAPTER I

The Origin of Conventions [1

The four sources of the American theory of constitutions; the first American constitutions; the birth of the convention idea (Massa- chusetts, New Hampshire, and Federal); provisions for amendment in early constitutions; the development of the three methods now in use.

CHAPTER II

Fundamental Principles 11

Popular sovereignty; representative government; delegated powers; the right to change government; three methods of exercising this right; the electorate as a representative body; factional conventions; ingenious theories as to who are the people; classes of constitutional cases; a " state of nature. "

CHAPTER III Analysis of Questions 30

The meaning of "constitutional"; other definitions; the three classes of conventions; authorized conventions; popular conventions; spontaneous conventions; the nature of conventions; the relative powers of departments of government; a forecast of this book.

CHAPTER IV

Popular Conventions are Legal 38

The status of conventions, when not mentioned in the Constitution; instances in which they have been held; the Rhode Island doctrine; Attwill's theory; the Massachusetts theory; conventions valid even though expressly prohibited; perhaps popular in nature even when expressly authorized; the extraconstitutional nature of conventions.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER V

PAGE

Who Calls the Convention? 58

Who enacts the convention act; under the Initiative; when authorized by the constitution; when the legislature calls an unauthorized con- vention; when the legislature submits the question to the people; even when the people merely elect the delegates; legislative stat- ute; the need of legislative assistance; the desirabiUty of dispensing with it.

CHAPTER VI

Legislatures as Conventions 79

In Indiana they cannot so act; in North Dakota they can; comparison of the two views.

CHAPTER Vn Executive Intervention 89

The convention a fourth branch of the government; interference by State executive veto in constitutional cases; in extraconstitutional cases; by Federal executive; intervention to suppress; intervention to assist; executive recognition; interference with pending conven- tion.

CHAPTER VIII

The Convention Act not Amendable 97

Questions involved; the validity of the legislation; who enacted the convention act; if the legislature enacted, they can amend it; if the people enacted, the legislature cannot amend it; but legislatures have done so on occasions.

CHAPTER IX

Legislative Control 105

Five methods of control; depends on who passed the act; cross-refer- ences on powers of the convention; probably no right to restrict; instances of successful restriction; instances of unsuccessful restric- tion; the doctrine of reasonable restrictions; abolition of the con- vention; indirect interference; recognition and non-recognition.

CHAPTER X Popular Control 120

Depends on who passed the act; the peo])le can control; the people can amend, if they passed the act; if the legislature jjassed the act; in cases of doubt; aboUtion of the convention; instructions to delegates.

TABLE OF CONTENTS XI

CHAPTER XI

PAGE

EXTRAORDINAEY PoWERS CLAIMED 128

Convention sovereignty; certain conventions not precedents; inter- ference with the executive; power to legislate; legislation under the guise of constitutional amendment; submission of legislation to the people; incidental legislative powers; powers granted by United States Constitution to legislatures; complete usurpation of powers.

CHAPTER XII

Judicial Intervention 149

In proceedings under constitution; in extraconstitutional proceedings; when still pending; when completed; internal convention affairs; a political rather than judicial question; interference with usurped powers; judicial assistance; judicial advice.

CHAPTER XIII

Does the Constitution Apply? 165

Cannot prevent the convention; constitutional provisions directory; mandatory if adopted by the people; constitution not applicable even to constitutional proceedings; Federal, Constitution applicable.

CHAPTER XIV

Internal Procedure 170

Judge of own elections; filling vacancies; expulsion of members; hall; officers; rules; committees; supplies; records; printing; mainte- nance of order; bincUng the State's credit; reconvening to codify the amended constitution.

CHAPTER XV

Status op Delegates 185

Are they public officers? precedents on oaths; anomaly of oath of inem- bers; of assisting officers; privileges and immunities of individual delegates.

CHAPTER XVI

Submission of Amendments 193

History; necessity when required by constitution; when required by act; when not required; can legislature change time? can convention change time? separate submission; enlarged or reduced electorate; methods of submission.

Xll TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER XVII

PAGE

The Doctrine op Acquiescence 214

Lapse of time; government acquiescence; popular acquiescence; in constitutional cases; in extraconstitutional cases; does not validate the means.

CHAPTER XVIII

Conclusions 220

History; fundamentals; legality and source of conventions; amending the convention act; executive intervention; control of the conven- tion; convention sovereignty; judicial intervention; the constitu- tion; conduct of the convention; consent of the governed.

INDEX 232

LIST OF CASES CITED

A.

PAGE

Armstrongy.'Berkey, 23 0kla. 176 149

Atty. Gen. v. Tillinghast, 203 Mass. 539 187

B.

Birmingham Ry., Ex parte, 145 Ala. 514 122, 129, 141, 145

Bott V. Secy, of State, 62 N. J. L. 107 206, 218

Bradford v. Shine, 13 Fla. 393 52, 131, 144

Bragg V. Tuffts, 49 Ark. 554 142

Brittle v. People, 2 Neb. 198 79, 158, 215

C.

Carton v. Secy, of State, 151 Mich. 337 . 63, 90, 92, 107, 112, 134, 163, 198

Chicago V. Reeves, 220 111. 274 83

Collier v. Frierson, 24 Ala. 100 40, 150, 151

Commonwealth v. Griest, 196 Pa. 396 81

Commonwealth v. Kimball, 24 Pick. 359 25

Cranmer v. Thorson, 9 S. D. 149 153

Cummings v. Missouri, 4 Wall. 277 207

D.

Denny, Re, 156 Ind. 104 150

Duncan, fie, 139 U. S. 449 25

Durfee v. Harper, 22 Mont. 354 149^

E. ElUngham v. Dye, 178 Ind. 336 . . 14, 42, 48, 64, 68, 74, 80-85, 87, 129

F.

Foley V. Dem. Com., 70 So. 104 162, 218

Franz v. Autry, 18 Okla. 561 142, 152, 153

xiv LIST OF CASES CITED

G.

PAGE

Gibbes v. Raiboad, 13 S. C. 228 141, 145

Goodrich v. Moore, 2 Minn. 61 23, 179

Green v. Shumway, 39 N. Y. 418 205

Grigsby v. Peak, 57 Tex. 142 146

H.

Hatch V. Stoneman, 66 Cal. 632 150

Holmberg v. Jones, 7 Ida. 752 149

K.

Kamper v. Hawkins, 3 Va. 20 3, 27, 28, 39, 56

Knight V. Shelton, 134 Fed. 423 161

Koehler v. Hill, 60 la. 543 149, 157, 158, 215

L.

La. Ry. v. Madere, 124 La. 635 122, 124, 190

Linde v. Robinson, 160 N. W. 512 215

Livermore v. Waite, 102 Cal. 113 83, 84, 150

Loomis V. Jackson, 0 W. Va. 613 69, 158, 215

Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1 94, 101, 157, 158, 162, 215

M.

McBee v. Brady, 15 Ida. 761 149

McConaughty v. Secy, of State, 106 Minn. 392 149

McCready v. Hunt, 2 Hill Law 1 . 12, 63, 72, 121, 124, 135, 136, 137, 160

McCulloch V. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316 39

McMullen v. Hodge, 5 Tex. 34 133

Miller v. Johnson, 92 Ky. 589 112, 156, 183, 195, 215

N. Nesbit V. People, 19 Col. 441 214

O.

Opinion of Mass. Justices, 1917 50, 66, 99, 164, 167

Opinion of N. Y. Justices, unreported 56,99,116,164

Opinion of Justices, 3 Pick. 517 172

Opinion of Justices, 6 Cush. 573 . 44, 45, 46, 64, 123, 164, 198, 199, 217 Opinion of Justices, 115 Mass. 602 209

LIST OF CASES CITED XV

PAQB

Opinion of Justices, 136 Mass. 578 209

Opinion of Justices, 160 Mass. 586 64

Opinion of Justices, 76 N. H. 586 33, 164

Opinion of Justices, 76 N. H. 612 138, 164, 197

Opinion of Justices, 14 R. I. 649 . . . 15, 33, 43, 46, 47, 49, 56, 57, 198

P.

Pac. States Tel. Co. v. Oregon, 223 U. S. 118 119, 162, 169

Paving Co. v. Hilton, 69 Cal. 479 149

Paving Co. v. Tompkins, 72 Cal. 5 149

People V. Curry, 130 Cal. 82 149

People V. Loomis, 135 Mich. 556 149

People V. Militzer, 272 111. 387 210

People V. Strother, 67 Cal. 624 149

Plowman v. Thornton, 52 Ala. 559 141

Q.

Quinlan v. Houston Ry. Co., 89 Tex. 356 144, 145, 146

R.

Reliance v. Prison Com., 161 Ky. 135 12

Richards v. Whisman, 36 S. D. 260 100

Ridley v. Sherbrook, 43 Tenn. 569 94

S.

Schertz v. Bank, 47 111. App. 124 143

Scown V. Czarnecki, 264 111. 305 210

Senate File, Re, 25 Neb. 864 149

Smith V. Good, 34 Fed. 204 161

Sproule V. Fredericks, 69 Miss. 898 90, 134

State V. Am. Sugar Co., 137 La. 407 40, 65, 68, 70, 123, 167

State V. Brookhart, 113 la. 250 149

State V. Brooks, 17 Wyo. 344 150

State V. Capdevielle, 104 La. 561 70, 122

State V. Cox, 3 Eng. 436 82

State V. Dahl, 6 N. D. 81 40, 48, 63, 67, 87, 93, 163

State V. Davis, 20 Nev. 220 149

State V. Favre, 51 La. Ann. 434 73, 167

State V. Neal, 42 Mo. 119 146, 207

State V. Powell, 77 Miss. 543 149

State V. Swift, 69 Ind. 505 149

State V. Tooker, 15 Mont. 8 149

State V. Tufly, 19 Nev. 391 149

xvi LIST OF CASES CITED

T.

PAGE

Taylor v. Beckham, 178 U. S. 548 25

Taylor v. Commonwealth, 101 Va. 829 ... . 104, 112, 156, 199, 215 Thomasson v. Ruggles, 69 Cal. 465 149

W.

Wells V. Bain, 75 Pa. 39 . . 16, 17, 19, 24, 28, 32, 72, 74, 75, 76, 90, 109,

117, 136, 137, 152, 160, 165, 170, 195, 213

Weston V. Ryan, 70 Neb. 211 214

Williams v. Suffolk Ins. Co., 3 Sumner 220 157

Wood's Appeal, 75 Pa. 59 . . 19, 73, 110, 111, 121, 124, 129, 136, 152, 155,

159, 162 Woods V. Woburn, 220 Mass. 416 210

[Y. Young V. Duncan, 218 Mass. 346 , 210

REFERENCES

"Columbia Dig."; "Index-Digest of State Constitutions." Prepared by Columbia University, and published by the New York Con- stitutional Convention Commission, 1915.

Dodd: "The Revision and Amendment of State Constitutions." Wal- ter Fairleigh Dodd. Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore, 1910.

Holcombe: "State Government in the United States." Arthur Norman Holcombe. MacmiUan Co., 1916.

Jameson: "Constitutional Conventions." John Alexander Jameson. Fourth edition. Callaghan & Co., Chicago, 1887.

"N. Y. Revision of Consts."; "Revision of the State Constitution." PubUshed by the New York Constitutional Convention Com- mission, 1915.

Thorpe: " Federal and State Constitutions." Francis Newton Thorpe. 7 vols. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1909.

" Trial of Dorr " ; "Trialof Thomas Wilson Dorr for Treason." George Turner and W. S. Burges. B. F. Moore, Printer, Providence, 1844.

CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

Chapter I THE ORIGIN OF CONVENTIONS

Constitutional conventions, as a means of amending written constitutions, are distinctly an American institution. In fact, written constitutions themselves originated in this country.

The idea of a constitution is Anglo-Saxon. The word is used on both sides of the Atlantic to signify something superior to legislative enactments; in other words, a body of fundamental principles of government which are beyond the control of the Legislature.

A constitution is a social compact, by which the whole people covenants with each citizen, and each citizen with the whole people, that all shall be governed by certain laws for the common good.^ In other words, it is the Anglo-Saxon theory that gov- ernment is in some way based upon a contract between the people and the State.

The American colonies, however, were bound not only by the terms of the unwritten British constitution, but more di- rectly by the charters or other written instruments whereby Great Britain directed their government. These charters, of course, became suspended the moment the colonies declared their independence, as did also the operation on the colonies of even the British constitution itself. As it has sometimes been expressed, the colonies reverted to a state of nature.^

It was inevitable that in their attempts to emerge from this state of nature and organize a new social contract, each colony should make its contract embody the fundamental principles of the British constitution, and that they should promulgate these contracts in wiitten form, like their former charters. Several

* Mass. Const., Preamble. « ggg pp. 26-28, injra.

2 , CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

of the colonies, in fact, re-adopted their charters to serve them as constitutions.^

The political experience and theories of the colonists thus supplied four principles: (1) The employment of definite written instruments, prescribing the nature and form of government;

(2) the idea of a constitution superior to ordinary legislation;

(3) the conception of certain natural rights asserted by such a constitution; and (4) the theory of the social contract. The written constitution, born in America, was the embodiment of these four principles.^

The constitutional convention, as we know it to-day, also developed in America. It is true that governments had in the past been changed by conventions {i.e. comings-together), but these had always been unrepresentative and spontaneous. As Braxton says:

The first and crudest conventions were in no sense representa- tive bodies; but were mere voluntary, irregular, illegitimate as- semblies of individuals, acting on their own motion and on their own behalf, who felt themselves sufficiently powerful to resort to the ultimate right of Revolution, and wrest, by violence, from their sovereigns, such governmental concessions as they desired. The existence of such bodies was neither provided for, nor recognized by, the laws or existing social system. They relied merely on the right of vis major to justify their actions and support their demands. Such was the Convention of the Barons at Runnymede in 1215, that framed, and, in a sense, enacted. Magna Charta, the first faint suggestion in England of a written constitution.'

But in America the representative convention developed. It was a step as far beyond Runnymede as our constitutions were beyond Magna Charta.

The first American constitutions originated in a variety of ways. In order to understand the foundation upon which each rested, it will be necessary to consider: first, the origin of the Revolutionary legislative body in each of the thirteen States; and secondly, the method in which each constitution was en- acted. Only three States went through the form of continuing

• Massachusetts until 1780; Connecticut until 1818; Rhode Island until 1842.

2 Dodd, pp. 2-3.

» A. Caperton Braxton in VII " Va. Law Reg.," 79, 82.

THE ORIGIN OF CONVENTIONS 3

the charter legislature, to wit: Delaware, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.^

Massachusetts is usually incorrectly classified as being among this number, owing to a failure to appreciate that the Provincial Congress of 1774 was not a continuation of the General Court of the preceding June.^

Similarly with Virginia. We learn from a decision of her own Supreme Court that the Revolutionary government was not a continuation of the House of Burgesses.^ The rest of the States held unauthorized elections with Uttle or no pretense at legality.'^

In nearly all of the States, certain more or less voluntary organizations, called committees of safety, shared the govern- ing power.^

The dissolution of the constitutional assemblies, by the govern- ors appointed by the crown, obliged the people to resort to other methods of deliberating for the common good. Hence the first introduction of convention : bodies neither authorized by, or known to the then constitutional government; bodies, on the contrary, which the constitutional officers of the then existing governments considered as illegal, and treated as such. Nevertheless, they met, deliberated, and resolved for the common good. They were the people, assembled by their deputies; not a legal, or constitutional assembly, or part of the government as then organized. . . . They were, in effect, the people themselves, assembled by their dele- gates, to whom the care of the commonwealth was especially, as well as unboundedly confided.^

Regardless of the legality or illegality of the inception of these various governing bodies, they become, by virtue of mili- tary force and of popular acquiescence,^ the de facto govern- ments of their respective States.

Let us now consider the methods in which these de facto governments brought about the establishment of written con- stitutions.^

» Dodd, p. 14; Jameson, pp. 113 and 128-129.

* George Tolman, "Preliminaries of the Concord Fight" (1902), p. 6. 8 Kamver v. Hawkins (1793), 3 Va. 20, 68-74. « Jameson, pp. 113, 114 n. 1, 119, 122, 126, 130, 132-134. ^ Jameson, p. 113.

« Kamper v. Hawkins (1793), 3 Va. 20, 68. ' See Chapter XVII, infra.

^ The following classification is based upon Dodd, pp. 24-25, with some regrouping, however, based upon an analysis of the full accounts.

4 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

In eight instances the legislative body adopted and pro- mulgated the constitution in the same manner in which it would have passed a mere statute, without either advance authority from, or ratification by, the people.^

In five instances the action was taken by a legislative body expressly authorized thereto by popular vote; but the con- stitution was not submitted in any manner to the people.^

In four instances the constitutions were enacted by the legislature under express authority from the people, and copies were distributed some time before enactment, in order to give the people an opportunity to object and suggest changes.^

In one instance, the legislature submitted a constitution to the people ^^dthout previous authority, but it was rejected.^

The legislative bodies above referred to were in some cases legislatures attempting to frame constitutions, and in other cases conventions exercising legislative powers. The distinction is immaterial; they were the only regular legislative bodies of their respective States.

In tlu-ee instances, constitutions were framed by special conventions, separate from the regular legislative bodies, and were submitted to the people.^ These three conventions, together with the conventions which framed and adopted the Federal Constitution, mark the birth of the constitutional convention movement in this country, and accordingly deserve more than passing notice.

In New Hampshire and Massachusetts, during the Revolu- tionary War period, there was developed the convention as we know it to-day; that is, an independent body for the sole pur- pose of framing a constitution, and submitting it to a vote of the people. But it should be remembered that before this development took place, both of these States had established fairly stable governments. New Hampshire by its constitution

1 North Carolina (April, 1776), South Carolina (1776), Georgia (1776), Virginia (1776), New Jersey (1776), and the continuation of the charters in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut.

2 New Hampshire (1776), Delaware (1776), Georgia (1777), New York (1777), and Vermont (1777). Jameson (pp. 128-130) gives Delaware the credit of holding the first regular convention, but see Dodd, p. 15.

» Maryland (1776), Pennsylvania (1776), North Carolina (Dec. 1776), and South Carolina (1778). * Massachusetts (1778). 6 New Hampshire (1778 and 1781-1783) and Massachusetts (1780).

THE ORIGIN OF CONVENTIONS 5

of 1776, and Massachusetts by an amended form of its colony charter. In neither was there urgent need of a new govern- ment; in neither was there an aggressive Tory element. Neither of these States was threatened by military operations at the time. In neither State was there any danger to be apprehended from the creation of an independent convention and the sub- mission of its work to a vote of the people.

The history of the development of the convention method in these two States was as follows.

Massachusetts, unlike Rhode Island, which remained under its colony charter until 1842, was one of the earliest States to adopt an independent form of government. In the spring of 1774, Governor Gage forcibly prorogued the Massachusetts legislature. The people promptly prepared to elect a pro- vincial congress of their own to take its place. To offset this move. Gage called for the election of a new legislature. The people elected practically the same delegates to both the provincial congress and the legislature, whereupon Gage can- celled his call. Nevertheless, the legislature met and adjourned over to merge with the congress. This congress and its successor, which sat for five months in 1775, reenacted the charter in a slightly amended form, which served Massachusetts as a con- stitution until 1780. Under it the Great and General Court {i. e. the legislature) and the Governor's Council were regu- larly elected as formerly, the latter exercising the executive powers.

Soon after the Declaration of Independence, steps were taken in Massachusetts toward framing a new form of govern- ment. In accordance with a recommendation of the previous legislature, the two branches of the legislature of 1777-1778 met together as a convention and submitted a constitution, which, however, was indignantly rejected by the electorate, because they resented the legislature's assumption that it could call a convention without first obtaining an authorization from the people.

In the following year the chastened legislature called upon the voters to state whether they wished a constitution and whether they would authorize the legislature to call a con- vention. The vote on both questions was affirmative, and the legislature accordingly called the convention which drafted

6 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

the present Massachusetts constitution. This constitution was adopted in 1780.^

The experience of New Hampshire was very similar. In response to a recommendation by the Continental Congress, the provincial congress of New Hampshire adopted a tem- porary constitution on January 5, 1776, although in the face of strong protest from many parts of the State. The agita- tion in the western towns became so serious that it was neces- sary for the provincial congress to send a committee to assure that section that the form of government adopted was purely temporary.

Delegates from certain of the towns met in Hanover in June,

1777, and passed resolutions that any permanent plan of govern- ment should be framed by a convention convened solely for that purpose. Subsequent constitutional procedure in New Hampshire followed those suggested lines.

The legislature of 1777 asked that the various representatives be instructed by their towns as to the expediency of holding a convention. Many of the members of the next legislature were so instructed, and accordingly it was voted in February,

1778, that a convention be held in June of that year. The convention, called by virtue of this vote, drafted a constitution; but it was rejected by the people.

This procedure was repeated in calling a second convention, which met in 1781 and submitted a constitution, which also was rejected. The same convention submitted a revised copy in 1782, and a second revision in 1783, which was finally adopted.2

As already said, it was the idea of a separate convention which defeated the constitution framed by the Massachusetts legislature in 1777-1778. As a recent writer has said:

The material factor which defeated the constitution was the widespread belief that the only convention which could stand for all the people and best define its rights and determine its form of government, was a convention consisting of delegates to whom the powers of the people were delegated for the sole purpose of

» George Tolman, " Preliminaries of the Concord Fight " (1902); 1917 Manual of the General Court (Mass.), pp- 86-87; Dodd, pp. 8-10; Froihingham, Const, and Govt, of Mass.; II "Mass. Law Quarterly," 1.

2 Dodd, pp. 3-8.

THE ORIGIN OF CONVENTIONS 7

framing a constitution, and not a body of representatives entrusted at the same time with other duties.^

Dodd gives to the towns of the New Hampshire grants, meeting in Hanover in June, 1777, the credit of originating the convention idea.^ But to the town of Concord, Massachusetts, belongs the honor of antedating the towns of the New Hamp- shire grants. On October 21, 1776, the town voted on the question of authorizing the legislature to frame a constitution:

That the Supreme Legislative, either in' their proper capacity, or in Joint Committee, are by no means a body proper to form and establish a Constitution, or form of Government; for reasons fol- lowing : first, because we conceive that a Constitution in its proper idea intends a system of principles established to secure the subject, in the possession and enjoyment of their rights and privileges, against any encroachments of the governing part, second, because the same body that forms a constitution have of consequence a power to alter it, third, because a constitution alterable by the Supreme Legislative is no security at all to the subject against any encroachment of the governing part on any, or on all of their rights and privileges.

Accordingly they recommended the calling of a convention.^

This procedure of constitution-framing by a convention chosen for that express purpose, which idea was originated in Concord, Massachusetts, and was copied by the New Hamp- shire towns, was also followed in Vermont in 1786, and with respect to the Federal Constitution.

Jameson points out that the congress which framed the Articles of Confederation possessed not a single one of the elements necessary to give it legitimacy as a constitutional convention.^ The body which framed the permanent Constitu- tion of the United States was scarcely more legitimate.

The Annapolis convention had met merely to settle the commercial disputes of the American States, but had recom- mended that the succeeding convention at Philadelphia should

1 Arthur Lord in II "Mass. Law Quarterly," 1, 5; cf. Journal, Mass. Conv., 1779-1780, p. 225.

2 Dodd, p. 6.

3 "Mass. Archives," Vol. 156, No. 182. A facsimile is to be printed in the manual of the Mass. 1917 Convention.

* Jameson, pp. 147-148.

8 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

consider "other objects than those of commerce." Accord- ingly, a convention met in May, 1787, at Philadelphia, "to devise such further pro\'isions as shall appear to them necessary to render the constitution of the Federal Government adequate to the exigencies of the Union." ^ This convention was really a diplomatic treaty-making body, rather than a constitutional convention in the purest sense of the term.

But the conventions of the eleven States which ratified the Constitution were all regularly-called constitutional conven- tions. The same may be said of the conventions of North Carolina, Rhode ilsland, and Vermont, which ratified the Constitution after it was declared established.^

So much for the origin of the idea of a written constitution, and for the employment of conventions to draft these instru- ments. Let us now consider the growth of the idea of the convention as a method of amending or altering constitutions already established.

The absence of any provision for alteration in the early constitutions should not be taken as an indication that their framers thought the regular legislatures competent to alter them, but rather that they did not consider the matter at all.^

Thus six of the early constitutions, and the rejected Massa- chusetts constitution of 1778, provided no method for their own amendment.^

Of the eight constitutions which did provide for amendment, three provided for legislative action (in a manner different and more difficult, however, than the passage of a mere statute),^ two provided for submission by a council of censors for rati- fication by a specially called convention,^ one provided for a convention called by petition,^ and one for a convention called by a popular vote at a certain fixed date.^

1 Jameson, pp. 149-150. 2 Jameson, p. 153.

3 Dodd, p. 27.

4 South Carolina (1776), Virgmia (1776), New Jersey (1776), New Hamp- shire (1776), New York (1777), and North Carolina (Dec. 1776).

6 Maryland (1776), Delaware (1776), and South Carolina (1778).

8 Pennsylvania (1776) and Vermont (1777).

"> Georgia (1776).

* Massachusetts (17S0). The vote was unfavorable, no convention was held, and thus this method lapsed by non-user. There was a similar provision in the Kentucky constitution of 1792, and under it was framed the constitution of 1799.

THE ORIGIN OF CONVENTIONS »9

The New Hampshire constitution of 1784 contained a similar provision, but with the added quahfication that the work of this convention should be submitted to the voters for their approval.

But soon it became apparent that it would be convenient for each State to have two methods of changing its constitu- tions; although only four constitutions had, up to 1835, adopted both the legislative and convention methods.^ Up to 1917, one hundred and thirty-nine constitutions have been framed by that many conventions. Of these, nine have con- tained no method of amendment, twenty-nine have contained provisions for amendment by convention alone, thirty-six by the legislative method alone, and sixty-five by both modes.^

In all of the States except New Hampshire, specific provision is now made for the amendment of State constitutions, by action by the legislature.^

In twelve States, the constitution may now be amended by popular initiative wdthout the interposition of either the legis- lature or a convention.^

Only twelve of the State constitutions now in force omit to provide for the holding of constitutional conventions.^ Yet conventions have been held in all of these States except Rhode Island, Indiana, and Vermont. The question of holding a con- vention has twice been submitted in Rhode Island, in spite of a Supreme Court opinion declaring the convention method un- constitutional, and there have been authoritative expressions of opinion in Vermont and Indiana that a convention could be held there.®

It may therefore be said that New Hampshire is the only state in which amendments may not be proposed by the legislature, and that Rhode Island is perhaps the only exception to the rule that conventions may be held for the revision of State constitutions.^

1 United States (1787), South Carolina (1790), and Delaware (1792 and 1831).

^ Jameson, pp. 550-551; Dodd, pp. 119-120. Arizona and New Mexico in 1910; Louisiana in 1913.

^ "Columbia Dig.," pp. 10-21.

* "Columbia Dig.," p. 771. These States are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Okla- homa, and Oregon.

^ "Columbia Dig.," p. 21. These States are Arkansas, Connecticut, Indiana, Louisiana, ISIassachusetts, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Dakota, Pennsyl- vania, Rhode Island, Texas, and Vermont.

6 See Chapter IV, infra. ^ Dodd, p. 120.

10 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

The Federal Constitution provides for the holding of a Fed- eral convention as an alternative to the usual method of sub- mission of amendments by Congress.^

Thus the convention method and the legislative method of amending constitutions have now become equally established throughout the length and breadth of the United States.

^ U. S. Constitution, Art. V.

Chapter II; FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES

In order to understand the nature, powers, and limitations of constitutional conventions, it will be necessary first to discuss a few fundamental principles of government; for the convention, designed as it is to tinker with such a basic instrument as the constitution, must of necessity get closer to fundamentals than any other governmental agency.

Government in America is based upon popular sovereignty. The Federal Constitution was ordained and established by "the people of the United States," ^ and guarantees to each of the several States "a republican form of government." ^ This means, in other words, a representative form.

It is founded upon the theory that the people are fit to rule, but that it would be cumbersome for them to govern themselves directly. Accordingly, for the facilitation of business, but for no other purpose, the people choose from their own number representatives to represent their point of view and to put into effect the collective will.

As Jameson expresses it:

Of the American system of government, the two leading princi- ples are, first, that laws and Constitutions can be rightfully formed and established only by the people over whom they are to be put in force; and, secondly, that the people being a corporate unit, com- prising all the citizens of the state, and, therefore, too unwieldy to do this important work directly, agents or representatives must be employed to do it, and that, in such numbers, so selected, and charged respectively with such functions, as to make it reasonably certain that the will of the people will be not only adequately but speedily executed.^

1 U. S. Const., Preamble.

2 U. S. Const., Art. IV, § IV.

» Jameson, p. 1; "Works of Daniel Webster," VI, pp. 221-224.

12 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

These principles were recognized by our forefathers in fram- ing the various Bills of Rights, which declare in substance that, as all power resides originally in the people, and is derived from them, the several magistrates and officers of government are their substitutes and agents, and are at all times accountable to them.^

The various agents of the people possess only such power as is expressly or impliedly delegated to them by the constitution or laws under which they hold office; and do not possess even this, if it happen to be beyond the power of such constitution or laws to grant.

As the Supreme Court of South Carolina said in an early decision:

Whatever authority this Court or any other constituted author- ity in this State possesses, it possesses by delegation from the people, and is exercised in their right. WTiat they have failed to delegate, even if it operates injuriously and in bad faith towards their confederates, the Court cannot possess.^

The Declaration of Independence, which is the first great declaration of American principles, says truly, "We hold these truths to be self-evident: That all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalien- able rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."

It follows, as a necessary conclusion from this statement in the great Declaration, that the people have an unalienable right to change their government whenever the common good re- quires. In fact, that very conclusion is drawn by the Declara- tion itself.

Yet, because of the training of our ancestors, this idea was difficult of establishment. As Braxton points out:

Both Church and State taught and enforced the dogma that governments were of divine origin, and existed by divine right; and to this proposition the corollary was obvious, that the people had no right to alter what God had estabhshed. Finally the idea took

^ Mass. Decl. of Rts. Art. V.

2 McCready v. Hunt (1834), 2 Hill Law (S. C.) 1, 270. Cf. Reliance v. Prison Com. (1914), 161 Ky. 135, 142.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 13

root and began to develop, that while government, in its general sense, as distinguished from anarchy, may be said to be a divine institution, yet no particular form of government could lay just claim to any divine right of preference over any other form. In this one idea lay the germ of all modern political and civil liberty. Yet, simple and elementary as it seems to us, in this age of enhght- enment, it was many years before this idea could be reconciled to the tender consciences of many pious persons who had been taught from their childhood, as a part of their religion to hold in super- stitious veneration this "Icon Basilike" and all that it stood for.^

Practically every one of the original State constitutions of America contains an assertion of this fundamental right of the people to change their form of goverimient. The following quo- tations from these constitutions may prove instructive on this point: I

Some mode should be established by common consent, and for the good of the people, the origin and end of all governments, for regulating the internal polity of this colony .^

All political power is vested in and derived from the people only.'

''All government of right originates from the people,'is founded in compact only, and instituted solely for the good of the whole.*

' When any government shall be found inadequate or contrary to these purposes, a majority of the community hath an indubitable, inalienable, and indefeasible right to reform, alter, or aboHsh it, in such manner as shall be judged most conducive to the public weal.^

Whenever these great ends of goverrmient are not obtained, the people have a right, by common consent, to change it, and take such measures as to them may appear necessary to promote their safety and happiness. . . . The community hath an indubitable, un- alienable, and indefeasible right to reform, alter, or abolish government in such manner as shall be by that community judged most conducive to the public weal.^

The people, from whom all power originates and for whose benefit all govermnent is intended.^

1 VII "Va. Law Reg.," 79, 84.

2 S. C. Const. (1776), Preamble.

3 N. C. Const. (1776), Decl. of Rts., Art. I.

4 Md. Const. (1776), Art. I.

6 Va. Const. (1776), Bill of Rts., § 3.

6 Pa. Const. (1776), Preamble and Decl. of Rts.,''Art. V.

^ Ga. Const. (1777), Preamble.

14 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

Whenever these great objects are not obtained, the people have a right to alter the government, and to take measures necessary for their safety, prosperity, and happiness. . . . The people alone have an incontestable, unalienable, and indefeasible right to institute government; and to reform, alter, or totally change the same, when their protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness require it.^

All government of right originates from the people, is founded in consent, and instituted for the general good. Whenever the ends of government are perverted, and public liberty manifestly en- dangered, and all other means of redress are ineffectual, the people may, and of right ought, to reform the old, or establish a new government. The doctrine of non-resistance against arbitrary power, and oppression, is absurd, slavish, and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind.^

All just authority in the institutions of political society is derived from the people, and established with their consent, to advance their happiness; and they may, for this end, as circumstances require, from time to time, alter their constitution of government.^

It is important to note that these "self-evident truths," these "fundamental rights" are admitted rather than guaran- teed by the constitutions. See the following:

Now no truth can be self-evident, which becomes evident only under particular conditions, as when it is deducible only from . . . the provisions of some positive code. ... If the truth in question is a self-evident truth, it is one which would obtain equally whether asserted in the constitution ... or not.^

It needed no reservation in the organic law to preserve to the people their inherent power to change their government.^

The Supreme Court of Rhode Island stands alone in denying the principles laid down in the Bills of Rights. In 1883 it said :

/It has been contended that there is a great unwritten common law of the states, which existed before the Constitution, and which the Constitution was powerless to modify or abolish, under which the people have the right, whenever invited by the General Assembly, ... to alter and amend their constitutions, . . . Our Constitu-

» Mass. Const., Preamble and Bill of Rts., Art. VII.

2 N. H. Const. (1784), Preamble and Bill of Rts., Art. X.

» Del. Const. (1792), Preamble.

^ Jameson, pp. 235-236.

6 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 344.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 15

tion is . . . the Supreme law of the State! We know of no law, except the Constitution and laws of the United States, which is paramount to it.^

And this in the teeth of the fact that the Bill of Rights then in force in Rhode Island proclaimed:

The basis of our political systems is the right of the people to make and alter their constitutions of government.^

And of the fact that the Rhode Island convention which rati- fied the Federal Constitution included in the ratification these words :

That the powers of government may be re-assumed by the people, whensoever it shall become necessary to their happiness.

Holcombe has an ingenious theory that the Federal Consti- tution destroyed this right referred to in the various State con- stitutions, but he is apparently alone in this.^

How may the people exercise this right to change their government? They may do it in any one of three ways : namely, (1) by some authorized procedure; (2) by a lawful act of the whole people in their sovereign capacity; or (3) by the spon- taneous act of an unrepresentative part of the people.

By the term "authorized procedure," I mean some method provided by the charter or constitution under which the State in question is governed, or by the express permission of some sovereign government, in case the people in question are a subject people. An example of the latter sort is when Congress passes an act permitting some subject territory of the United States to frame a form of government preparatory to its ad- mission to statehood.

The whole people in their sovereign capacity, acting through the forms of law at a regular election, may do what they will with their own frame of government, even though that frame of government does not expressly permit such action, and even though the frame of goverimient attempts to prohibit such action. This method of change of government will be amplified and justified in Chapter IV.

1 Opinion of Justices (1883), 14 R. I. 649, 654.

2 R. I. Const., Art. I, §1.

^ Holcombe, "State Government," p 33. See p. 168, injra.

16 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

When a part of the people or even a majority of them act outside the forms of law, they have no power except the power of force to bind those who do not join in the movement. Such a change or attempted change of government is nothing but factional, even though it may be conducted in a most orderly manner. Factional changes of government, or "spontaneous changes," as Jameson calls them, will be discussed more fully toward the end of this chapter.^

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has attempted to draw a distinction between these three methods of change of govern- ment. The court's language is as follows :

The words "in such manner as they may think proper," in the declaration of rights, embrace but three known recognized modes by which the whole people, the state, can give their consent to an alteration of an existing lawful frame of government, viz. :

1. The mode pro\aded in the existing constitution.

2. A law, as the instrumental process of raising the body for revision and conveying to it the powers of the people.

3. Revolution.

The first two are peaceful means through which the consent of the people to alteration is obtained, and by which the existing government consents to be displaced without revolution. The gov- ernment gives its consent, either by pursuing the mode provided in the constitution, or by passing a law to call a convention. If con- sent be not so given by the existing government the remedy of the people is in the third mode, — revolution.

If the legislature, possessing these powers of government, be unwilling to pass a law to take the sense of the people, or to dele- gate to a convention all the powers the people desire to confer upon their delegates, the remedy is still in their own hands; they can elect new representatives that will. If their representatives are still unfaithful, or the government becomes tyrannical, the right of revolution yet remains.^

The author would suggest that the following changes be made in the parts which he has italicized: namely, that the first "revolution" be changed to "spontaneous action, ratified by acquiescence," and that the second and third "revolution" be changed to " spontaneous action."

1 See pp. 19-23, infra. Cf. Jameson, p. 104.

2 Wells V. Bai7i (1872), 75 Pa. 39, at 47-48.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 17

Let US not however attempt to decide at just this point whether the Pennsylvania Court correctly used the term "revolution." This is really a question of terminology rather than of fundamentals. The definition of the word will be dis- cussed in Chapter III/ and in Chapter IV there will be con- sidered the question as to whether popular conventions may properly be designated as "revolutionary."^

On the fundamental points expressed, the Pennsylvania Court was entirely correct. It laid down the principles that the electorate is really a representative body, a body representing "the people."

The people here meant are the whole — those who constitute the entire state, male and female citizens, infants and adults. A mere majority of those persons who are qualified as electors are not the people, though when; authorized to do so, they may represent the whole people.

The electors who can pronounce the voice of the people are those alone who possess the qualifications sanctioned by the people in order to represent them, otherwise they speak for themselves only, and do not represent the people.

A majority of the adult males having the qualifications of elec- tors can bind the whole people only when they have authority to do so.

The great error of the argument of those who claim to be the people, or the delegates of the people, is in the use of the word 'people. Who are the people? Not so many as choose to assemble in a county, or a city, or a district, of their own mere will, and to say — we the people. Who gave them power to represent all others who stay away? Not even the press, that wide-spread and most powerful of all subordinate agencies, can speak for them by au- thority. The voice of the people can be heard only through an authorized form, for, as we have seen, without this authority a part cannot speak for the whole, and this brings us back to a law as the only authority by which the will of the whole people, the body politic called the state, can be collected under an existing lawful government.^

' See pp. 31-33, infra. ^ See p. 54, infra.

3 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, at 46, 47, 49, and 53.

18 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

And Braxton says, in the same connection:

The "people" to whom our Bills of Rights refer, the only "people" whom civilization recognizes as having any sovereign or political rights, are the people, not in a state of nature, but as organized into social government. When, therefore, we are dis- cussing any problem or doctrine of government, or of political or civil rights, let us lay aside all consideration of the people in a "state of nature"; let us omit all reference to that idle dream of the early theorists, about the people meeting together in a "vast plain" — a thing they, of course, never did and never possibly could have done; and instead, let us ever consider the people, not as a capricious, erratic, lawless monster, but as an all-powerful, but orderly, force moving only in lawful form, in accordance with the great rules and principles, and in pursuance of the methods, which are essential to its organized existence.^

The people do not vote at a popular election any more than they vote at a session of the legislature. They speak only through representatives in either instance. The people include men, women, and children. In some governmental functions, these people speak through the electors, in other instances through the legislature, but always through representatives.

Some writers have even gone to the extent of stating that the electors are the people. Witness the following:

Under our system of government it is apparently well settled that the ultimate sovereignty is in the people, in the restricted sense of those who are enfranchised. The power to change the fun- damental — the written constitution — is in them alone. It is this principle which causes the courts to recognize generally the right of the legislature, as the organ of the people, to submit a call for a convention of the people, and to regard such a convention as a valid method of constitution making, although the existing con- stitution contains no provision to that effect.^

The Massachusetts Supreme Court has recently held that "people" as mentioned in the Bill of Rights are all the people, whereas "people" in provisions relative to elections are merely the qualified voters.^ This would seem to be a very sensible distinction.

But be that as it may. A majority of the electors can repre-

1 VII "Va. Law Reg.," 79, 87.

2 XXIX "Harv. Law Rev.," 529.

5 1917 Mass. Senate Doc, 512. See pp. 208-209, infra.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 19

sent the people only at a duly held election. The action of a ma- jority of the electors in any other manner is just as ineffective as would be the action of a majority of the legislators taken during a legislative recess.

The Pennsylvania Court expresses these thoughts in the following language:

The people, that entire body called the state, can be bound as a whole only by an act of authority proceeding from themselves. In a state of peaceful government they have conferred this authority upon a part to speak for the whole only at an election authorized by law. It is only when an election is authorized by law, that the electors, who represent the state or whole people, are bound to attend, and if they do not, can be bound by the expression of the will of those who do attend.^

Law is the highest form of a people's will in a state of peaceful government, when a people act through a law the act is theirs.^

Judged by these standards, it will be seen that a spontaneous convention is not really a movement of the whole people, no matter how large a percentage of the voters it actually repre- sents.

This may answer the suggestion which is often made by loose thinkers on this subject; namely, if some rich man or some body of men were to pay the expenses of holding a state-wide election, and were to invite all the voters to attend, would not an amendment adopted at such an election become a valid part of the constitution through thus receiving the popular sanction? But the Pemisylvania Court replies as follows:

Let us suppose a voluntary election unauthorized by law, and delegates elected. It is plain a convention composed of such dele- gates would possess no power to displace the existing government, and impose a new constitution on the whole people. Those voting at the unauthorized election had no power to represent or to bind those who did not choose to vote.

Suppose a constitution formed by a volunteer convention, as- suming to represent the people, and an attempt to set it up and dis- place the existing lawful government. It is clear that neither the

1 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 47. See also in this connection the quo- tation on page 22, infra.

2 Wood's Appeal (1874), 75 Pa. 59, 71-72.

20 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

people as a whole nor the government having given their assent in any binding form, the executive, judiciary and all officers sworn to support the existing constitution would be bound, in maintenance of the lawfully-existing institutions of the people, to resist the usurpation, even to the whole extent of the force of the state. If overpowered, the new government would be estabhshed, not by peaceful means, but by actual revolution.^

The leading example of factional convention In the United States is the "People's Convention" in 1841 in Rhode Island, which culminated in what is generally known as "Dorr's Re- bellion," to be discussed a little later.

In Maryland, in 1837, there were conditions like those in Rhode Island in 1841, and the supporters of reform elected a convention without any authorization from the regular govern- ment, but the convention took no action, for the legislature hastened to adopt the most important proposed reforms.^

Somewhat similar to the Maryland case was that of the con- vention at Topeka in the territory of Kansas in 1855. This convention was assembled upon the recommendation of meet- ings and associations of private individuals. The constitution which it framed was submitted to a popular vote and received a majority of the votes cast upon the question of its adoption, although only its friends voted upon this question. This con- stitution was never recognized by Congress, though it would seem that the irregularity of its formation and adoption might have been cured by congressional ratification, had Congress cared to take such action.^

The territory of Michigan in 1835 adopted a constitution and applied for admission into the Union. Congress passed an act that Michigan should be admitted if she would agree to a restricted boundary. The new State rejected the condition. Thereupon a popular movement was begun, and delegates were elected to a convention, which assembled without either con- gressional or State authorization, and assented to the condition imposed by Congress. Congress accepted this action as satis- factory and by its acceptance ratified the action of the irregular convention.^

1 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 48-49.

^ Jameson, p. 216; Dodd, p. 61.

^ Jameson, pp. 202-204; Dodd, p. 61.

4 Jameson, pp. 188-189; Dodd, pp. 61-62.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 21

Thus what is originally merely a factional convention may in some cases become an authorized convention by subsequent rati- fication; in such cases, by Congress.

' But apart from some curing ratification, we have seen that, although the people are supreme, they have no method of ex- pression except through their representatives, the voters; and they in turn can only speak by means of elections regularly called and held.

It was this little technical point alone which justified the prose- cution of Thomas W. Dorr for supporting the " People's Con- stitution" of 1841 in Rhode Island. Under his leadership the people of that State attempted to overthrow the tyrannous rule of the landholding classes who were still entrenched behind the King's charter. Caucuses of the adult male citizens through- out the State sent delegates to a convention which submitted a fair and democratic constitution to a special election called by it. At this election a clear majority of all the adult males voted for the new frame of government. Not only this, but among those voting in favor was a clear majority of those duly regis- tered^ as voters under the charter. Dorr was subsequently elected Governor. He attempted to assume office, but John Tyler, Whig President of the United States, interfered at the request of the Wliig charter government, and forced Dorr and many of his followers into exile, by threatening to send Fed- eral troops into the State. This partisan action, by the way, is chiefly what drove the Whigs from power in the succeeding national election. Equally partisan was the Democratic con- gressional report on Tyler's action, which report will be cited elsewhere in this volume.

On Dorr's return, a few years later, he was tried and convicted of high treason. In the meantime, the Charterists themselves had submitted a constitution, which had received the votes of less than one third of the adult males, less than half of the regis- tered vote.

Yet technically this became the constitution of the State, and the People's Constitution did not. Neither method of pro- cedure was authorized by the charter. The valid one received seven thousand votes; the invalid one nearly foiu-teen thou- sand. Yet the difference in validity lay in this: the seven thou- sand voted at a duly called election, and hence had authority

22 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

to speak for the whole people; whereas the fourteen thousand voted at an irregular election, and hence spoke only for them- selves.^

The following quotations from the unreported opinion of the Rhode Island Supreme Court rendered at Dorr's trial may prove instructive.

This court can recognize no other [i. e. constitution] than that under which it holds its existence. . . . Any irregular action, with- out legal authority, is no action at all, that can be taken notice of by a court of law. ... It matters not therefore whether a major- ity, or what majority, voted for a pretended constitution, as is alleged by the prisoner, and as he now asks to be permitted to prove. The nmnbers are nothing; we must look to the legality of the proceeding, which, being without form of legal authority, is void and of no effect.^

See also the following quotations from the argument of Daniel Webster in the famous case of Luther v. Borden in which the United States Supreme Court went very fully into the validity of Dorr's Rebellion, although deciding the case on other grounds:

When it is necessary to ascertain the will of the people, the legis- lature must provide the means of ascertaining it.

There must be an authentic mode of ascertaining the public will somehow and somewhere. If not, it is a government of the strong- est and most numerous.'

One of the five instances in which new States have been formed within the boundaries of other States, presents an example of a factional convention. Vermont is not such an instance, as she had maintained her independence against the State of New York and the United States for fourteen years ;^ and hence, however irregular had been her original organization, her gov- ernment had become regular through lapse of time and ac- quiescence of her people.^

But in the case of West Virginia, the legality of its admission

^ For full accounts of "Dorr's Rebellion" see Committee Rept., 54G, 1st Sess., 28th Cong.; Mowry, "The Dorr War" (1901); Luther v. Borden (1849), 7 How. 1.

2 "Trial of Dorr," p. 38. » 7 How. 1, 31-32.

* Jameson, p. 139. * See Chapter XVU, injra.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 23

into the Union depends to a large extent on the legaKty of the absolutely revolutionary pro-union government, which was set up in the State of Virginia shortly after the outbreak of the Civil War. This government appears to have been ordained by a convention extremely factional, representing but a fraction of the people of a fraction of the State; and yet the assent of this government to the dismemberment of Virginia was ren- dered effective by force of Federal arms, just as the factional government in Rhode Island was rendered meffective by the same force.^

The possibility of spontaneous changes being legal has been suggested in the following dictum:

It may well be questioned whether, had the Legislature refused to make provision for calling a convention, the people in their sovereign capacity would not have had the right to have taken such measures for framing and adopting a constitution as to them seemed meet.^

The Committee of Congress, chosen for partisan purposes to prepare a report on Dorr's Rebellion, discreditable to President Tyler, framed an ingenious theory along the lines of the above dictum, to the effect that a majority of the adult males consti- tute the people. This theory they expressed in the following language :

That the (political) people include all free white male persons, of the age of twenty-one years, who are citizens of the State, are of sound mind, and have not forfeited their right by some crime against the society of which they are members.^

It is true that the original Virginia Bill of Rights says that "a majority of the community hath an indubitable, unalien- able and indefeasible right, etc."^ And Walker says that the right of revolution exists "whenever a majority desire it." ^

But in the light of the foregoing discussion, it is probable that what Walker and the framers of the Virginia constitution really

^ Jameson makes a half-hearted claim that all this was perfectly constitu- tional. Jameson, pp. 168-172.

2 Goodrich v. Moore (1858), 2 Minn. 61, 66.

3 Committee Rept., 546, 1st Sess., 28th Cong., p. 50. * Va. Bill of Rights, § 3.

B Walker, "American Law" (11 ed.), p. 231.

24 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

meant was the right of the people, speaking through a majority of their electors.

At any rate, particularly in these days when women are clam- oring that they too are people, it is easier to follow the Penn- sylvania view that all male, female, and minor citizens are people, but that the people can speak only through duly qualified voters.^

Of course, it is true that many factional movements have succeeded in overturning the government. But they have been ratified by subsequent events, which made up for the illegality of their beginnings. The spontaneous governments of the American colonies succeeded when force triumphed over Eng- land. The "People's" government of Rhode Island failed, and the Union government of West Virginia succeeded, because of force, applied by the Federal authorities.

Revolutionary conventions . . . are not peculiar to any coun- try, but have existed wherever, and will continue occasionally to exist as long as, the ultimate and eternal right of revolution re- mains — a right which, it is said, depends solely upon the power to successfully invoke it.^

If overpowered, the new government would be established, not by peaceful means, but by actual revolution.^

Thus authorized movements depend upon either constitu- tional or congressional authority; popular movements depend upon the power of the people; spontaneous movements depend upon force, or at least upon acquiescence.

No exact line can be drawn between the three different classes of change of government; each merges into the next, and many instances are on the line.

Daniel Webster has summed up, in the following words, the ground which we have just covered, and this summary has twice received the approval of the United States Supreme Court:

Mr. Webster's argument in that case took a wider sweep, and contained a masterly statement of the American system of govern- ment, as recognizing that the people are the source of all political power, but that as the exercise of governmental powers immediately by the people themselves is impracticable, they must be exercised

^ See quotation from Wells v. Bain, p. 17, supra.

2 Braxton, VII "Va. Law Reg.," 79, 82.

3 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 49.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 25

by representatives of the people; that the basis of representation is suffrage; that the right of suffrage must be protected and its exercise prescribed by previous law, and the results ascertained by some certain rule; that through its regulated exercise each man's power tells in the constitution of the government and in the enact- ment of laws; that the people limit themselves in regard to the qualifications of electors and the quahfications of the elected, and to certain forms for the conduct of elections; that our liberty is the liberty secured by the regular action of popular power, taking place and ascertained in accordance with legal and authentic modes; and that the Constitution and laws do not proceed on the ground of revolution or any right of revolution, but on the idea of results achieved by orderly action under the authority of existing govern- ments, proceedings outside of which are not contemplated by our institutions.^

One more fundamental point, not directly related to the fore- going, must however be discussed: namely, the meaning of constitutionality and unconstitutionality, and the relation between the constitution and governmental affairs in general .^^

This is a subject under which there exists a good deal of mis- apprehension, with the result that lawyers, writers, and even judges have been found laying down the principle that anything which is not authorized by the constitution must, therefore, be considered as prohibited by the constitution. And yet the great distinction drawn by Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw between Federal and State constitutions rests upon a denial of this assumption.^

The purport of his decision was that there exists midway between the class of actions prohibited by the constitution and the class of action authorized by the constitution, a twilight zone consisting of those actions which are neither authorized nor prohibited.

As the Federal government has no powers other than those expressly or impliedly given to it by the Constitution, all Federal activities within the twilight zone are just as illegal as those which fall into the expressly prohibited class. As the people reserve to themselves all powers not expressly or im-

1 Re Duncan (1891), 139 U. S. 449, 461; Taylor v. Beckham (1899), 178 U. S. 548, 579.

^ For a definition of " constitutional," see p. 30, infra. 3 Commonwealth v. Kimball (1837), 24 Pick. 359.

26 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

pliedly granted to the three branches of the government, it follows that with respect to the State constitutions, any action falling within the twilight zone is lawful through not being prohibited.

Thus it is seen that there are three classes of cases in con- stitutional law, namely: (1) things authorized; (2) things neither authorized nor prohibited; and (3) things prohibited.

To this may perhaps be added a fourth class, namely, things which the constitution has no power either to authorize or to prohibit.

Thus with respect to the control of State constitutions over the question of amending the constitution, any given method may be either (1) expressly authorized; (2) permitted because not prohibited; (3) prohibited; or (4) beyond the jurisdiction of the constitution.

This fourth class is perhaps a subdivision of the second. Any amendatory method which is beyond the control of the constitution falls into class 4, regardless of whether the con- stitution attempts to authorize or prohibit it, or merely remains silent on the subject.

A word more relative to this fourth class. Some persons will deny that there can exist a class of actions, which are neither constitutional nor unconstitutional, being beyond the control of the constitution. To such a person, the following question should be put: "Under the State constitution, is it constitutional or unconstitutional for the President of the United States to call out the State militia?" The answer is: "The State constitution has nothing to do with the matter." This is merely one example to show the possibility of the exist- ence of extra- or even 5wpra-constitutional matters.

Now to another point : the suggestion was made in Chapter I that when the colonies declared their independence, they re- verted to a state of nature.^ This suggestion deserves a little analytical attention.

Dodd quotes with approval the following from a resolution passed at a meeting of New Hampshire towns in 1776:

It is our humble opinion, that, when the Declaration of Inde- pendency took place, the Colonies were absolutely in a state of

^ P. 1, supra.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 27

nature, and the powers of Government reverted to the people at

large. ^

And the Supreme Court of Virginia has said :

The instant that the declaration of independence took effect, had the convention proceeded no farther, the government, as for- merly exercised by the crown of Great Britain, being thereby totally dissolved, there would never have been an ordinary legisla- ture, nor any other organized body, or authority in Virginia. Every man would have been utterly absolved from every social tie, and remitted to a perfect state of nature.^

But Braxton says:

What, then, is this "right of the people" (or of a majority of them) to "alter their government," which the advocates of con- ventional omnipotence invoke to support their views? Is it the right to resolve themselves into a "state of nature," to "scatter the elements of government around them," and to "stand upon the foundations of society" — "to conjure up chaos?" Surely not.

To the religious man, government, in its broadest sense, is still regarded as ordained by God, and therefore the people have no right to abolish it; to the non-religious, it is still an absolute essential for the existence of society. What right, then, have the people to abolish government? The "people," as we have seen — the only "people" whom political society can recognize are the people or- ganized into a government of some sort. If, then, they should abolish all government, they would manifestly destroy their own existence.

When we speak of the right of the people to govern themselves we do not mean what the words literally imply, but merely their right to alter or amend their government, or to replace it with a new one, at their pleasure.

The existence of government is absolutely essential to the exist- ence of the "people" in any political sense; and the only way in which the people have a right to abolish the government is by substituting a new one in its stead. There can be no hiatus be- tween them.

The idea of the people resuming — taking back into their own hands — all the powers of government is a delusion. The people can never take the powers of government into their own hands;

1 N. H. State Papers, Vol. VIII, p. 425; Dodd, p. 2.

2 Kamper v. Hawkins (1793), 3 Va. 20, 72.

28 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

the utmost they can do is to enlarge or curtail, amend or alter, those powers in the hands of their government, or to transfer them from one government to another; but they can never "resume" them in toto. Not only have they no right, but they have no power to do so. They can abolish government, and thereby destroy their own political existence, but they can never directly exercise the powers of government — only a government of some sort can pos- sibly do this.^

In other words, the people are all-powerful like Samson; but when they pull down the temple of the state, they thereby destroy themselves.

Of course, Braxton is right; but is he not setting up a man of straw so as to knock it down again? He is attacking the oratorical flights of fancy of those who assert convention sovereignty,^ rather than attacking the real foundations of their arguments.

Most other writers assume that which Braxton sets out so elaborately to prove. Thus Jameson says that the people are a corporate unit, comprising all the citizens of the state.^ The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has defined the people as "the body politic called the state." ^

And the Supreme Court of Virginia reaches the same con- clusion, although basing the result upon the inconvenience rather than the impossibility of a state of nature.^

From all the foregoing discussion, we can deduce the follow- ing fundamental principles to guide us in considering the status, powers, and limitations of constitutional conventions.

Ours is a representative government, founded on popular sovereignty.

"The people" are the people as organized into a state of social government; they cannot abolish government without thereby terminating their own existence as the people.

Governments derive their powers from the consent of the governed; therefore the governed have a right to withdraw that consent and to change their government at will. They can exercise this right either by an authorized procedure, by a

1 VII " Va. Law Reg.," 79, SS-89.

^ Convention sovereignty will be considered on its merits in Chapter XI.

' Jameson, p. 1.

4 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 53.

B Hamper v. Hawkins (1793), 3 Va. 20, 72.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES 29

lawful though unauthorized act of the whole people, or by a spontaneous act, provided that in the case of such spontaneous act, it be later ratified by some higher power, i. e. either Con- gress in the case of a Territory, or the people themselves in the case of the State. The people can speak only through their representatives, the voters, and the voters can speak only at a regular election.

It is not necessary that a given action be either authorized or prohibited by the constitution; it may be permitted by not being mentioned at all, or it may be valid because outside the power of the constitution.

Chapter III ANALYSIS OF QUESTIONS

In the light of the historical development of constitutional conventions and of the fundamental principles already dis- cussed, we are now prepared to analyze the various questions, for the object of answering which this book is written.

First, let us observe the French proverb, "Definissons nos termes!"

The term "constitutional convention" is not felicitous, for the word "constitutional" may mean to some people "author- ized by the constitution," and to others merely "relating to the constitution," Hence the apparent anomaly of the phrase "an unconstitutional constitutional convention." Therefore, a "constitutional convention," as used in this book, may be defined as "a convention employed as a step toward framing or revising a constitution." To avoid ambiguity, such con- ventions will nearly always be referred to merely as "conven- tions," omitting the word "constitutional." To the same end, the word "constitutional" will never be used immediately preceding the word "convention" to indicate the constitution- ality of the convention; but rather some circumlocution will be employed.

Even when used to refer to the constitutionality of the con- vention, the terms "constitutional" and "unconstitutional" present an ambiguity. "Constitutional," as we have seen in the preceding chapter, may refer either to something authorized by the constitution, or to something valid through not being prohibited by the constitution, or even to something which is legal because beyond the control of the constitution. "Un- constitutional" may mean the reverse of any of those three things. As used in this book, the term "constitutional" will be used only to apply to matters over which the constitution has control, and which in the exercise of that control it either authorizes or omits to prohibit.

ANALYSIS OF QUESTIONS 31

A circumlocution will be used, whenever possible, in place of the word "submission"; for this word might equally well mean "acquiescence in" or "reference to."

" Revolution," as applied to conventions, is a word upon which there can be no possibility of agreement. Jameson, Dodd, Braxton, and others insist that popular conventions are not revolutionary, and reserve the term "revolution" for sponta- neous conventions alone.

Dodd says:

The convention . . . is in no sense a revolutionary . . . body.^ Braxton says:

A constitutional convention is a normal and legal institution, ... it involves neither revolution nor a dissolution of the ordinary government, even in theory.

In the earlier days existing social systems did not contemplate the legal possibility of, and therefore made no provision for, any fun- damental change in their constitutions: hence, the only means of effecting such change was, by revolution, to overthrow the exist- ing government, and, by force, either to engraft upon it the desired changes, or else to substitute an entirely new system in its place. But, as the science of government became better understood, and the great doctrine of the right (not merely the power) of the people to change their government, was promulgated, it was found that it was not necessary to resort to revolution in order to change or modify government, but that such changes or modifications might be made as peacefully, as orderly and as legally as any ordinary function of government could be exercised. From the idea in- volved in this doctrine grew the modern Constitutional Convention, an institution so far unconnected and inconsistent with revolution, either peaceful or violent, that its whole purpose and raison d'etre is to prevent, and do away with, the necessity of excuse for revolu- tion — in fact, it might properly be called the " Anti-Revolutionary Convention." ^

But it is to be remembered that Dodd and Braxton wrote in States (Illinois and Virginia respectively) where conventions are held under the authority of constitutions. Accordingly their views as to all conventions are colored by the fact that the

» Dodd, p. 72.

2 VII "Va. Law Reg.," 79, 96, 81.

32 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

conventions with which they have had to deal have been of the authorized variety. Similarly the present author's point of view may be colored by the fact that conventions in Massachu- setts are generally recognized as being revolutionary. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania says:

It is not pretended that the late convention sat as a revolu- tionary body.^

If they are correct in their theory that conventions, sanctioned by the inalienable right of the people and assisted by the exist- ing legislature, are not revolutionary, then, by their test, the secession conventions of the Southern States were not revolu- tionary, nor is even the coming constitutional convention in Russia.

By "revolution" they probably mean "revolution by vio- lence." But violence or lack of violence ought not to be the test in determining the fundamental nature of a governmental overturn.

In the words of Reverend William B. Greene:

It is not necessary, in order that there be a revolution, that there should be blood shed, powder burned, and other attendants of war displayed. A revolution may take place peaceably, and if the right is once recognized in a country, it should take place peaceably, be- cause in the recognition of that right, is also the recognition of the duty of obedience upon the part of the Government.^

Walker uses the word "revolution" in the same sense when he says:

But it is needless to enlarge upon the general right of revolution. It must of necessity exist, whenever a majority desire it, even though the existing government should be in terms made perpet- ual, as some of the provisions in our constitutions are declared to be.^

Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, leader of the majority in the Massa- chusetts convention of 1853, expressed the sentiments of his party when he said in that body:

» Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. No. 39, 48.

2 Deb. Mass. Conv. of 1853, I, 129.

3 Walker, "American Law" (11 ed.), p. 231.

ANALYSIS OF QUESTIONS 33

Are we not now engaged in a revolution — a peaceful revolution by the ballot-box, and not by the sword and the bayonet? Sir, these are revolutionary times, so far as the Government is con- cerned. We are assembled to revolutionize, so far as it may be judged expedient, the organic structure of our present Constitu- tion. I look upon this whole proceeding of calling a convention as a mode of revolution by which we may peaceably accomplish that which in other countries is attained by the sword, and by force. Here, through the medium of the ballot-box, the people take to themselves the supreme control of the whole machinery of the government.^

However, as already said, it will be impossible to agree on this term. Dispute would be profitless. Accordingly, let us agree that, for the purposes of this book, the author will use the word "revolution" to mean any overturn unauthorized by the constitution.

The New York Supreme Court nearly reaches this definition, when it says:

A change in the fundamental law, wheri not made in the form which that law has prescribed, must always be a work of the ut- most delicacy. Under any other form of government than our own, it could amount to nothing less than a revolution.^

They might have added, " And under ours it is revolutionary, even though not a revolution."

And the Rhode Island Supreme Court, although denying the lawfulness of conventions, says that if there is any such law, it is a law of revolutionary rather than of constitutional change.^

Ruling Case Law says:

An attempt by the majority to change the fundamental law in violation of the self-imposed restrictions is unconstitutional and revolutionary.^

Having disposed of the foregoing definitions, we ought next to proceed to classify the various sorts of constitution conven- tions. Now, the convention is only one of the many means for altering the form of government.

1 Deb. Mass. Conv. of 1853, I, 78-79.

2 Journal, 69th N. Y. Assembly, p. 920.

3 Opinion of Justices (1883), 14 R. I. 649, 654.

4 6 R. C. L., § 16-

34 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

We have seen, during the discussion of fundamental princi- ples in the last chapter, that changes of government may be either authorized, popular, or spontaneous.^

Among the authorized methods are: amendment by legisla- tive action, amendment by popular vote after submission by the legislature, amendment by the initiative, and amendment by convention.

With respect to a popular uprising, the convention is appar- ently the only method whereby the form of government can be legally changed in disregard of constituted authority; al- though if the question of amendment could get on to the ballot at a regular election in some other unauthorized way, the action of the electors in ratifying it would probably be just as binding.

Spontaneous methods of change of goverimaent all, in the last analysis, depend upon force for their success; therefore it is immaterial in which of the many possible spontaneous ways a constitution is promulgated, if it be later established by force. The force is all that is material. Success succeeds, and failure fails; no other difference is apparent between successful and unsuccessful spontaneous conventions.

Thus each of the three classes of changes in constitutions — to wit, authorized, popular, and spontaneous — may take the form of a convention; and accordingly we Have as the three sorts of conventions to be considered in this book, the author- ized convention, the popular convention, and the spontaneous convention.

The spontaneous convention we may disregard, as it is bound by no law and derives whatever force it may have from subse- quent events, rather than from the way in which it is either con- stituted or conducted. Spontaneous conventions are without the form of law and, therefore, cannot possibly provide us with useful precedents.

This book aims to discuss the nature, powers, and limitations of both authorized and popular conventions. The nature of authorized conventions depends largely upon the source of the authority. But popular conventions all probably derive their authority from the people, although this is disputed by Jameson, who asserts that they derive their authority from the legislature. A whole chapter will be devoted to discussing this point of dis-

^ See p. 15, supra.

ANALYSIS OF QUESTIONS 35

agreement.^ The question of whether the legislature calls the convention leads us to the question of whether the legislature can call itself a convention, to which question a chapter will be devoted.^

The question naturally arises in connection with popular con- ventions as to whether, inasmuch as they are not authorized by the constitution, they are not thereby rendered unconstitutional and void. A chapter will be devoted to this point also.^

Aside from the question of the source of authority of the two sorts of conventions, there are the questions of their relation to the other departments of government, the relative powers of the various departments, and the extent to which any of the departments can interfere with the convention or the conven- tion interfere with any of the departments.

Accordingly, inter alia, we shall consider whether the State executive has power to interfere with both sorts of convention under various provisions or lack of provisions in the State constitutions, and also whether the Federal executive has power to intervene in determining the legality of convention action in one of the States. One chapter will be devoted to these con- siderations.^

Next as to the legislative department. Judge Jameson's entire work on constitutional conventions was written with the view to proving the supremacy of the legislative branch over the convention.^ For the purposes of his discussion, he assumed that all conventions, whether called at the one extreme under the provisions of the State constitution, or at the other by a direct vote of the people, were in either event the creatures of the legis- lature and hence subject to its control. Also, he treated the question of the power of the legislature to amend the statute calling a convention, as being merely a question of the right of the legislature to control the convention; whereas in reality it in- volves three questions: i. e. the power of the legislature, the source of the statute, and whether the legislature can amend an act passed by the people.

The question, here involved, of the power of the legislature, is the same question that is involved in considering whether the

* Chapter V, infra. ^ Chapter VI, infra,

^ Chapter IV, infra. * Chapter VII, m/ra.

6 Dodd, p. 73.

36 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

legislature can restrict a convention by the terms of the original convention act.

The question of who enacts the convention act is the same question as that already referred to, relating to the source of authority of popular conventions. The question as to whether the legislature can amend a statute passed by the people in their sovereign capacity is self-explanatory.

These three questions last referred to are each treated in a separate chapter.^

The restricting of the convention by the original convention act, if it be submitted to the people, instead of being, as we have just supposed, enacted by the legislature alone, involves the question of the power of the people to restrict the convention. This same question is involved when we discuss whether con- stituents have a right to give binding instructions to a conven- tion delegate. Popular control of conventions is the subject of one of the chapters.^

In contradistinction to the idea of legislative or even popular control, is the theory that the convention, once launched, be- comes the sovereign, and remains supreme so long as it is in existence. Conventions, claiming this degree of sovereignty, have exercised extraordinary powers, including the enactment of legislation and the removal of executive officers. They have even tried to amend the convention act by which they them- selves were created. Extraordinary powers claimed by conven- tions, including interference with the legislative and executive branches, form the contents of one chapter.^

Two questions closely related to each other are: whether the constitution applies to conventions, and whether the courts will interfere with conventions. Some people might assiune that these are the same question; but it is clear that the constitution may perhaps apply, and yet that the coiu-ts may in some cases re- fuse to interfere with the convention, on the ground that it is a coordinate government body, and is therefore the judge of its own constitutional limitations; in other words, that the ques- tions involved are political rather than legal. On the other hand, the courts may interfere with a convention, on grounds

1 See Chapter IX on the power of the legislature; Chapter V on the source of the statute; and Chapter VIII on the power to amend.

2 Chapter X, infra. ^ Chapter XI, infra.

ANALYSIS OF QUESTIONS 37

not furnished by the constitution. Then, too, a court mijijht also render assistance to a convention in enforcing its rights and powers. Accordingly, the author has tried to divide those some- what interrelated questions into two chapters, one dealing with judicial intervention,^ and the other dealing with the question as to whether the constitution applies to conventions.^

It is obvious that as all bodies have some incidental powers beyond the strict duties of such bodies, so also the convention must have some incidental powers which do not strictly relate to the framing of a constitution. These are discussed in a sep- arate chapter, which deals with the internal control of the con- vention by itself; and to this chapter the author has added some words on the privileges of the individual members.^

Not only is the legal status of the convention important, but also the legal status of the individual delegates. Are they public officers, and should they take an oath to support the constitution which they are engaged in overturning? Ought they to take any oath of office? These questions form the subject matter of another chapter, on the status of delegates.'*

The questions of the need and method of submission of amendments by the convention to the electorate, are inciden- tally touched upon under almost every phase of the subject of constitutional conventions. There is involved the applicability of constitutional provisions, the binding force of the convention act, the power of the legislature to amend that act, and the right of judicial, executive, or popular interference. Yet the questions of the need and method of submission of the amend- ments are so important in themselves that the authorities and precedents have been collected in one chapter.^

A final matter for consideration is the doctrine that the validity and effect of all constitutional changes depends, in the last analysis, upon "getting away with it"; in other words, on the people and the existing government accepting and acquiescing in the change. One chapter is devoted to this doctrine of acquiescence.^

The concluding chapter of the book is a summary of the an- swers to the questions presented and analyzed in this chapter.^

» Chapter XII, infra. 2 Chapter XIII, infra. ^ Chapter XIV, infra. 4 Chapter XV, infra. « Chapter XVI, infra. ^ Chapter XVII, infra. '> Chapter XVIII, infra.

Chapter IV POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL

The exact legal status of popular conventions (i. e. those conventions which are held in such an orderly manner as clearly to represent the popular will, and yet which are not expressly authorized by the existing constitution) is a very important matter to consider.

As we saw in Chapter II, any given method of amending the constitution of a State may be either (1) authorized by the constitution, or (2) permitted because not prohibited or because the constitution is powerless to prohibit, or (3) effectu- ally prohibited.^

In which class does the popular convention fall? There are authorities for placing this sort of convention in each of the three classes.

It might seem at first glance that the convention method of amending the constitution could not possibly be legal except in the cases in which the State constitution expressly authorizes this method; and yet if this were so, the legality of at least one of the many such conventions which have been held throughout the United States, would certainly have been questioned before this.

We have already discussed historically a number of these instances.^ Practically all the original constitutions of the thirteen colonies and Vermont were framed by popular con- ventions held by revolutionary governments without any further legal sanction than the will of the people as expressed through their electorate. Thus the Supreme Court of Virginia has said:

' The convention of Virginia had not the shadow of a legal, or constitutional form about it. It derived its existence and authority from a higher source; a power which can supersede all law, and

* See p. 26, supra. * See Chapter I, supra.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 39

annul the constitution itself — namely, the people, in their sover- eign, unlimited, and unlimitable authority and capacity.^

Some of these constitutions, now recognized as valid, did not even have this sanction, and may therefore be regarded as merely factional.

The Constitution of the United States was superimposed upon the various State constitutions without any authority derived from any of them, and in direct violation of the pro- vision of the Articles of Confederation.^ Not only this, but it might legally have been adopted by the people of the various States, against the will of the various State governments, for the United States Supreme Court has said :

The assent of the States, in their sovereign capacity, is implied in calling a Convention, and thus submitting that instrument to the people. But the people were at perfect liberty to accept or reject it ; and their act was final. It required not the affirmance, and could not be negatived, by the State governments. The consti- tution, when thus adopted, was of complete obligation, and bound the State sovereignties.

It has been said that the people had already surrendered all their powers to the State sovereignties, and had nothing more to give. But, surely, the question whether they may resume and modify the powers granted to government does not remain to be settled in this country.^

Most of the secession conventions were popular, or even spontaneous. Many new States have been admitted to the Union under constitutions framed by the people without the authority of Congress, but Congress has ratified the illegal action in admitting them.

But the most important precedents for the purposes of the present discussion are States, which, although at peace under a duly established constitution which did not provide for the holding of a constitutional convention, nevertheless held con- ventions, the legality of which has not been questioned.

Jameson mentions twenty-seven such conventions held prior to 1887.4

1 Kamper v. Hawkins (1793), 3 Va. 20, 74.' ^ Articles of Confederation, Art. XIII. See p. 49, infra. 3 McCulloch V. Maryland (1819), 4 Wheat. 316, 404.

^ Jameson, p. 210, n. 1. These conventions are as follows: Arkansas, 1874; Connecticut, 1818; Georgia, 1833 and 1839; Indiana, 1850; Louisiana, 1852

40 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

Dodd reports three more prior to 1908, to wit: Missouri in 1890, Louisiana in 1898, and Connecticut in 1902.^ Since 1908, no popular conventions have been held: but Massachusetts is holding one in 1917, and Indiana is to hold one in 1918.

Jameson has the following to say on the legality of such conventions :

The question of the legitimacy of Conventions thus called, I shall have occasion to consider in other parts of this work, when treating of the relations of legislatures to Conventions, and of the powers of the former resulting from those relations. I shall, therefore, here only observe, — 1. That, whenever a Constitution needs a general revision, a Convention is indispensably necessary; and if there is contained in the Constitution no provision for such a body, the calling of one is, in my judgment, directly within the scope of the ordinary legislative power; and, 2. That, were it not a proper exercise of legislative power, the usurpation has been so often committed with the general acquiescence, that it is now too late to question it as such. It must be laid down as among the established prerogatives of our General Assemblies, that, the Constitution being silent, whenever they deem it expedient, they may call Conventions to revise the fundamental law.^

Cooley and the Supreme Courts of Alabama, Louisiana, and North Dakota have also said that, in the absence of any pro- hibition in the State constitution, a convention may be lawfully held.3

Dodd says, following Jameson's line of thought:

It has now become the established rule that where the constitu- tion contains no provision for the calling of a convention, but has no provision expressly confining amendment to a particular method, the legislature may provide by law for the calling of a con- vention — that is, the enactment of such a law is within the power

and 1879; Massachusetts, 1853; Missouri, 1845, 1861, and 1865; New Jersey, 1844; New York, 1801, 1821, and 1846; North CaroUna, 1835; Pennsylvania, 1837 and 1872; Rhode Island, 1824, 1832, 1841, and 1842; South Carolina, 1790; Tennessee, 1870; Texas, 1876; Virginia, 1829 and 1850. To this hst there should probably be added at least the following: Massachusetts, 1820; Delaware, 1791 and 1852; Maryland, 1850.

1 Dodd, p. 44.

2 Jameson, pp. 210-211.

3 Cooley, Const. Lims. (7 ed.), p. 56; Collier v. Frierson (1854), 24 Ala. 100, 108; State v. Am. Sugar Co. (1915), 137 La. 407, 413; State v. Dahl (1896), 6 N. D. 81.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 41

of the legislature unless expressly forbidden, and is considered a regular exercise of legislative power. ^

There are now twelve States which have no express con- stitutional provisions for the calling of conventions,^ yet in eight of these, to wit, Arkansas, Connecticut, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Massachusetts, conventions have been held without any serious question being made as to their legality.

In Rhode Island the question of holding a convention was in 1853 twice submitted to the people, but further submission of the question has been effectively discouraged by an adverse opinion of the Supreme Court of that State.^

In Vermont, the special commission appointed in 1908 to present to the next legislature proposals of amendment to the constitution, although it proposed some changes in the amend- ment clause, nevertheless omitted to propose the convention method and yet suggested the possibility of holding a con- vention, thus showing that in its opinion express constitutional authorization would be unnecessary.'*

The North Dakota Supreme Court has decided that the un- authorized convention would be lawful in that State.^ This opinion has recently been reiterated by the Attorney-General of that State.^

Some doubt has been expressed as to whether the Indiana convention of 1850 furnishes a precedent for holding a con- vention under the present constitution there. Although the constitution then in force authorized the holding of conventions, it cannot be considered as authorizing the convention of 1850, for the conventions authorized by the constitution were to be held in 1828, 1840, 1852, etc. It would seem, however, that it is even a stronger disregard of the constitution to hold a con- vention whenever you please, under a constitution which says you may hold it in 1828, 1840, or 1852, than to hold a conven- tion whenever you please, under a constitution which makes no mention of conventions; just as it would be more disobedient

» Dodd, p. 44.

2 "Columbia Dig." p. 21.

3 Opinion of Justices (1883), 14 R. I. 649.

4 Report of Jan. 6, 1910, pp. 3, 18. B State V. Dahl (1896), 6 N. D. 81.

6 N. D. House Journal, Jan. 26, 1917.

42 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

for a child to go down-town at 2:00, after obtaining permission to go at 3:00, than it would if his parents had never in all his life mentioned the subject of going down-town.

The Supreme Court of Indiana has asserted the legality of this convention.-^ The present constitution of Indiana contains no provision for the holding of conventions, yet one is about to be held there in 1918. But it is possible that this State, by striking out the convention provision from her constitution, manifested an intention never again to have a convention.^

Thus we see that in all of the twelve States whose constitu- tions are silent on the subject, except Rhode Island, and possibly Indiana, conventions can now be held.

Let us now consider the legal authorities which hold that this ought not to be so.

In several of the conventions of this class, the objection has been raised that they were illegitimate bodies because called without special authority in the respective constitutions.^

But as Jameson points out:

The objection has commonly been urged by a minority, whose party or other interests inclined them to look with disfavor upon any change in the existing Constitution.*

In spite of the ulterior nature of their motives, however, their views have found the way into some textbooks and encyclo- pedias. The following is an example:

The people must act by majorities, and in adopting the consti- tution the majority which does so has in effect prescribed the method by which the majority of the people may alter or amend it. An attempt by the majority to change the fundamental law in violation of the self-imposed restrictions is unconstitutional and revolutionary.^

And, as Jameson says, these objections gain some plausibility because of the existence of other methods of amending the respective constitutions.

There having been provided, it has been said, a mode in which constitutional changes might be effected, it was a violation of legal

1 Ellingham v. Dtje (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 377-378.

2 N. D. House Journal, Jan. 26, 1917. ' Jameson, p. 211, n. 3.

4 Jameson, p. 211. ^ 6 R. C. L., § 16.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 43

analogy to infer a power to do substantially the same thing in another way, not authorized specifically by the Constitution, ac- cording to the well established rule, expressio unius est exdusio alterius}

This was exactly the line of reasoning pursued by the only real legal authority against the validity of popular conventions, namely, the Supreme Court of Rhode Island. In an opinion rendered to the legislature in 1883, this court said:

The ordinary rule is that where power is given to do a thing in a particular way, there the affirmative words, marking out the par- ticular way, prohibit all other ways by implication, so that the particular way is the only way in which the power can be legally executed.

The mode provided in the Constitution for the amendment thereof is the only mode in which it can be constitutionally amended. . . . Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. . . . One of the greatest of modern jurists. Chief Justice Shaw, was of the same way of thinking, and, conjointly with his associates, declared it to be his opinion that the Constitution of Massachusetts is constitutionally amendable only as therein provided. . . . Any law inconsistent with it is void, and, therefore, if the provision which it contains for its own amendment is exclusive, implying a prohibition of amendments in any other manner, then, of course, any act of the Assembly providing for a convention to amend the Constitution is unconstitutional and void.^

It will be noticed that this opinion apparently cites the Su- preme Court of Massachusetts as being of like mind; yet a careful analysis of the language used by each court will show that the Providence Court does not so cite the Massachusetts Court, and that the Massachusetts Court did not so hold.

Before discussing the Massachusetts opinion itself, however, let us first take up another interpretation of it. Attorney- General Attwill of Massachusetts, in a legal opinion rendered to the legislature of 1917, squarely cites the Massachusetts Supreme Court as denj-ing the validity of constitutional con- ventions in that State; but having unnecessarily cited the court as taking this extreme position, he then proceeds to overrule the court by himself taking the opposite extreme position of holding that the convention is not only legal, but is expressly

1 Jameson, p. 211. 2 14 r. j. 649^ 651.

44 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

authorized by the Massachusetts constitution. The material parts of his opinion are as follows:

If the convention called to revise, alter or amend the Consti- tution pursuant to the vote of the people at the last annual elec- tion, under Gen. St. 1916, c. 98, is authorized by the provisions of our present Constitution, the position of a delegate to the con- vention is a " place under the authority of the Commonwealth."

It has been asserted by many, and seems to have been the opin- ion of the justices of the Supreme Judicial Court in an opinion to the Legislature (reported in 6 Cush. 573) that article IX of the Amendments to the Constitution, providing a method for the adoption of specific and particular amendments to our Constitu- tion, excluded by implication any authorization to the people to revise or change it by the convention method, and this view is not unsupported by other authority.^

He then quotes the various provisions of the Massachusetts constitution which recognize the right of the people to alter their form of government, and continues:

^ This incontestable, unalienable and indefeasible right, which indeed is the essence of a republican form of government, cannot, in my judgment, be taken away except by plain and unmistakable language. That the people of one generation can deprive the people of a succeeding generation of their unalienable right to reform, alter or totally change their form of government, except in a re-" stricted manner, when their protection, safety, prosperity and happiness require it, is repugnant to our theory of government, that the right to govern depends upon the consent of the governed. It seems to me a much more reasonable, if not a necessary, construc- tion of the Constitution to hold that article IX of the Amend- ments provides only a manner of amending the constitution in addi- tion to other methods that may be adopted by the people of changing their form of government, under the fundamental right guaranteed by the Bill of Rights, whenever "their protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness" require it. . . .

Accordingly, I am of the opinion that the Convention will be held under the authority of the Commonwealth.^

Thus Attorney-General Attwill, the latest authority on the subject, goes to the opposite extreme from the Rhode Island

1 1917 Mass. House Doc. 1711, p. 2.

2 1917 Mass. House Doc. 1711, pp. 2-^.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 45

Court, and goes further in sustaining the vah(Hty of popular conventions than any one before him. It would seem that he goes unnecessarily far.

Mr. Attwill's opinion would just as strongly support his conclusions (without, however, being as at present a rather forced construction of the constitution), if he had changed the italicized words (the italics are mine), by substituting for the word "authorized" the words "not effectually prohibited,"^ and for the word "guaranteed" the word "admitted."^ Read over his language with these two words changed.

Thus we find the Rhode Island Court ayyarently citing the Massachusetts Coiu-t as deciding that popular conventions are unconstitutional and void; and we find Mr. Attwill clearly so citing the court, but attempting to overrule it.

Let us now take up the Massachusetts case itself, and see what it really decided. The opinion reads as follows :

Under and pursuant to the existing Constitution, there is no authority given by any reasonable construction or necessary im- plication, by which any specific and particular amendment or amendments of the Constitution can be made, in any other manner than that prescribed in the ninth article of the amendments adopted in 1820. Considering that pre\aous to 1820 no mode was provided by the Constitution for its own amendment, that no other power for that purpose, than in the mode alluded to, is anywhere given in the Constitution, by implication or otherwise, and that the mode thereby provided appears manifestly to have been carefully considered, and the power of altering the Constitu- tion thereby conferred to have been cautiously restrained and guarded, we think a strong implication arises against the exist- ence of any other power, under the Constitution, for the same purposes.^

It will be noticed that all that this court decided was that ''under and pursuant to the existing constitution^' there is no authority for any other method of amendment than the one

^ See p. 50, infra.

^ The Bills of Rights cannot guarantee the self-evident rights asserted in the Declaration of Independence. As Jameson says: "If the truth in question is a self-evident truth, it is one which would obtain equally whether asserted in the Constitution .... . or not." Javieson, p. 236, cf. p. 53, infra. Grinnell, in II "Mass. Law Quarterly," p. 275, agrees with the author in the foregoing criticism. , 3 6 Cush. 573, 574.

46 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

therein provided; in other words, that there exists no other method "under the constitution"

The Rhode Island Court may have recognized this, for it cites the Massachusetts Court as holding that " the constitution of Massachusetts is constitutionally amendable only as therein provided." ^

The restrictions placed on their opinion by the Massachu- setts Justices will be better understood, if we glance at the opening words of that opinion, which are not usually quoted in this connection. The legislature had attempted to ascertain from the court whether amendments to the constitution could be made in any other manner than that prescribed in the con- stitution itself. The court avoided making a square answer to this question, although it was obvious that what the legislature wanted to know was whether they could legally call a conven- tion to revise the constitution. The court opened its opinion with these significant words:

The court do not understand, that it was the intention of the house of representatives, to request their opinion upon the natural right of the people in cases of great emergency, or upon the obvious failure of their existing constitution to accomplish the objects for which it was designed, to provide for the amendment or alteration of their fundamental laws; nor what would be the effect of any change and alteration of their constitution, made under such cir- cumstances and sanctioned by the assent of the people. Such a view of the subject would involve the general question of natural rights, and the inherent and fundamental principles upon which civil society is founded, rather than any question upon the nature, construction, or operation of the existing constitution of the com- monwealth, and the laws made under it. We presume, therefore, that the opinion requested applies to the existing constitution and laws of the commonwealth, and the rights and powers de- rived from and under them. Considering the questions in this light, etc., etc.^

Modern interpretations of this early Massachusetts opinion are as follows:

It was assumed in the opinion, that the opinion requested ap- plies to the existing constitution and laws of the Commonwealth and the rights and powers derived from and under them, and did

1 14 R. I. 649, 651. = e Cush. 573, 574.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 47

not depend upon the natural right of the people in cases of great emergency, or upon the obvious failure of their existing constitu- tion to accomplish the objects for which it was designed, to pro- vide for the amendment and alteration of their fundamental laws.^

It was contended that there was precedent for this opinion [i. e. the Rhode Island one] in an earher opinion of the supreme court of Massachusetts. A careful study of the opinion of the Massachusetts court, however, shows that its opinion related to another matter.^

Thus the Massachusetts Court recognizes the existence of the fundamental principles considered in the second chapter of this book, and the existence of a higher authority than that of the constitution itself. And although the court speaks of this higher right as existing "in cases of great emergency, or upon the obvious failure of their existing constitution," ^ yet the right has not been limited to such cases in actual practice in Massachusetts.

There the legislature in 1851 and again in 1852, without the existence of any emergency, submitted to the voters the ques- tion of holding a constitutional convention. On its second submission, the question carried, and a convention was held.

Judge Morton of the Massachusetts Supreme Court, after joining with his colleagues in expressing the already cited opin- ion that the convention method was unauthorized by the con- stitution, ran for the convention of 1853 and took a seat in that body. In the course of one of the debates, he said of the statute which had called the convention into being that it was law because it had been sanctioned by the votes of the people.^

The Massachusetts and the Rhode Island courts were perhaps right in saying that the existence of one express method for amending the constitution, impliedly prohibits the use of any other method of amendment; but the Rhode Island Court stands alone in drawing from this the conclusion that popular conventions are, therefore, invalid. The trouble with the Rhode

1 Arthur Lord, in II "Mass. Law Quarterly," 1, 24 (1916).

^ Holcombe, "State Government," p. 95.

^ The Rhode Island court, even, has recognized the right to hold unauthor- ized conventions "ex necessitate." Opinion of Justices (1883), 14 R. I. 649, 653.

4 Deb. Mass. Conv. of 1853, Vol. I, p. 76.

48 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

Island Court was that it could not conceive of anything not con- stitutional being valid.^

If the express authorization of the legislative method of amend- ment impliedly prohibits the convention method, a fortiori would the express authorization of the convention method impliedly pro- hibit the holding of a convention in ways not provided for. Yet conventions have been successfully held in Georgia in 1788, in Indiana in 1850, in Delaware in 1852, in Florida in 1865, and in Pennsylvania in 1789, in direct violation of such provisions.^

The Supreme Court of Indiana has recently asserted the legal- ity of such conventions:

It may be answered, that the General Assembly, in the action taken in those years, made no attempt to assume the power, under the general grant of authority to legislate, to formulate a new Con- stitution, or to revise the existing one. It merely asked the people to express their will in relation to calling a convention to revise or amend the Constitution, to be expressed through the ballot, and when it was expressed it was a warrant and a command which the legislative agency carried out as given. Under such circumstances, the calling of a convention, as Jameson in his work shows, is in accordance with sound political principles, and a well-recognized and established practice. The rule thus established in American constitutional law by the evolution of the constitutional convention from the two revolutionary conventions of England in 1666 [sic] and 1689, he shows is applicable to states like ours, ha\nng a limited provision for amendment, through the initiative of the legislature, but no provision for a convention for a general re\dsion.^

Compare:

The decided weight of authority and the more numerous prece- dents are arrayed on the side of the doctrine which supports the existence of this inherent legislative power to call a constitutional convention, notwithstanding the fact that the instrument itself points out how it may be amended.*

Not only have conventions been successfully held without question in States whose constitutions either are entirely silent

* On extraconstitutional validity, see p. 26, supra.

^ For descriptions of these conventions, see pp. 51-52, infra. 3 Ellingham v. Di/c (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 377-378.

* StcUe V. Dahl (1896), 6 N. D. 81, 87. Op. Atty. Gen., in N. D. House Jour- nal, Jan. 26, 1917.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 49

as to methods of amendment, or impliedly prohibit this method by naming another; but they have been even held in States whose constitutions expressly prohibit them.

In Delaware, where the constitution of 1776 provided that the constitution should not be " altered, changed or diminished, without the consent of five parts in seven of the assembly, and seven members of the legislative council," the legislature of that State in 1791 called a constitutional convention in spite of the provision that the constitution should be altered in only one way.^

So also the Maryland legislature called the convention of 1850, although the constitution of 1776 specifically provided that the constitution should be altered only by a bill passed by two successive general assemblies of that State.^ The Georgia constitution of 1798 contained a provision with respect to amendment similar to that in the Maryland con- stitution of 1776, but in this State also conventions were nevertheless held, namely, in the years 1833 and 1839.^

To these four examples of the legal holding of a constitutional convention, although expressly prohibited by the constitution, may be added the convention which framed the Constitution of the United States, as this convention was expressly prohib- ited by the following language in the Articles of Confederation:

The articles of this Union shall be perpetual; nor shall any alteration at any time hereafter be made in any of them; unless such alteration be agreed to in a Congress of the United States, and be afterwards confirmed by the Legislature of every State.*

The Rhode Island Supreme Court said in the already-cited opinion that "an implied is as effectual as an express pro- hibition.^ The court might well have said: "An express prohibition is as meffectual as an implied."

These five examples apparently completely dispose of Mr. Attwill's theory that popular conventions derive their validity through being expressly authorized by the constitution. Would not a better view be that the various Bills of Rights admit the existence of a higher power than the constitution, to wit, the

' Jameson, pp. 214-215. ^ Jameson, pp. 215-216.

3 Dodd, p. 44, n. 28. ^ Art. XIII.

5 Opinion oj Justices (1S83), 14 R. I. 649, 654.

50 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

will of the people; rather than that they graciously grant to succeeding generations a privilege which it would be in their power to withhold.

The Supreme Court of Massachusetts has recently refused to pass on the question of whether popular conventions are legal, and if so, whether they are held under the constitution; saying merely that ^f they are held under the constitution, such and such is the law. They say:

The validity and the powers of this convention are not neces- sarily involved in these questions. ... If the convention to revise and alter the Constitution is held under the Constitution, it is because the people of the Commonwealth have under the Con- stitution the right to alter their frame of government according to orderly methods as provided by law, and through the medium of an act of the Legislature.^

But even if these provisions in Bills of Rights may be con- sidered as expressly granting such a power to the people, they may be regarded as in much the same position as the man who was trying to show his authority over his dog by ordering him to sit up and beg. The dog refused to obey. Finally the man, still determined to show his authority, cried out: "Well, then, lie down! I will be obeyed!" If the constitution really does authorize the convention, this authorization is immaterial; for the constitution, as we have seen, would have no power to pro- hibit it.

This view may be carried still further to apply to even those constitutions which expressly authorize the holding of a con- vention. If these constitutions, too, would have no power to prohibit the convention, their authorization of it is at the most the mere providing of a means for the expression of a superior popular right.^ Most of the constitutions concede the right of the people to be at least consulted before a convention is held.

Thus the popular nature of even expressly authorized con- ventions is now generally recognized in practice, if not in theory. That the constitution is merely helping out a superior right, rather than granting a privilege to the people, is shown by the

1 1917 Mass. Senate Doc, 512.

^ A similar argument was successfully used in a contested election case in the Illinois convention of 1862. See p. 185, infra.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 51

fact that the people may accept so much of the constitutional assistance as they wish, and may disregard the constitutional limitations. Delaware furnishes us an example of this.

The Delaware constitution of 1831 provided that no con- stitutional convention should be called except by authority of the people, and that the only way to obtain this authority would be to take a vote on the third Tuesday of May of any year and obtain the affirmative vote "of a majority of all the citizens of the state having a right to vote for representatives." Acting under this provision of the constitution, the general assembly in 1851 passed an act to take the vote of the people. At the election held under this act a majority of the votes cast were in favor of a convention, but the number was not sufficient to constitute a majority of all citizens who had a right to vote for representatives. Nevertheless the legislature declared that the question had carried and passed another act calling a convention.^

If the constitution of Delaware could effectively limit the right of the people to call a convention, then this convention was illegal and void. If, on the other hand, the people can lawfully disregard the constitution even in cases where the constitution provides for a convention, then this convention was valid. The question arose in the convention itself, and the majority opinion of the delegates was that the clause of the constitution was merely recommendatory, not peremptory.^

Similarly with respect to the Indiana convention of 1850. The Indiana constitution in 1816, then in force, authorized the calling of a convention every twelfth year, but a convention was held within one of the twelve-year periods, and was never questioned.^

The Pennsylvania convention of 1789 also belongs in this class. The constitution then in force in that State provided that it should be amended only in a manner therein directed, namely, by a convention called by the council of censors. An attempt was twice made to obtain a majority of the censors in favor of calling a convention, but both attempts failed. Finally, just prior to the sitting of the next council, the gen- eral assembly took the matter into its own hands by obtaining

1 Jameson, p. 209, n. 1. 2 Jameson, p. 209, n. 1.

* Jameson, p. 210, n. 1,

52 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

a popular expression of opinion on the expediency of holding a convention. This was done by an informal canvass during a recess of the legislature. The result satisfied the members that the people wished a convention, and one was accordingly called, which framed and established the constitution of 1790.^

Similarly with respect to the series of Georgia conventions in 1788-1789. The constitution of 1777, then in force, authorized a convention upon the petition of a majority of the voters of a majority of the counties. The legislature disregarded this provision and appointed a convention in 1788 to draft a new constitution. The people elected delegates to a convention in the fall of that year which modified the constitution drafted by the first convention and submitted it to a third convention elected by the people in 1789.^ Yet Jameson refers to the "regularity" of this procedure.^

Similarly with respect to the Florida convention of 1865. The constitution of 1838 of that State provided that "no con- vention of the people shall be called, unless by the concurrence of two thirds of each House of the General Assembly." Yet the Florida constitution of 1865 was drawn by a convention called by the Governor, and was sustained by the Supreme Court of the State.^

These five examples would seem to establish the principle that conventions, even when expressly authorized by the con- stitution, are nevertheless popular in their nature, and have pretty much the same standing as though the constitution had been silent on the subject. In other words, constitutional provisions permitting the holding of conventions are, like legislative acts on the subject, merely recommendatory to the people.

Thus we come back to the fact that all conventions are valid if called by the people speaking through the electorate at a regular election. This is true, regardless of whether the con- stitution attempts to prohibit or to authorize them, or is merely silent on the subject. Their validity rests not upon constitu- tional provision nor upon legislative act, but upon the funda- mental sovereignty of the people themselves.

1 Jameson, pp. 213-214. 2 j)q^^ p, 42.

2 Jameson, p. 135.

4 Bradford v. Shine (1871), 13 Fla. 393, 415.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 53

Judge Jameson makes an interesting attempt to reconcile his theory of legislative supremacy with the fundamental principles from which he, as an able jurist, is unable to escape. It may prove instructive to analyze his views on this point.

He says as follows:

Revolution can never be resorted to under the Federal Con- stitution, or under any other Constitution, legally; but, when the evils under which a commonwealth languishes, become so great as to make revolution, including insurrection and rebellion, less in- tolerable than an endurance of those evils, it will be justifiable, although the Federal relations of that commonwealth may be such as to array against her forces vastly greater than they would be were she and the other States independent and isolated com- munities. The right of revolution stands not upon the letter of any law, but upon the necessity of self-preservation, and is just as perfect in the single man, or in the petty State, as in the most numerous and powerful empire in the world. This right, the founders of our system were careful to preserve, not as a right under, but, when necessity demanded its exercise, over our Con- stitutions, State and Federal.

Thus, the Declaration of Independence affirms, "that whenever any form of government becomes destructive" of the ends of govern- ment, "it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute a new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form as to them shall seem most hkely to effect their safety and happiness."

Not only so, but it classes this affirmation among the" self-evident truths: "We hold these truths to be self-evident."

Now, no truth can be self-evident, which becomes evident only under particular conditions, as when it is deducible only from the construction of legal instruments, or from the provisions of some positive code. It must be a truth independently of such conditions, as would be indispensable to give it rank as a legal truth. If the truth in question is a self-evident truth, it is one which would obtain equally whether asserted in the Constitution and laws or not.

The second class of documents consists in the Bills of Rights of a large number of our Constitutions, containing broad general asser- tions of the right of a people to alter or abolish their form of govern- ment, at any time, and in such manner as they may deem expedient. The peculiarity of these documents is, that they seem to assert

54 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

the right in question as a legal right; at least, they furnish a plausible argument for those who are willing to have it believed that the right is a legal one; when, in fact, it is a revolutionary right. The framers of those Constitutions generally inserted in them provisions for their own amendment. Had nothing further been said, it might have been inferred, that no other mode of securing needed changes was under any circumstances to be pursued, but that prescribed in those instruments. Such, however, was not the intention of their framers. They meant to leave to the people, besides, the great right of revolution, formally and solemnly as- serted in the Declaration of Independence. They, therefore, affirmed it to be a right of the people to alter or abolish their Constitutions, in any manner whatever; that is, first, legally, in the mode pointed out in their Constitutions, or by the customary law of the land ; and secondly, illegally, that is, for sufficient causes, by revolutionary force.^

Judge Jameson lays down these fundamental principles absolutely correctly. He recognizes that a change of govern- ment under the fundamental right of the people is a right over our constitutions rather than a right under them. In other words, it is an extraconstitutional or supraconstitutional right, rather than a constitutional right. He recognizes that the self-evident truths laid down by the Declaration of Independ- ence and the Bills of Rights would obtain equally, whether asserted in the constitution or not. In other words, con- stitutions do not guarantee these rights; they merely admit them.

Where he errs is when he tries to apply these principles to his preconceived theory. He divides conventions into merely two classes, i. e. legal and revolutionary. This classification would fit very nicely were it not for the existence of the four cases already referred to, in which conventions were held in the very teeth of prohibitory provisions in the existing constitutions. Jameson himself refers to three of these conventions, and admits that they were wholly illegitimate in their origin. He goes on to say:

It is obvious, that to justify such proceedings, on legal grounds, would be to take away from the fundamental law that character- istic quality by which it is the law of laws — the supreme law of

^ Jameson, pp. 235-236.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 55

the land. If it be not the supreme law, for all the purposes of a Constitution, in the American sense, it might as well be a piece of blank paper. . . .

There is in my judgment, no way in which* the action of those bodies, in those cases, can be justified, except by affirming the legal right of the inhabitants of a given territory, organized as a body politic, to meet at will, as individuals, without the authority of law, and, on their own claim that they are the people of the State, to dictate to the government such changes in its laws. Constitution, or policy, as they may deem desirable.^

Thus Jameson has to classify these conventions as merely spontaneous, although forced to admit at least their de facto validity. Is it not simpler to classify these conventions, together with conventions held in the absence of any mention in the constitutions, as in a class standing halfway between con- stitutional cases and cases in which the convention requires armed force for its assistance? In other words, the following out of the fundamental principles, as laid down by Jameson himself, forces us to the classification adopted at the opening of Chapter III, namely, authorized conventions, popular con- ventions, and spontaneous conventions.

Judge Walker, in the latest edition of his monumental work on American law, has this to say relative to popular sovereignty:

This indeed is self-evident, since all power comes from the people. They have created the government, and may destroy it, when it ceases to satisfy them. Delegated power, as above stated, is not irrevocable. . . . But it is needless to enlarge upon the general right of revolution. It must of necessity exist, whenever a majority desire it, even though the existing government should be in terras made perpetual, as some of the provisions in our con- stitutions are declared to be.^

Judge Jameson's description of legitimate revolution, quoted a little way back,^ fits exactly the great class of conventions which the present author has denominated "popular," and which Jameson himself admits are not authorized by any con- stitution. Following his definition, we may assume that popular conventions are extra- or supra-constitutional.

' Jameson, p. 217.

2 Walker, American Law (11 ed.), p. 231.

* Jameson, p. 235. See pp. 53-54, supra.

56 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

As he himself punningly puts it, the right of the people to change their government is not a right under the constitution, but is rather a right over the constitution.^

Or to quote from the Supreme Court of Virginia in an early decision :

The convention of Virginia had not the shadow of a legal, or constitutional form about it. It derived its existence and authority from a higher source; a power which can supersede all law, and annul the constitution itself — namely, the people, in their sovereign, unlimited, and unlimitable authority and capacity.^

Or from the Supreme Court of New York:

Neither the calling of a convention, nor the convention itself is a proceeding under the constitution. It is over and beyond the constitution.^

It is true, however, that the Rhode Island Supreme Court and Dodd can be cited in opposition to this idea of a sanction above and superior to the constitution.

Dodd says that the convention is in no sense an extraconsti- tutional body.'* But that statement may very well be true with respect to conventions in his State, Maryland, |where the constitution expressly authorizes them; without, however, being at all true with respect to popular conventions.

The Rhode Island Court says:

Finally, it has been contended that there is a great unwritten common law of the states, which existed before the Constitution, and which the Constitution was powerless to modify or abolish, under which the people have the right, whenever invited by the General Assembly, and as some maintain, without any invitation, to alter and amend their constitutions. If there be any such law, for there is no record of it, or of any legislation or custom in this State recognizing it, then it is, in our opinion, rather a law, if law it can be called, of revolutionary than of constitutional change. Our Constitution is, as already stated, by its own terms, the supreme law of the State. We know of no law, except the Constitution and laws of the United States, which is paramount to it.^

* Jameson, p. 235.

2 Kamper v. Haivkins (1793), 3 Va. 20, 74.

3 Journal, 69th N. Y. Assembly, p. 919.

4 Dodd, p. 72.

6 Opinion of Justices (1883), 14 R. I. 649, 654.

POPULAR CONVENTIONS ARE LEGAL 57

But we must take into consideration the fact that the court were undoubtedly influenced by a recollection of Dorr's Re- bellion, and so denied not only the existence of any such thing as extraconstitutional law, but also the validity of the popular convention, which even Dodd admits.

This is also admitted by the Declaration of Independence and practically all of the various American Bills of Rights.^

Thus we may conclude that although popular conventions are not constitutional, it does not necessarily follow from this that they are void, although the Rhode Island Supreme Court so contends.^ They are really authorized by a power above the constitution, to wit, the sovereignty of the people, and hence are supraconstitutional and perfectly valid .^

1 See pp. 12-14, supra.

2 Opinion of Justices (1883), 14 R. I. 649.

' Frank W. Grinnell, one of the ablest of the ultra-conservative members of the Massachusetts bar, has an article in No. 4 of Vol. II of the "Massachusetts Law Quarterly" (pp. 274^280) (appearing too late to quote in this book), in which article he too asserts the extraconstitutionality of conventions which are not expressly mentioned in the constitution. On the general subject of this chapter, see particularly "Methods of Changing the Constitutions of the States, Especially that of Rhode Island," by Charles S. Bradley, ex-Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island. Boston, 1885.

Chapter V WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION?

Whether the legislature has the power to amend the act by which a convention is called is an important question to be treated later in this book. It depends in part upon a considera- tion of whether it is the legislature or the people who originally enacted that act. In fact, the whole matter of the status of the convention and of its members depends to some extent upon a solution of this problem, to which this chapter will accordingly be devoted.

First let us eliminate certain types of convention to which this discussion does not properly relate. Since the introduction of the initiative and referendum in the West and Middle West, not only may constitutional amendments be made in twelve States by an initiative petition without the interposi- tion of either the legislature or a convention;^ but also in six additional States, the people can initiate and adopt a measure providing for the holding of a convention; and may, by referen- dum, veto any statutes by which the legislature attempts to interfere with a convention.^ In all of these States except Ar- kansas, Maine, and North Dakota, the constitutions provide that legislative acts for the calling of a convention must be referred to the people; ^ and in these three under the referendum, the people can compel the reference of this question to them. Thus in these States the convention is entirely, absolutely, and un- questionably within the control of the people, and hence owes nothing of its authority to the legislature.

So, too, if we adopt the theory that conventions which are

^ These States are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Michigan, Mis- souri, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Oregon. "Co- lumbia Digest," p. 771.

^ These States are Idaho, Maine, Montana, South Dakota, Utah, and Washington. "Columbia Digest," p. 771.

' "Columbia Digest," p. 21.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 59

expressly authorized by the constitution derive their authority from that document rather than from the people, we may dis- regard such cases for the purposes of this discussion.

Most of the constitutions which contain provisions for the calhng of conventions now provide that they be called after the legislature has submitted the question of a convention to the people and has obtained their approval, such a popular vote to be taken whenever the legislatures themselves may think proper. The first provisions of this character were those contained in the Delaware constitution of 1792,^ the Tennessee constitution of 1796,^ the Kentucky constitution of 1799,^ and the Ohio constitution of 1802.'* The Kentucky provision of 1799, which was substantially repeated in the constitution of 1850, threw great obstacles in the way of calling a convention, by requiring two successive popular votes; but this plan was not followed by other States except in the one case of the Louisiana constitution of 1812.^ The Kentucky constitution of 1891 discarded the requirement, but does require the vote of two successive gen- eral assemblies to propose the question to the people.^ The plan of permitting the legislature at its discretion to submit to the people the question of calling a constitutional convention, has for many years been the most popular one, and is now in force by the constitutions of twenty-five States.^

Some States do not even leave it to the discretion of the legis- lature as to when the people shall vote on the question of calling a convention, but specifically provide by their constitutions that popular votes shall be taken at definite intervals. There are now six States which require the periodical submission of this question.^ The constitutions of four of these permit the legislature to submit the question to the people at other than the regular periodical times. ^

1 Thorpe, Vol. 1, p. 580. * Thorpe, Vol. 6, p. 3421.

' Thorpe, Vol. 3, p. 1288. * Thorpe, Vol. 5, p. 2908.

s Thorpe, Vol. 5, p. 1390. ^ ^ Thorpe, Vol. 5, p. 1355.

^ These States are Alabama, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vir- ginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. "Columbia Digest," pp. 22-23.

* These States are : Maryland, New Hampshire, Iowa, Michigan, New York, and Ohio. " Columbia Digest," p. 22.

* Iowa, Michigan, New York, and Ohio. " Columbia Digest," p. 22.

60 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

The Oklahoma constitution requires the legislature to sub- mit the question at least once in every twenty years, leaving the particular time to the legislature's discretion.^

Thus the practice of obtaining the popular approval for the calling of a convention may be said to have become almost the settled rule. Thirty-two State constitutions require such a popular expression of approval, and even where it has not been expressly required, such a popular vote has been taken in a majority of cases in recent years.^

Maine and Georgia are the only States whose constitutions now provide for the holding of a constitutional convention, without also containing a provision for first obtaining the ap- proval of the people.^

In the case of these States it may be argued that the conven- tion derives its authority from the legislature alone; although in the case of Maine it may well be argued that the convention derives its authority from popular acquiescence, as manifested in the failure of the people to circulate a referendum petition; and in both cases it might possibly be argued (on the analogy of the Pennsylvania decision to be discussed a little later in this chapter) that the people ratify the legislative statute by par- ticipating in the election of delegates under it.

In the case of the thirty-two State constitutions which require a popular vote in advance of calling the convention, it may be contended that the people call the convention under a permission graciously conferred on them by the constitution, but the Dela- ware, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Florida cases discussed in the last chapter,^ in which cases valid conventions were held in open disregard of constitutional provisions relative to the manner of holding conventions, lend weight to the theory that a con- vention authorized by the constitution stands upon no different footing with respect to the source of its authority, than a con- vention which is not so authorized, or than one which is even prohibited.

As we saw, when discussing fundamental principles in Chapter II, if conventions are beyond the jurisdiction of the constitu- tion, it matters not whether the constitution attempts to pro-

^ "Columbia Digest," p. 22. ^ See infra, p. 66.

3 "Columbia Digest," p. 21. * Supra, pp. 51-52.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 61

hibit or to authorize them, or is silent on the subject; all such conventions are supraconstitutional.^

Nevertheless, the New Hampshire Supreme Court has said that where a convention is authorized by the constitution, it becomes an ordinary legislative matter to call the convention and arrange the details.^ The question of who calls the conven- tion was not, however, before the court.

This brings us to that class of conventions, the discussion of which is the chief object of this book, namely, conventions held under the authority of supraconstitutional fundamental law.

When the legislators, acting as the representatives of the people, call such a convention without first submitting the ques- tion to their constituents, it is clear that in the absence of any other controlling circumstance, the convention owes its existence to the legislature. But there is some doubt as to whether the legislature can legally call a convention without obtaining the popular permission.^

When the legislature submits to the people the question of holding a convention, there is much disputed authority and precedent as to whether the convention act is enacted in whole, in part, or at all, by the people. There are two classes of cases for us to consider: (1) those in which the convention act is passed prior to the submission of the question to the people, and (2) those in which the people first express their opinion and then the legislature calls the convention. Let us first consider the former class of cases.

This question is to some extent wrapped up in the question of the power of the legislature to amend the convention act, to be discussed in a later chapter,^ and the two questions have been more or less confused by the courts and textbook writers. The author will endeavor, however, to disentangle them.

We saw, in the preceding chapter, that Jameson justified the legality of popular conventions on the ground that "the calling of one is, in my judgment, directly within the scope of the ordinary legislative power." ^

^ Supra, p. 26.

2 Opinion of Justices (1911), 76 N. H. 586, 587.

^ See pp. 66-68, infra.

"^ See Chapter VIII, infra.

^ Supra, p. 40. Jameson, p. 211.

62 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

And Dodd follows him with, "The enactment of such a law ... is considered a regular exercise of legislative power." ^ Dodd has somewhat modified his views since he wrote the last quota- tion, as is shown by the fact that in a more recent article of his he omits to make any such statement.^ Jameson's idea raises at once the question as to whether the calling of a convention is within the powers of a legislature at all; for if not, that settles the question of the authorship of the convention act. This is exactly the line of reasoning pursued by the New York Supreme Court, which said:

The legislature is not supreme. It is only one of the instruments of that absolute sovereignty which resides in the whole body of the people. Like other departments of the government, it acts under a delegation of powers; and cannot rightfully go beyond the limits which have been assigned to it. This delegation of powers has been made by a fundamental law, which no one department of the govern- ment, nor all the departments united, have authority to change. That can only be done by the people themselves. A power has been given to the legislature to propose amendments to the Con- stitution, which, when approved and ratified by the people, become a part of the fundamental law. But no power has been delegated to the legislature to call a convention to revise the Constitution. That is a measure which must come from, and be the act of the people themselves.^

Compare Thompson, speaking in the Virginia convention of 1829:

No one ever supposed that the Acts to take the sense of the people, and to organize a Convention, were Acts of ordinary legis- lation; or, properly speaking. Acts of legislation at all, as little so as an election by that body of any officer. . . . The truth is, the action of the ordinary legislature on this subject ... is not of the character of ordinary legislation. It is in the nature of a resolve or ordinance adopted by the agents of the people, not in their legislative character, for the purpose of collecting and ascertain- ing the public will, both as to the call and organization of a Con- vention and upon the ratification or rejection of the work of a Convention.

1 Dodd, p. 44.

^ I " Cyc. American Government," 427.

2 Journal, G9th N. Y. Assembly, p. 919. This opinion was approved in full by a committee lieaded by Elihu Root, in a report to the New York Convention of 1894. Rev. Record, Vol. I, pp. 258-260, 270.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 63

It being a matter of interest to know what the acts were, if not acts of legislation, the speaker thus explained his views on that subject:

The Acts spoken of were called for by their constituents, resulted from the necessity of the case, and were justified by that supreme and paramount law, the salus populi. In short, they supplied the only mode by which the original right of the people to meet in full and free Convention to reform, alter, or abolish their form of government, could be exercised without jeopardizing the peace, tranquillity, and harmony of the State. ^

And compare the following from the Supreme Courts of South Carolina, Michigan, North Dakota, Massachusetts, and Indiana respectively :

The legislature in passing the act for calling together the con- vention, were not acting in their legislative capacity. The act has no relation to the general powers of legislation.^

Nowhere in article 4, entitled "Legislative Department," is any reference made expressly or impliedly to amendments or re- visions of the Constitution. Only by section 2, article 20, has the legislature any power to act upon a revision of the Constitution. The power there conferred is ministerial rather than legislative. But the name is immaterial. It does not require the approval of the governor to make it valid. It is made the sole agency by which the people may determine (1) whether they desire a revision, and (2) if they decide that they do, to provide for the election of delegates.^

That it did not take the form of an ordinary law is too clear for controversy. The joint resolution has no title. Its enacting clause is not couched in the language prescribed by the constitution to be employed in the enactment of ordinary laws; nor was it ever sub- mitted to the governor for approval. Whenever it is necessary that the expression of sovereign will should take the form of ordi- nary legislation, these requirements must be strictly observed. But, in declaring its purpose that a specific proposition should be submitted to the people for their approval or disapproval, the legislature is not discharging the ordinary function of enacting laws.*

^ Jameson, pp. 579-580.

2 McCready v. Hunt (1834), 2 Hill Law (S. C.) 1, 271.

3 Carton v. Secy, of State (1908), 151 Mich. 337, 341.

4 State V. Dahl (1896), 6 N. D. 81, 82.

64 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

The Constitution has vested no authority in the legislature in its ordinary action to provide by law for submitting to the people the expediency of calling a Convention of delegates for the purpose of revising or altering the Constitution of the Commonwealth.^

In assuming to legislate in relation to structural changes in the government, the legislature is not acting within the power it takes under the general grant of authority to enact, alter and repeal laws under and pursuant to the Constitution.^

Compare Dodd: "The process of amendment is a process of superior legislation,"^

Now, if a convention act is not ordinary legislation, does it not therefore verge on being a "fundamental law"? Jameson has himself pointed out that :

Of the power of the people to enact fundamental laws there is not only no doubt, but it is clear that no other body has power to enact them, except by express warrant for the particular occasion.*

And compare Braxton:

The People alone have the power of enacting or changing the Fundamental Law; . . . from them alone does the Convention derive its powers in that regard.^

These quotations ought to be sufficient to differentiate the passage of ordinary laws from the passage of laws which verge on the fundamental.

Another point which bears strongly on this is that although the legislature of Massachusetts, prior to the adoption of the XLII Amendment, could not lawfully refer to a popular vote any question within the legislature's own legislative powers,^ yet the legislature could lawfully refer to a popular vote, a statute calling a constitutional convention, thus showing that such a statute is not within the legislative powers of the legis- lature, but is within the legislative powers of the electorate.^

1 Opinion of Justices (1833), 6 Cush. 573, 574-575.

2 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 357.

3 Dodd, p. 232.

^ Jameson, p. 395, n. 1. 6 Braxton, VII " Va. Law Reg.," 100, 101.

* Opinion of Justices (1894), 160 Mass. 586, 589. See also Jameson, pp. 420-421, and n. 1.

^ This was successfully done in 1819 and 1852.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 65

A still further consideration is as follows: If it be the legis- lature which enacts the convention act and thus calls the convention into being, then the legislature can confer on another body {i. e. the convention) a power {i. e. to propose a con- stitution) which the legislature itself does not possess;^ which is absurd.^

The most recent court decision on the subject might appear, from the following language, to agree with Jameson's original idea that a convention act is ordinary legislation:

In the absence of any provision in the Constitution on the sub- ject it seems that the legislature alone can give validity to a con- vention. See 6 R. C. L., § 17, p. 27.^

But when we look up the court's reference to R. C. L., a different face is put on the matter, for R. C. L. says:

In the absence of any provision in the constitution on the sub- ject, it seems that the legislature alone can give legality to a con- vention. Where a change in the constitution is made under pro- ceedings initiated by the legislature it is not because the legislature possesses any inherent power to change the existing constitution through a convention, but because it is the only means through which an authorized consent of the whole people, the entire state, can be lawfully obtained.^

And later, in the court decision itself, it is held that the particular convention referred to was the creature of the people.^

Thus, regardless of whether the legislature may all by itself legally call a convention, it is clear that the weight of authority is against the view that the calling of a convention is among the regular legislative powers.

Judge Cooley does not ascribe to the regular legislative pow- ers the right to institute convention proceedings, but rather ascribes this right to the fact that some department must start the ball rolling and that the legislature is the best fitted for this, being nearest the people.^

* See p. 85, infra.

^ Senator Niles, in Jameson, p. 196.

3 State V. American Sugar Co. (1915), 137 La. 407, 413.

« 6 R. C. L., § 17, p. 27.

5 State V. American Sugar Co. (1915), 137 La. 407, 415,

6 Cooley, Const. Lims. (7 ed.), pp. 56, 59-60.

66 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

The Massachusetts Supreme Court in its recent opinion says that if the convention is held under the constitution (which we have seen it is not), the people have a right to proceed through the medium of an act of the legislature. But they do not state whether or not this act becomes the act of the people.^

It is undoubted that conventions have in the past been called by legislatures without advance permission from the voters, but the growing tendency has been to first take a popular vote.^

Thus Jameson, although he is the chief exponent of the doctrine of absolute legislative supremacy, says:

The intervention of the legislature is necessary to give a legal starting-point to a Convention, and to hedge it about by such re- straints as shall ensure obedience to the law; but as a Convention ought to be called only when demanded by the public necessities, and then to be as nearly as possible the act of the sovereign body itself, it would seem proper to leave the matter to the decision of the electoral body, which stands nearest to the sovereign, and best represents its opinion. Such seems to be the prevailing senti- ment in most of the States.^

And in New York in 1820 a convention act was vetoed for the following reasons :

It is worthy, therefore, of great consideration, and may well be doubted, whether it belongs to the ordinary legislature, chosen only to make laws in pursuance of the provisions of the existing Con- stitution, to call a Convention in the first instance, to revise, alter, and perhaps remodel the whole fabric of the government, and

1 1917 Mass. Senate Doc. 512.

2 Dodd, pp. 46-47, and n. 36; Jameson, p. 210, and n. 1. Jameson's note does not [differentiate between conventions called with, and those called with- out, popular permission. Dodd's note is inaccurate. Of the conventions cited by them, the author has only been able to find that the follomng were called by the legislature acting alone: New York, 1801; Connecticut, 1818; Rhode Island, 1824, 1834, 1841 and 1842; New Jersey, 1844; North Carolina, 1876; Louisiana, 1879; Mississippi, 1890; and a majority of the secession and reconstruction con- ventions. The New York convention came so shortly after the Revolution as to be almost a War convention. Those of Connecticut and Rhode Island were called by charter legislatures with unlimited powers. The New Jersey consti- tution of 1776 was amendable by the legislature. The rest of the conventions were Southern, doubtless based on Civil War precedents.

^ Jameson, p. 111.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 67

before they have received a legitimate and full expression of the will of the people that such changes should be made.^

Compare the following:

That in the opinion of this Convention, without intending to call in question the motives of the members of the Legis- lature, by the call of this Convention, the Legislature, at its late extraordinary session, was unauthorized by the people; and that said act, in peremptorily ordering a Convention of the people of the State, without first submitting to them the question whether there should be a Convention or no Convention, was an un- warranted assumption of power by the Legislature; at war with the spirit of republican institutions, an encroachment upon the rights of the people, and can never be rightfully invoked as a precedent.^

. . . the agents of the people, who have not been selected on that particular issue, should not take upon themselves the responsibility of burdening the people with the expense of such a movement, without first submitting to them the question of whether they de- sire such a convention to be called. The argument against the taking of the initiative by the legislature in such cases, without first ascertaining public sentiment on the question, is so strong, and Hes so plainly on the surface, that in many states the constitution, in terms, requires the submission of the proposition to popular vote, and a majority vote in its favor, before the legislature can legally summon the people to meet in convention to revise their organic law.3

The coming Indiana convention of 1918 sharply diverges from this tendency, for the legislature passed the convention act, not only without popular permission, but actually in the teeth of a popular refusal.^ The legislature of 1913 submitted to the electorate the question of calling a convention, and the electorate overwhelmingly voted in the negative. Neverthe- less, the legislature went right ahead, just as though they had obtained the authority from a favorable vote,^ and passed the convention act of 1917. But the courts of Indiana are prone

' Jameson, p. 670.

2 Journal, Miss. Conv. 18.51, pp. 48 and 50.

3 State V. Dahl (1896), 6 N. D. 81, 86.

^ The only precedent for such action is the Rhode Island convention of 1824. But the people repudiated the work of this convention, two to one. Mowry, "The Dorr War," pp. 30-33.

« See pp. 73-74, infra.

68 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

to upset any legislative encroachments upon the process of alter- ing the fundamental law;^ and so, until we see whether or not the courts interfere with this convention, it would be best not to regard it as a precedent.

But see a 1915 court opinion, which cites Cooley:

None of the Constitutions of the state of Louisiana contains provisions relative to conventions of the people, except the Con- stitution of 1812.

This silence of the organic law on the subject-matter leaves the question of calling such convention to the representatives of the people in legislative session convened.^

Later passages, however, in this same opinion show that the court, like Judge Cooley, regarded the legislature as the mere initiator of the proceedings, and regarded the electorate as the real source of the convention's powers.^

Compare Ruling Case Law:

Call of Constitutional Conventions. — The customary manner of calling constitutional conventions in the United States is by resolution of the legislature followed by a submission of the question to the electorate.*

And compare a 1916 writer:

The weight of opinion to-day seems to be that the legislature may properly submit to the people the question of holding a con- vention to revise the constitution, and if the voters elect to hold such a convention the amendments proposed by that convention, if ratified by the people, become a part of the fundamental constitu- tion, in the absence of any provisions of the constitution prohibiting such a method of amendment.''

Thus convention-calling is not a regular function of the legis- lature, and there is a growing tendency toward the view that the legislature has no power to call a convention without first obtaining permission from the people. In case that permission is obtained, who is it that calls the convention?

The Supreme Court of Massachusetts said in 1833:

1 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336.

2 State V. Am. Sugar Co. (1915), 137 La. 407, 413.

3 State V. Am. Suqar Co. (1915), 137 La. 407, 415.

4 6 R. C. L., § 17, p. 27.

6 n "Mass. Law Quarterly," 1, 26.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 69

If . . . the people, by the terms of their vote, decide to call a convention of delegates ... we are of opinion that such delegates would derive their whole authority and commission from such vote.^

Marcus Morton, one of the judges to join in rendering this opinion, amplified it as follows in the Massachusetts convention of 1853, in which he sat as a delegate:

This Act derives its force directly from the people. The legis- lature only proposed the Act, and the people of the Commonwealth having sanctioned it by their votes, it became law. . . . The legislature had the right of proposing the Act calling a Convention, and of submitting it to the people; but its whole force is derived from acceptance of the Act by the people of the Commonwealth themselves.^

The New York Supreme Court in 1846 had likewise said:

A convention is not a government measure, but a movement of the people, having for its object a change, either in whole or in part, of the existing form of government.

As the people have not only omitted to confer any power on the Legislature to call a Convention, but have also prescribed another mode of amending the organic law, we are unable to see that the Act of 1845 had any obligatory force at the time of its enactment. It could only operate by way of advice or recommendation, and not as a law. It amounted to nothing more than a proposition or suggestion to the people, to decide whether they would or would not have a convention. The question the people have settled in the affirmative, and the law derives its obligation from that act, and not from the power of the Legislature to pass it.

The people have not only decided in favor of a Convention, but they have determined that it shall be held in accordance with the provisions of the Act of 1845. No other proposition was before them, and of course their votes could have had reference to nothing else.^

See also the following quotations to the same effect:

A constitutional convention lawfully convened, does not derive its powers from the legislature, but from the people.*

' Opinion of Justices (1833), 6 Cush. 573, 575.

2 Deb. Mass. Conv. 1853, Vol. I, p. 76.

3 Journal, 69th N. Y. Assembly, p. 919.

« Loomis V. Jackson (1873), 6 W. Va. 613, 708.

70 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

It is the People, and the People alone, who enacted the call for this Convention, by adopting the proposition submitted to them by the Legislature in 1900.^

When the call for the Convention was adopted by the People, in 1900, it became the act of the People, and not of the Legislature, which merely framed and proposed it.^

The people, when they voted for the holding of the Convention, voted for it to be held "in accordance wath Act No. 52 of 1896."^

The Constitutional Convention . . . derives its authority di- rectly from the people.*

We cannot suppose that the voters meant that it was their wall that a Convention should be called, without any regard to the time, place, or manner, of calling the Convention ; for that was all pre- scribed in the Act of 1852, under which they voted. . . . The voters must have well understood the whole matter when they were called upon to signify their will. When, therefore, they voted that it was expedient to call a Convention to revise the Constitu- tion, that vote must have carried with it a desire that the Conven- tion should be called with regard to the time, place, and manner, indicated in the Act; and that the vote carried with it everything contained in the Act in relation to the manner of voting, the holding of meetings, where they should be called, and where the elections should be held. They expected and intended all these to conform to the Act when they gave that Act their sanction.^

When the people, acting under a proper resolution of the Leg- islature, vote in favor of calling a convention, they are pre- sumed to ratify the terms of the call, which thereby becomes the basis of the authority delegated to the convention.^

Opposed to this idea of popular origin is Jameson's theory that " so far as those Acts were ever to have force as laws, they were to derive it from the legislature." ^

Hon. Joel Parker maintained the correctness of this position in the Massachusetts convention of 1853, as follows:

1 Braxton, VII "Va. Law Reg.," 100, 103.

2 Braxton, VII " Va. Law Reg.," 100, 104.

3 State V. Capdevielle (1901), 104 La. 561, 569. * Braxton, VII " Va. Law Reg.," 79, 97.

6 Speech of Mr. Hyde, Deb. Mass. Conv. 1853, Vol. I, p. 124.

6 6 R. C. L., § 18, p. 27; State v. Am. Sugar Co. (1915), 137 La. 407, 415.

' Jameson, p. 398.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 71

The contingency attached to it [convention act of 1852] gave it no different character from that of any other act upon the statute book. It was passed under the constitution and by the legislature as a legislative act. The act provided for putting the question to the people and the question was put. The people answered in such a way that the rest of the act took effect as an act of the legislature and not as an act of the people distinct from the legislature; it gave to the act no other character than that which it had possessed before as a legislative act.^

Rufus Choate has expressed a more moderate point of view than Jameson and Parker, in the following words:

Wliat did the people, in point of fact, do in regard to tliis point of the law of 1852? Was it not exactly this? The legislature caused to be presented to them, according to the forms of law, the question for substance, whether they deemed it expedient that a Conven- tion should be called to consider of revising the Constitution. They answered yes; and there they rested. . . .

Under that repose, under that inaction of the people, after that manifestation of their will in that general form, it became a matter for mere law in its ordinary course, to devise and enact details.^

But we should not forget that the act discussed by the New York Supreme Court and by them held to have been enacted in its entirety by the electorate, was exactly similar to the one discussed by Rufus Choate.

Thus it will be seen that there are two theories with respect to who enacts the convention act, under which the people vote to hold a convention. The theory with the greatest weight of authority behind it is based upon the fact that there would be no convention unless the people voted afRrmatively, that an affirmative vote would result in holding exactly the sort of con- vention in every detail provided in the act, and that the people are presumed to know the terms of the act under which they vote. The conclusion drawn from this is that the convention act in its every detail is enacted by the people voting under it.

The opposing theory, as laid down by Choate, is based upon the fact that the only question expressly submitted to the people is "Shall there be a convention?"; that if the legislature had merely submitted this question without providing the de-

1 Deb. Mass. Conv. 1853, Vol. I, pp. 154^155.

2 Deb. Mass. Conv. 1853, Vol. I, pp. 117-119.

72 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

tails in advance, it would have been competent for the legis- lature to have provided the details after an affirmative vote by the electorate. From this they conclude that the providing of details before the vote of the electorate is equally as much the action of the legislature.

In view of the almost evenly divided opinion on this subject, both points of view are fully expressed here 'without discrimi- nation, although the author personally strongly inclines to the former.

Several court dicta go to extremes in asserting the popular origin of conventions. Thus the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that the mere voting for delegates, under a convention act which the legislature has not submitted to the people, makes that statute the act of the people. Their exact language is as follows :

When, therefore, the people elected delegates under the second Act, they adopted the terms it contained by acting under it.^

Dodd comments adversely on this decision as follows:

In the Pennsylvania decision cited above: the question of holding a convention was submitted to the people and decided in the affirmative; the subsequent legislative act calling the con- vention (this act was not submitted to the people) sought to im- pose certain restrictions upon the convention, and the court then said that these restrictions were imposed by the people; the facts fomid by the court did not conform to the real facts of the case.^

It is clear, of course, that the people in voting for delegates to a convention have no way of expressing either approval or dis- approval of the terms of the act under which the convention is called; here clearly there is no popular adoption of restrictions sought to be imposed upon a convention by legislative act.*

Yet the Pennsylvania idea has been accepted in other de- cisions, as the following quotations show:

The people elected delegates in reference to this call; it was not contemplated that they should do any act which was not necessary to give effect to the object and purpose of the people.'*

1 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 55.

2 Dodd, pp. 76-77.

3 Dodd, p. 75.

< McCready v. Hunt (1834), 2 Hill Law (S. C.) 1, 222-223.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 73

The convention was called upon the lines which were suggested by the Legislature, and in exact conformity with the will of the sovereign, as expressed at an election duly held in keeping there- with, and the delegates duly chosen thereto were regularly con- vened.^

When a people act through a law, the act is theirs, and the fact that they used the legislature as their instrument to confer their powers, makes them the superiors and not the legislature.^

Under the Pennsylvania theory, all convention acts, under which the electorate chooses the delegates, become thereby the product of a popular vote.

The only alternative theory would appear to be the ingen- ious one suggested by Holcombe in the following language:

Where the call for the convention is not submitted to the people for an expression of their consent, such power as the convention may possess is apparently delegated to it by the legislature on its own authority. It is an accepted principle of the unwritten constitution, however, that legislative power may not be dele- gated by the body on which the people have conferred it. The calling of a convention, therefore, without a vote of the people must be regarded as an abdication of power by the regular legisla- ture in favor of an extra-constitutional body. Such a body is a revolutionary rather than a constitutional convention, and the extent of its powers would apparently be determined by itself, subject only to the hmits which the people in their capacity of ultimate sovereign may be able to impose.^

So much for cases in which the legislature frames the conven- tion act before the popular vote. Even when the act is framed after the popular vote, the legislature is not proceeding under its general powers, but rather under a special grant of power contained in the favorable vote. Thus the people choose the legislature as their agents to frame the convention act.

Dodd says:

There are dicta to this effect based upon the theory that the people in voting for a convention confer upon the legislature authority to limit the powers of such conventions.*

1 State V. Favrc (1899), 51 La. Ann. 434, 436.

2 Wood's Appeal (1874), 75 Pa. 59, 72.

* Holcombe, State Government, p. 126.

* Dodd, p. 87, n. 26 But he disagrees with this, saying: "There would be a strong presumption that in voting for a convention they meant to vote for one with full power." Dodd, p. 76. Compare pp. 103-104, infra.

74 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

And the Supreme Court of Indiana has said:

The General Assembly . . . merely asked the people to express their will in relation to calling a convention . . . and when it was expressed it was a warrant and a command which the legislative authority carried out as given. ^

Of course, in case the entire act is expressly submitted to the people for ratification (as is required by the constitutions of Oregon and Oklahoma, and as is regularly practiced in many other States),^ there would seem to be no doubt that it derives its force and validity from the popular approval.

Dodd, however, points out that it is necessary in such a case for the people to pass on two questions in one, namely, whether they want a convention, and whether they w^ant one under the terms proposed by the legislature; and he infers from this that there is some doubt as to whether even such a statute is the act of the people.^ This seems like far-fetched reasoning, however.

The only situation in w^hich one could be absolutely certain that the convention act was the product of the legislature alone, would be if the legislature called the convention and itself chose the delegates.^ Yet there is argumentative authority even against this, for in the case of the Pennsjdvania conven- tion of 1872, the convention act was not submitted to the people, and the legislature chose part of the delegates; yet the entire proceeding was held by the courts to be popular in its nature.^

But, as we saw early in this chapter, the whole question of whether the legislature or the people enacts the convention act may be cleared up by a consideration of the relative powers of the legislature and the people. We have already seen that the people have a supraconstitutional right to take steps to change their government, and that this right is conceded by most constitutions.^ Wliere does the legislature derive any right to take steps to change the form of government except in cases

» Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 377-378. 2 Dodd, p. 75.

5 Dodd, p. 75.

* As in the case of the Georgia convention of 178S. Jameson, p. 135,

6 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 52. 6 Supra, pp. 13-14.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? t5

in which that right is expressly conferred upon the legislature by either the constitution or the people? Legislatures have no inherent rights. Their powers are derived from the constitu- tion and hence in States whose constitutions do not provide for the holding of a constitutional convention, it would seem that the legislature cannot call a convention/ and hence that a con- vention in order to be valid must be the act of the people.

Yet, although the legislature cannot lawfully call a conven- tion unless it possesses authority derived either from the con- stitution or directly from the people, on the other hand the people cannot call a constitutional convention without some means being first provided for the expression of popular opin- ion.^ It is also necessary, either before or after the people have expressed their wish for a convention, for some law to provide for the election of the delegates.

At one time in the early history of the country the view was entertained that the people could legally assemble in convention and revise their constitution without the sanction of the legisla- ture, but this doctrine is no longer recognized.^

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has said in this connec- tion:

When a law becomes the instrumental process of amendment, it is not because the legislature possesses any inherent power to change the existing constitution through a convention, but because it is the only means through which an authori~ed consent of the whole people, the entire state, can be lawfully obtained in a state of peace. ... If the legislature, possessing these powers of government, be unwilling to pass a law to take the sense of the people, . . . the remedy is still in their own hands; they can elect new representatives that will. . . . The people required the law, as the act of the existing government, to which they had ap- pealed under the Bill of Rights, to furnish them legal process to raise a convention for revision of their fundamental compact, and without which legal process the act of no one man could bind another.^

Judge Jameson comments on this decision in the following words, the conciseness of which leaves nothing further to be said on the subject.

1 Supra, pp. 62-65. 2 Supra, pp. 16-19.

3 6 R. C. L., § 17, p. 27. « Wells v. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 47-48.

76 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

Admitting the competency of the people to call conventions, it would be impracticable, except through legislative interposition.^

A supraconstitutional right requiring the assistance of con- stitutional authority is certainly an anomaly, and yet that is what exists in the case of conventions. It has already been pointed out in Chapter II that the reason for the failure of Dorr's Rebellion in Rhode Island was this one technical point — he did not have the assistance of duly constituted authority, and hence there was no means of ascertaining whether he repre- sented the people or merely a faction of the people.^

And yet as Dodd points out,^ the legislature may stand in the way of the fulfillment of the popular will, just as the legislatures have in some cases nullified constitutional provisions by refus- ing to pass an enabling act thereon. The remedy of electing new representatives, as suggested by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court,^ is not sufficient.

In one case at least, difficulty has been encountered in ob- taining the passage of a law for the assembling of a convention authorized by the people. In 1886 a popular vote taken in New York (under the constitution of 1846, which provided for such a vote once every twenty years) was overwhelmingly in favor of the calling of a convention. But, owing to a disagreement between the legislature and the Governor, who belonged to dif- ferent political parties, it was impossible for some time to ob- tain the passage of a law authorizing the convention, and the convention did not actually meet until eight years after the popular vote. In the constitution adopted by this convention, it was sought to avoid such a difficulty for the future by mak- ing the constitutional provisions regarding a convention self- executing.^

Not merely is the popular vote on the question of holding a convention to be taken at twenty-year intervals, but the last vestige of intervention by the legislature in the matter is swept finally away. In case the people vote in the afiirmative, the con- stitution itself provides, minutely, for the apportionment, election, organization, and procedure of the convention. Thus there is now imbedded in the constitution of New York a complete system

^ Jameson, p. 539. ^ See p'p. 21-22, supra.

3 Dodd, pp. 55-56, and n. 53. « Wells v. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 47.

6 Dodd, p. 55.

WHO CALLS THE CONVENTION? 77

for total revision of the constitution of that state beyond the control of the legislature. The people initiate, the convention drafts, the people enaet.^

The popular will was similarly thwarted in New Hampshire in 1860 and 1864.2

The Michigan constitution of 1908 accomplishes the same result by provisions similar to those of the New York con- stitution of 1894. The Missouri constitution of 1875 also makes the assembling of a convention independent of legislative action, after the people have voted that a convention shall be held; the constitution itself containing full provisions regarding the apportionment and election of delegates. Writs for an election are required to be issued by the Governor after a favorable vote of the people.^

But, in all of the States except those mentioned above, the assembling of conventions is to a large extent dependent upon legislative action, even after the people have voted that a convention shall be held.*

From all the foregoing, we can make the following deductions as to who it is that calls a convention; in other words, who it is that enacts the convention act.

If the act originates by an initiative petition, it is clear that the people pass the act, although there may be some dispute as to whether they proceed under the authority of the con- stitution, or under a supraconstitutional authority, with the mere assistance of the constitution.

In case the constitution provides for the holding of a con- vention without either legislative or popular action, such a convention will probably derive its whole force and validity from the constitution. If the constitution provides for the holding of a convention after action by the legislature alone, it is probable that such a convention derives its validity from the constitution and is called into being by the legislature. But in the last two cases it may well be that the people, by acting under the convention act or constitutional provision, ratify it and make it theirs.

1 Judson, Essentials of a Written Const. (U. of Chi. 1903), p. 21.

2 Dodd, p. 55, n. 53.

3 Dodd, pp. 55-56.

* Compare the discussion of this same point, pp. 116-117, infra.

78 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

If the constitution authorizes a convention after popular vote, it may be that the convention is the creature of the people with the permission of the constitution; but owing to the fact that the constitution could not withhold this permission, and in the light of the four cases in which the constitutional methods were disregarded, it is possible that even such a convention derives its whole authority from the popular vote, and that the con- stitution merely provides the means, the same as a statute would have done.

When the legislature passes a convention act without sub- mitting it to the people, if there is a pre\dous vote of the people authorizing a convention in general terms, it may be that tliis vote delegates to the legislature the power to enact details.

When the legislature submits the question to the people, either wdth or wdthout the sanction of the constitution, the weight of authority is that the convention derives its whole sanction from the popular vote, and that such details as are enacted by the legislature prior to the popular vote derive their binding force from the people and not from the legislature; a fortiori, if the legislature submits the entire act for popular ratification.

Yet we have seen that there is need of a means through w^hich the people may express their wall. This msLy be pro- vided either by a statute or by a constitutional provision; preferably the latter, as that frees the convention from the danger of legislative usurpation.

Chapter VI LEGISLATURES AS CONVENTIONS

In the preceding chapter we discussed the power of the legislature to call a constitutional convention. There we found that, although the present tendency is to regard a reference of the question to the people as absolutely essential, yet, in the early days, this was not always done.^ In fact, on occasions, the legislature has even elected a part or all of the delegates itself.2

The original conventions of the period of the Revolutionary War combined the functions of conventions and legislatures,^ but as the convention system developed, the two bodies gradu- ally became more and more differentiated. Thus we see the western towns of New Hampshire protesting in 1777 against the framing of a permanent plan of government by the legis- lature,^ and we see the people of Massachusetts in 1778 over- whelmingly voting dowTi a constitution drafted by a legislature which had resolved itself into a constitutional convention.^

A constitution drafted by a legislative commission in Michigan in 1873, and constitutions drafted by the Rhode Island legis- lature and submitted in 1898 and 1899, were rejected by the people.^

The only example of successful drafting of a constitution by a legislature occurred in the Territory of Nebraska in 18G6. But it is interesting to note that the Supreme Court of that State held the entire proceeding to be irregular, being ciu-ed, however, by the admission of the State into the Union. '^

Legislatures generally have not presumed that they had any power to resolve themselves into constitutional conventions,

^ See p. 66, supra. ^ See p. 74, supra.

^ See p. 4, supra. ^ See p. 6, supra.

^ See pp. 5, 6-7, supra. * Dodd, p. 39, n. 20.

"> Brittle v. People (1873), 2 Neb. 198, 216.

80 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

until we come to the case of Indiana in 1911. The general assembly of that year drafted and incorporated in a bill what was therein termed a proposed new constitution, which was really a copy of the existing constitution with twenty-three changes in its provisions, and submitted it to a vote of the people at the general election to be held in November, 1912.^

The Indiana legislature doubtless proceeded upon the theory that, if a legislature can call a convention and choose the dele- gates to it, the legislature can call itself a convention and choose its own members as the delegates. Doubtless the legislature thought that, even though this method of procedure was contrary to both the customary convention method and the constitutional method of submission by two successive legis- latures; yet, nevertheless, a popular ratification of the proposed new constitution would cure all irregularities in its inception.

Maybe the legislature was right in this latter assumption,^ but that can never be ascertained, for the Supreme Court of the State nipped the proceeding in the bud by enjoining the submission of this new constitution to the people. The Supreme Court of California had also, in an earlier decision, given some intimation as to what the law would be in a case like this.

These two decisions have developed the following principles of law relative to the powerlessness of the legislature to resolve itself into a constitutional convention.

First: A constitution is a legislative act of the people. On this point the Indiana Court says:

A state constitution has been aptly termed a legislative act by the people themselves in their sovereign capacity, and, therefore, the paramount law.^

Secondly: There is a marked distinction between the legis- lative powers of the people and the legislative powers of the legislature. On this see the following:

To erect the State or to institute the form of its government is a function inherent in the sovereign people. To carry out its purpose of protecting and enforcing the rights and liberties of which the ordained constitution is a guaranty, by enacting rules of civil

1 Ind. Laws, 1911, c. 118.

^ See p. 216, infra.

3 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 345.

A

LEGISLATURES AS CONVENTIONS 81

conduct relating to the details and particulars of the government instituted, is the function of the legislature under the general grant of authority. It needed no reservation in the organic law to pre- serve to the people their inherent power to change their government against such a general grant of legislative authority.^

A constitution is legislation direct from the people, acting in their sovereign capacity, while a statute is legislation from their representatives, subject to limitations prescribed by the superior authority.^

The Parliament of Great Britain, is possessed of all legislative powers whatsoever. It can enact ordinary statutes, and it can pass laws strictly fundamental. Not so with our legislatures.^

The two houses and the governor constitute the entirety of the body which considers and finally determines all matters of legis- lation. But it is the two houses and the great mass of the electors of the commonwealth combined which constitute the body which considers and determines the questions of constitutional amend- ment. With all matters of legislation the people in their capacity of electors have nothing to do. But with constitutional amend- ments they have everything to do, for the ultimate fate of all proposed amendments depends absolutely upon their approval. If they approve, the proposed amendment at once becomes a part of the constitution; if they disapprove, it fails utterly and never comes into existence. The fundamental distinction wliich thus becomes most manifest, between the mere legislative machinery of the government, and that machinery which alone possesses the power to ordain amendments to the constitution of the common- wealth is most radical and extreme.^

We have seen that, in the United States, the constitutional Con- vention belongs to the genus legislature, — by which it is meant that its proper function is to elaborate, to a certain extent, to be determined by the tenor of its commission, the fundamental law, much as the legislature enacts the ordinary municipal law. Of these two species of law, the distinction between which has been already explained, it is the important thing to note, that the one denominated fundamental is, generally speaking, the work only of a Convention, a special and extraordinary assembly, con- vening at no regularly recurring periods, but whenever the harvest

1 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 344.

2 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 345.

3 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 347.

< Commojiwealth v. Griest (1900), 196 Pa. 396, 410-411.

82 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

of constitutional reforms has become ripe; while, on the other hand, the ordinary statute law, whose provisions are tentatory and transient, is, regularly at least, the work of a legislature, — a body meeting periodically at short intervals of time.^

Thirdly: The legislature, in taking any steps toward the framing of a constitution, does not act in its legislative capacity. This we have already seen in the last chapter, where were reviewed many authorities to the effect that the calling of a convention, being a step in the framing of fundamental law, is not strictly within general legislative powers.

Many decisions bearing more or less on this point, but relating more particularly to the extralegislative natiu-e of the proposal of constitutional amendments, are collected in the Indiana decision.^

Furthermore, the Indiana decision says that in the ordinary legislative method of constitutional amendment, the legislature is quoad hoc empowered to act as a convention.

By express constitutional provision, they act in conventional capacity, in the way of recommending specific amendments to their constitution.^

The Indiana Court quotes with approval the following from the Supreme Court of Arkansas:

The General Assembly, in amending the constitution, does not act in the exercise of its ordinary legislative authority, of its gen- eral powers; but it possesses and acts in the character and capac- ity of a convention, and is quoad hoc, a convention expressing the supreme will of the sovereign people.^

and Jameson's following comment thereon:

It expresses with admirable brevity, force, and clearness, the true doctrine in regard to the power of our General Assemblies under similar clauses of our Constitutions.^

This, however, cannot be meant literally, for it is easily ob- servable that the courts will enforce strict compliance w^ith the

' Jameson, p. 422.

2 EUingham. v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 347-352. Cf. State v. Hall (1916), 159 N. W. 281, 282.

3 EUingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 347.

^ Slate V. Cox (1848), 3 English (Ark.) 436, 444; quoted 178 Ind. 336, 348. ^ Jameson, p. 586; quoted 178 Ind. 336, 348. Cf. Collier v. Frierson (1854), 24 Ala. 100, 102.

LEGISLATURES AS CONVENTIONS 83

constitutional provisions for the legislative method of amend- ment, whereas they are much more cautious in interfering with the popular method of amendment through the medium of a convention.

The language used, however, is all right as illustrating the principle that the legislature, in framing a constitutional change, is not acting as a legislature, but is rather acting under an extra- legislative power specifically delegated to it by the people for this purpose.

Fourthly : The legislature gets by express grant, its power to frame constitutional changes. See the following quotations :

In submitting propositions for the amendment of the consti- tution, the legislature is not in the exercise of its legislative power, or any sovereignty of the people that has been intrusted to it, but is merely acting under a limited power conferred upon it by the people.

The extent of this power is limited to the object for which it is given, and is measured by the terms in which it has been conferred, and cannot be extended by the legislature to any other object, or enlarged beyond these terms. ^

This right to propose amendments to the constitution is not the exercise of legislative power by the General Assembly in its ordi- nary sense, but such power is vested in the legislature only by the grant found in the constitution, and such power must be exercised witliin the terms of the grant.^

Where authority is specifically granted to the legislature by the constitution to prepare and submit amendments, that establishes its competency, and, to the extent of the specific authorization and within its limitation, it is always to be considered as chosen for the purpose.^

Power over the Constitution and its change has ever been con- sidered to remain with the people alone, except as they had, in their Constitution, specially delegated powers and duties to the legislative body relative thereto for the aid of the people only.*

Fifthly: It follows that the legislature cannot act as a con- vention without a similar express grant, either in the constitu-

1 Livcrmore v. Waitc (1894), 102 Cal. 113, 118.

2 Chicago v. Recvca (1906), 220 111. 274, 288.

3 EUingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 353. ^ EUingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 357.

84 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

tion, or given by the people under their extraconstitutional powers.

The legislature is not authorized to assume the function of a constitutional convention, and propose for adoption by the people a revision of the entire constitution under the form of an amendment.^

This is quoted with approval by the Indiana Court.^ Jameson has said:

It is thoroughly settled that, under our Constitutions, State and Federal, a legislature cannot exercise the functions of a con- vention — cannot, in other words, take upon itself the duty of fram- ing, amending, or suspending the operation of the fundamental law.^

This also is cited with the approval by the Indiana Court.^ Sixthly: The general grant of legislative powers is not enough to empower the legislature either to act as, or to call, a convention; for, as we have seen, the framing of fundamental law is not a strictly legislative duty.^ Thus the Indiana Court says:

But this general grant of authority to exercise the legislative element of sovereign power has never been considered to include authority over fundamental legislation. It has always been de- clared to vest in the legislative department authority to make, alter and repeal laws, as rules of civil conduct pursuant to^'the Constitu- tion made and ordained by the people themselves and to carry out the details of the government so instituted.^

In assuming to legislate in relation to structural changes in the government, the legislature is not acting within the power it takes under the general grant of authority to enact, alter and repeal laws under and pursuant to the Constitution. For, to deal with or- ganic law — to determine what it shall be, when it needs change, the character of the change and to declare and ordain it — is peculiarly

1 Livermore v. Waite (1894), 102 Cal. 113, 118.

2 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 349. * Jameson, p. 422.

4 Ellingkam v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 352.

^ See full discussion of this point, pp. 80-83, infra.

6 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 343.

LEGISLATURES AS CONVENTIONS 85

a power belonging to the people, and this fact they have declared, as we have seen, in the first section of the bill of rights.^

Had it been thought then that the general grant of legislative authority placed in the hands of the General Assembly the power to accomplish the same work which that body was asking the people to authorize a constitutional convention to do, it is not to be sup- posed that the fruitless efforts to secure a convention would have continued. But, on the contrary, it is highly probable that the General Assembly would itself have done the work of revision or reframing amendments, and thus have avoided the delay and the greater expense, entailed by a convention. No one then claimed that the framing of fundamental law might be done by legislative act under the general grant of legislative authority.^

Seventhly: Nevertheless, by long custom the legislatures have acquired the power to assist the people to hold a constitutional convention. Thus Jameson has said:

It is clear that no means are legitimate for the purpose indicated but Conventions, unless employed under an express warrant of the Constitution.*

The author's conclusion is, that the change or amendment of the written constitutions which prevail under the American system is confined to two modes: 1, by the agency of conventions called by the General Assembly in obedience to a vote of the people, and usu- ally pursued when a general revision is desired; and 2, through the agency of the specific power granted to the General Assembly by constitutional provision to frame and submit proposed amend- ments, wliich is considered preferable, when no extensive change in the organic law is proposed.*

The extraconstitutional legality of such conventions has al- ready been discussed in Chapter IV.

Thus the Indiana decision appears to have established the law that the legislature has no authority to resolve itself into a constitutional convention.

But this law is likely soon to be upset by precedent in the neighboring State of North Dakota. There, the present con- stitution requires amendments to be twice passed by the legisla-

1 Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 357.

^ Ellingham v. Dije (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 360-361.

* Ellingham v. Dye (1912), 178 Ind. 336, 355.

86 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

ture before submission to the people;^ yet at the last session the majority party (^. e. the Farmers' Nonpartisan League) introduced a bill for the immediate submission of a complete new constitution, embodying the reforms pledged by the Farmers' platform.^ This bill passed the House, but was blocked by the hold-over members of the Senate. If, as now seems possi- ble, the Farmers gain control of both Houses at the next elec- tion, the bill will be adopted, and will undoubtedly be sustained by the Supreme Court, which is now dominated by the Farmers.

Thus, until we learn the result of the North Dakota experi- ment, the Indiana decision must remain open, especially as it was made by a court of the opposite political party than the party which at the time controlled the legislature.^

In this connection it is interesting to compare the following from a recent opinion by the Attorney-General of North Dakota :

An examination of our State and Federal Constitutions shows that no procedure for revision or for the adoption of a new State Constitution, as an organic whole, is provided for.

The Constitution of North Dakota, Section 2, however, does contain the following declaration:

"All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for the protection, security and benefit of the people; and they have the right to alter or reform the same whenever the public good may require."

Moreover, in our system of government, constitutions derive their power from the people, not the people from constitutions. The rights and powers of the people existed before a constitution was formed. In other words, before the establishment of a con- stitution, the people possessed sovereign power.

That power they still possess, except in so far as they may have delegated it to State or National Governments, or have volun- tarily restricted themselves in its exercise under their constitu- tions.

Many of our states have adopted express methods of revising their constitutions through constitutional conventions. However,

1 N. Dak. Const., Art. XV, § 202.

2 1917, N. D. House Bill 44.

3 VI "Am. Polit. Sci. Rev.," 43, 44.

LEGISLATURES AS CONVENTIONS 87

for generations, many states had no express method of revision, and at least a dozen states, North Dakota being among them, have none today.

It is urged that, since our Constitution provides a method of amendment, by exclusion the Legislature is prohibited from initiating a revision itself by drafting a new Constitution. This argument is untenable when dealing with sovereignty of the people seeking expression through revision. It is an instance where the ordinary doctrine of exclusion applicable to contracts is not binding. Moreover, if such an argument were applicable to legislative revi- sion it would be equally applicable to revision by convention, and on that subject our own Supreme Court, in 68 N. W. 421 (N. D.), has said:

"The decided weight of authority and the more numerous precedents are arrayed on the side of the doctrine which supports the existence of this inherent legislative power to call a constitu- tional convention, notwithstanding the fact that the instrument itself points out how it may be amended."

The sovereign power of revision having reached the threshold of the legislature without express written authority and solely by its irresistible right to expression, what mysterious power can then, without vestige of authority, assume the right to bridle it and lead it tamely down the narrow, though higlily respectable, avenue of revision by convention?

In my opinion any method followed by the legislature in placing before the people a new constitution for adoption or rejection in their sovereign capacity is legal}

He differentiates the Indiana case as follows :

In connection with this I will also say that the case of Ellingham m. Dye, 99 N. E. 1, apparently opposed to the legality of legislative revision, is clearly not applicable to the situation in this State, owing to an unusual and, perhaps, entirely unique occurrence in the history of Indiana when the provisions for revision contained in the Indiana constitution up to 1851 were then stricken out with the express intention that never again tvould the Indiana constitution be revised, but only changed by amendment.^

^ No. Dak. House Journal for Jan. 26, 1917. 2 No. Dak. House Journal for Jan. 26, 1917.

88 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

Whatever may be said for the correctness of his differentiation, the fact remains that in his main argument he overlooks two points: (1) that the legislature having probably no power to call a convention without popular permission/ a fortiori has no power to call itself a convention without such permission; and (2) that his citations, not given above, on the power of the legislature to submit a whole constitution, relate to submission in the regular constitutional manner, and not irregularly as attempted in Indiana and North Dakota.^

Nevertheless, as already suggested, it would be well to await the success of the North Dakota experiment before definitely passing upon the subject matter of this chapter.

1 See pp. 62-65, supra. * Dodd, pp. 260-261.

Chapter VII

EXECUTIVE INTERVENTION

The question of the power of one of these departments to interfere with a convention largely depends upon a determina- tion of the exact status of the convention. Regardless of whether or not the convention is revolutionary, there can be no doubt that, either with or without constitutional sanction, the conven- tion has become established as a regular organ of American government. The separation of the departments of government is a fundamental principle of American constitutional law. Nearly all of our constitutions lay down the rule that:

The legislative department shall never exercise the executive and judicial powers, or either of them; the executive shall never exercise the legislative and judicial powers, or either of them; the judicial shall never exercise the legislative and executive pow- ers, or either of them.^

And not only may no department exercise the powers of any other, but each department is also forbidden to interfere with the functions of any other.

This is important in connection with Dodd's theory as to the relation which the convention bears to the three regular de- partments. He says:

f' The better view would seem to be that the convention is a regular organ of the state (although as a rule called only at long intervals) — neither sovereign nor subordinate to the legislature.^

The following quotations from various authorities sustain this view:

But a rather better \'iew, less extreme than either of the pre- ceding ones, regards the convention as a regular organ of the existing government coordinate with the other branches. In its

1 Mass. Decl. of Rts., Art. XXX. 2 Dodd, p. 80.

90 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

sphere of constitution making it should be supreme, subject only to limitation by the people.^

The convention is an independent and sovereign body whose sole power and duty are to prepare and submit to the people a revision of the constitution, or a new constitution to take the place of an old one.^

Nothing could conduce more to simplicity of view, than to con- sider this institution as a branch of that system by which the state, considered as a political society, works out its will in relation both to itself and to the citizens of which it is composed. And this ... I am satisfied is the correct view to take of the question.^

A Constitutional Convention is a legislative body of the high- est order. It proceeds by legislative methods. Its acts are legis- lative acts. Its function is not to execute or interpret laws, but to make them. That the consent of the general body of electors may be necessary to give effect to the ordinances of the Conven- tion, no more changes their legislative character, than the re- quirement of the Governor's consent changes the nature of the action of the Senate and Assembly."*

It is the highest legislative body known to freemen in a repre- sentative government.^

It is of the greatest importance that a body chosen by the people of this state to revise the organic law of the state, should be as free from interference from the several departments of government, as the legislative, executive and judiciary are, from interference by each other.^

The only authority contra appears to be the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, which has said:

The convention is not a co-ordinate branch of the government. It exercises no governmental power, but is a body raised by law in aid of the popular desire to discuss and propose amendments.'^

1 XXIX "Harv. Law Rev.," 520.

2 Cartmi v. Seep, of State (1908), 151 Mich. 337, 340.

* Jameson, p. 315. Compare the quotation from Jameson, pp. 319-320, on p. 187, infra. And compare Jameson, pp. 23-24.

^ Report of Judiciary Committee, headed by EHhu Root, and unanimously adopted by the Convention. Rev. Record, N. Y. Conv. 1894, Vol. I, p. 245.

B Sproule V. Fredericks (1898), 69 Miss. 898, 904.

® Report of Judiciary Committee, headed by Elihu Root, and unanimously adopted by the Convention. Rev. Record, N. Y. Conv. 1894, Vol. I, p. 250. Quoted with approval in Deb. Mich. Conv. 1907-1908, p. 1275.

1 Wells V. Bain (1872), 75 Pa. 39, 57.

I

EXECUTIVE INTERVENTION 91

Thus the weight of authority is to the effect that the conven- tion, when in session, is a fourth branch of the government, with the same immunity from interference as that possessed by the other three. The executive and judiciary have no more right to interfere with the fourth branch than they do with the other legislative branch, namely, the legislature. The legislature has no right to interfere with a legislative body of higher standing.

Let us now consider intervention by the executive depart- ment, either of the state or nation. The converse question, i. e. the power of the convention to interfere in the affairs of the executive department, will be considered in a later chapter.^

First, with respect to the State executive. By this is meant the chief executive, i. e. the Governor, or the Governor acting with the consent and assistance of some advisory body.

The executive branch, like the other two branches, derives its delegated authority entirely from the constitution, and has no powers except those expressly or impliedly granted therein, and no powers even when granted, if they are such as to be be- yond the power of the constitution to grant. This must be borne in mind throughout this chapter.

The first manner in which a governor might interfere with a convention would be to prevent the holding of a convention by vetoing the convention act.

Under the initiative and referendum, in all the States in which it is in force,^ a convention initiated by the people would not be subject to executive veto, as the constitutions of those States do not authorize such a veto.

With respect to conventions expressly called by the con- stitution, or conventions the call for which is submitted to the people by the constitution without legislative action, it is like- wise clear that there is no way in which the Governor could veto the project.

With respect to constitutions which authorize the passage of conventions acts, the results differ in different States. In Alabama and Delaware the convention act need not be sub- mitted to the Governor for his approval, and is expressly de-

^ Chapter XI, infra.

^ Namely Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Idaho, Maine, Montana, South Dakota, Utah, and Washington. " Columbia Digest," p. 771.

92 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS

dared to be valid without his approval.^ No other constitutions make express provision in this connection, but it would appear that an act of the legislature calling for a popular vote would not be subject to veto, no veto power being mentioned in this connection; although a legislative act providing for the details of holding the convention, if regarded as ordinary legislation, would be subject to the regular veto power of the Governor.^

The usual practice in such States has been to submit to the people the question of holding a convention; without asking for the Governor's approval. This would naturally follow from the fact that a convention act is not a bit of ordinary legislation.

It does not require the approval of the governor to make it valid.^

Yet in Nebraska, which is a State of this sort, and where therefore the submission of this question to a popular vote would seem to be clearly within the power of the legislature, independent of the Governor, a joint resolution in 1903 upon this subject was vetoed by the Governor, and no further action was taken .^

In New York, the Governor by quarreling with the legislature, postponed for eight years the holding of the convention au- thorized by a popular vote in 1886.^

But although the executive veto of an act to take the sense of the people has been successfully employed on these occasions, yet executive approval is usually dispensed with. What author- ity there is sustains this custom, which thus has the support of the weight of both judicial and