By MR. JUSTICE BROWN, in announcing the conclusion and judgment
of the Court.
The circuit courts have jurisdiction, regardless of amount, of
actions against a collector of customs for duties exacted and paid
under protest upon merchandise alleged not to have been
imported.
The Island of Porto Rico is not a part of the United States
within that provision of the Constitution which declares that "all
duties, imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States."
Page 182 U. S. 245
There is a clear distinction between such prohibitions of the
Constitution as go to the very root of the power of Congress to act
at all, irrespective of time or place, and such as are operative
only throughout the United States, or among the several states.
A long continued and uniform interpretation, put by the
executive and legislative departments of the government upon a
clause in the Constitution should be followed by the judicial
department unless such interpretation be manifestly contrary to its
letter or spirit.
By MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS and MR.
JUSTICE McKENNA concurred.
The government of the United States was born of the
Constitution, and all powers which it enjoys or may exercise must
be either derived expressly or by implication from that instrument.
Ever then, when an act of any department is challenged because not
warranted by the Constitution, the existence of the authority is to
be ascertained by determining whether the power has been conferred
by the Constitution, either in express terms or by lawful
implication, to be drawn from the express authority conferred or
deduced as an attribute which legitimately inheres in the nature of
the powers given, and which flows from the character of the
government established by the Constitution. In other words, whilst
confined to its constitutional orbit, the government of the United
States is supreme within its lawful sphere.
Every function of the government being thus derived from the
Constitution, it follows that that instrument is everywhere and at
all times potential insofar as its provisions are applicable.
Hence it is that wherever a power is given by the Constitution
and there is a limitation imposed on the authority, such
restriction operates upon and confines every action on the subject
within its constitutional limits.
Consequently it is impossible to conceive that, where conditions
are brought about to which any particular provision of the
Constitution applies, its controlling influence may be frustrated
by the action of any or all of the departments of the government.
Those departments, when discharging, within the limits of their
constitutional power, the duties which rest on them, may, of
course, deal with the subjects committed to them in such a way as
to cause the matter dealt with to come under the control of
provisions of the Constitutions which may not have been previously
applicable. But this does not conflict with the doctrine just
stated, or presuppose that the Constitution may or may not be
applicable at the election of any agency of the government.
The Constitution has undoubtedly conferred on Congress the right
to create such municipal organizations as it may deem best for all
the territories of the United States, whether they have been
incorporated or not, to give to the inhabitants as respects the
local governments such degree of representation as may be conducive
to the public wellbeing, to deprive such territory of
representative government if it is considered just to do so, and to
change such local governments at discretion.
As Congress, in governing the territories, is subject to the
Constitution, it
Page 182 U. S. 246
results that all the limitations of the Constitution which are
applicable to Congress in exercising this authority necessarily
limit its power on this subject. It follows also that every
provision of the Constitution which is applicable to the
territories is also controlling therein. To justify a departure
from this elementary principle by a criticism of the opinion of
Mr.
Chief Justice Taney in
Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 393, is unwarranted. Whatever may
be the view entertained of the correctness of the opinion of the
Court in that case insofar as it interpreted a particular provision
of the Constitution concerning slavery and decided that, as so
construed, it was in force in the territories, this in no way
affects the principle which that decision announced, that the
applicable provisions of the Constitution were operative.
In the case of the territories, as in every other instance, when
a provision of the Constitution is invoked, the question which
arises is not whether the Constitution is operative, for that is
self-evident, but whether the provision relied on is
applicable.
As Congress derives its authority to levy local taxes for local
purposes within the territories not from the general grant of power
to tax as expressed in the Constitution, it follows that its right
to locally tax is not to be measured by the provision empowering
Congress "To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts, and Excises,"
and is not restrained by the requirement of uniformity throughout
the United States. But the power just referred to, as well as the
qualification of uniformity, restrains Congress from imposing an
impost duty on goods coming into the United States from a territory
which has been incorporated into and forms a part of the United
States. This results because the clause of the Constitution in
question does not confer upon Congress power to impose such an
impost duty on goods coming from one part of the United States to
another part thereof, and such duty besides would be repugnant to
the requirement of uniformity throughout the United States.
By MR. JUSTICE GRAY.
The civil government of the United States cannot extend
immediately and of its own force over territory acquired by war.
Such territory must necessarily, in the first instance, be governed
by the military power under the control of the President as
commander in chief. Civil government cannot take effect at once as
soon as possession is acquired under military authority, or even as
soon as that possession is confirmed by treaty. It can only be put
in operation by the action of the appropriate political department
of the government at such time and in such degree as that
department may determine.
In a conquered territory, civil government must take effect
either by the action of the treatymaking power or by that of the
Congress of the United States. The office of a treaty of cession
ordinarily is to put an end to all authority of the foreign
government over the territory, and to subject the territory to the
disposition of the government of the United States.
The government and disposition of territory so acquired belong
to the government of the United States, consisting of the
President, the Senate,
Page 182 U. S. 247
elected by the states, and the House of Representatives, chosen
by and immediately representing the people of the United
States.
So long as Congress has not incorporated the territory into the
United States, neither military occupation nor cession by treaty
makes the conquered territory domestic territory in the sense of
the revenue laws. But those laws concerning "foreign countries"
remain applicable to the conquered territory until changed by
Congress.
If Congress is not ready to construct a complete government for
the conquered territory, it may establish a temporary government,
which is not subject to all the restrictions of the
Constitution.
This was an action begun in the Circuit Court by Downes, doing
business under the firm name of S. B. Downes & Co., against the
collector of the port of New York, to recover back duties to the
amount of $659.35 exacted and paid under protest upon certain
oranges consigned to the plaintiff at New York, and brought thither
from the port of San Juan in the Island of Porto Rico during the
month of November, 1900, after the passage of the act temporarily
providing a civil government and revenues for the Island of Porto
Rico, known as the Foraker Act.
The District Attorney demurred to the complaint for the want of
jurisdiction in the court, and for insufficiency of its averments.
The demurrer was sustained, and the complaint dismissed. Whereupon
plaintiff sued out this writ or error.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after making the above statement, announced
the conclusion and judgment of the Court.
This case involves the question whether merchandise brought into
the port of New York from Porto Rico since the passage of the
Foraker Act is exempt from duty, notwithstanding the third section
of that act, which requires the payment of
"fifteen
Page 182 U. S. 248
percentum of the duties which are required to be levied,
collected, and paid upon like articles of merchandise imported from
foreign countries."
1. The exception to the jurisdiction of the court is not well
taken. By Rev.Stat. sec. 629, subd. 4, the circuit courts are
vested with jurisdiction "of all suits at law or in equity arising
under any act providing for revenue from imports or tonnage,"
irrespective of the amount involved. This section should be
construed in connection with sec. 643, which provides for the
removal from state courts to circuit courts of the United States of
suits against revenue officers
"on account of any act done under color of his office, or of any
such [revenue] law, or on account of any right, title, or authority
claimed by such officer or other person under any such law."
Both these sections are taken from the Act of March 2, 1833, 4
Stat. 632, c. 57, commonly known as the Force Bill, and are
evidently intended to include all actions against customs officers
acting under color of their office. While, as we have held in
De Lima v. Bidwell, actions against the collector to
recover back duties assessed upon nonimportable property are not
"customs cases" in the sense of the Administrative Act, they are
nevertheless actions arising under an act to provide for a revenue
from imports, in the sense of sec. 629, since they are for acts
done by a collector under color of his office. This subdivision of
sec. 629 was not repealed by the Jurisdictional Act of 1875 or the
subsequent Act of August 13, 1888, since these acts were
"not intended to interfere with the prior statutes conferring
jurisdiction upon the circuit or district courts in special cases
and over particular subjects."
United States v. Mooney, 116 U.
S. 104,
116 U. S. 107.
See also Ins. Co. v.
Ritchie, 5 Wall. 541;
Philadelphia v. The
Collector, 5 Wall. 720;
Hornthall
v. The Collector, 9 Wall. 560. As the case
"involves the construction or application of the Constitution" as
well as the constitutionality of a law of the United States, the
writ of error was properly sued out from this Court.
2. In the case of
De Lima v. Bidwell, just decided, we
held that, upon the ratification of the treaty of peace with Spain,
Porto Rico ceased to be a foreign country, and became a
territory
Page 182 U. S. 249
of the United States, and that duties were no longer collectible
upon merchandise brought from that island. We are now asked to hold
that it became a part of the United States within that provision of
the Constitution which declares that "all duties, imposts, and
excises shall be uniform throughout the United States." Art. I,
sec. 8. If Porto Rico be a part of the United States, the Foraker
Act imposing duties upon its products is unconstitutional not only
by reason of a violation of the uniformity clause, but because, by
section 9, "vessels bound to or from one state" cannot "be obliged
to enter, clear, or pay duties in another."
The case also involves the broader question whether the revenue
clauses of the Constitution extend of their own force to our newly
acquired territories. The Constitution itself does not answer the
question. Its solution must be found in the nature of the
government created by that instrument, in the opinion of its
contemporaries, in the practical construction put upon it by
Congress, and in the decisions of this Court.
The federal government was created in 1777 by the union of
thirteen colonies of Great Britain in "certain articles of
confederation and perpetual union," the first one of which declared
that "the stile of this confederacy shall be the United States of
America." Each member of the confederacy was denominated a
state. Provision was made for the representation of each
state by not less than two nor more than seven delegates; but no
mention was made of territories or other lands, except in Art. XI,
which authorized the admission of Canada, upon its "acceding to
this confederation," and of other colonies if such admission were
agreed to by nine states. At this time, several states made claims
to large tracts of land in the unsettled west, which they were at
first indisposed to relinquish. Disputes over these lands became so
acrid as nearly to defeat the confederacy before it was fairly put
in operation. Several of the states refused to ratify the articles
because the convention had taken no steps to settle the titles to
these lands upon principles of equity and sound policy; but all of
them, through fear of being accused of disloyalty, finally yielded
their claims, though Maryland held out until 1781. Most of these
states in the
Page 182 U. S. 250
meantime having ceded their interests in these lands, the
confederate Congress, in 1787, created the first territorial
government northwest of the Ohio River, provided for local
self-government, a bill of rights, a representation in Congress by
a delegate, who should have a seat "with a right of debating, but
not of voting," and for the ultimate formation of states therefrom,
and their admission into the Union on an equal footing with the
original states.
The confederacy, owing to well known historical reasons, having
proven a failure, a new Constitution was formed in 1787 by "the
people of the United States" "for the United States of America," as
its preamble declares. All legislative powers were vested in a
Congress consisting of representatives from the several states, but
no provision was made for the admission of delegates from the
territories, and no mention was made of territories as separate
portions of the Union except that Congress was empowered "to
dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting
the territory or other property belonging to the United States." At
this time, all of the states had ceded their unappropriated lands
except North Carolina and Georgia. It was thought by Chief Justice
Taney in the
Dred Scott
Case, 19 How. 393,
60 U. S. 436,
that the sole object of the territorial clause was
"to transfer to the new government the property then held in
common by the states, and to give to that government power to apply
it to the objects for which it had been destined by mutual
agreement among the states before their league was dissolved;"
that the power "to make needful rules and regulations" was not
intended to give the powers of sovereignty, or to authorize the
establishment of territorial governments -- in short, that these
words were used in a proprietary, and not in a political, sense.
But, as we observed in
De Lima v. Bidwell, the power to
establish territorial governments has been too long exercised by
Congress and acquiesced in by this Court to be deemed an unsettled
question. Indeed, in the
Dred Scott case it was admitted
to be the inevitable consequence of the right to acquire
territory.
It is sufficient to observe in relation to these three
fundamental instruments that it can nowhere be inferred that
the
Page 182 U. S. 251
territories were considered a part of the United States. The
Constitution was created by the people of the United States as a
union of states, to be governed solely by representatives of the
states, and even the provision relied upon here that all duties,
imposts, and excises shall be uniform "throughout the United
States" is explained by subsequent provisions of the Constitution
that "no tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any
state," and
"no preference shall be given by any regulation of commerce or
revenue to the ports of one state over those of another; nor shall
vessels bound to or from one state be obliged to enter, clear, or
pay duties in another."
In short, the Constitution deals with states, their people, and
their representatives.
The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, prohibiting
slavery and involuntary servitude "within the United States, or in
any place subject to their jurisdiction," is also significant as
showing that there may be places within the jurisdiction of the
United States that are no part of the Union. To say that the
phraseology of this amendment was due to the fact that it was
intended to prohibit slavery in the seceded states, under a
possible interpretation that those states were no longer a part of
the Union, is to confess the very point in issue, since it involves
an admission that, if these states were not a part of the Union,
they were still subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States.
Upon the other hand, the Fourteenth Amendment, upon the subject
of citizenship, declares only that
"all persons born or naturalized in the United States and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United
States and of the state wherein they reside."
Here there is a limitation to persons born or naturalized in the
United States which is not extended to persons born in any place
"subject to their jurisdiction."
The question of the legal relations between the states and the
newly acquired territories first became the subject of public
discussion in connection with the purchase of Louisiana in 1803.
This purchase arose primarily from the fixed policy of Spain to
exclude all foreign commerce from the Mississippi. This restriction
became intolerable to the large number of immigrants who were
leaving the eastern states to settle in the fertile valley
Page 182 U. S. 252
of that river and its tributaries. After several futile attempts
to secure the free navigation of that river by treaty, advantage
was taken of the exhaustion of Spain in her war with France, and a
provision inserted in the Treaty of October 27, 1795, by which the
Mississippi River was opened to the commerce of the United States.
8 Stat. 138, 140, Art. IV. In October, 1800, by the secret Treaty
of San Ildefonso, Spain retroceded to France the Territory of
Louisiana. This treaty created such a ferment in this country that
James Monroe was sent as minister extraordinary with discretionary
powers to cooperate with Livingston, then minister to France, in
the purchase of New Orleans, for which Congress appropriated
$2,000,000. To the surprise of the negotiators, Bonaparte invited
them to make an offer for the whole of Louisiana at a price finally
fixed at $15,000,000. It is well known that Mr. Jefferson
entertained grave doubts as to his power to make the purchase --
or, rather, as to his right to annex the territory and make it part
of the United States -- and had instructed Mr. Livingston to make
no agreement to that effect in the treaty, as he believed it could
not be legally done. Owing to a new war between England and France
being upon the point of breaking out, there was need for haste in
the negotiations, and Mr. Livingston took the responsibility of
disobeying his instructions, and, probably owing to the insistence
of Bonaparte, consented to the third article of the treaty, which
provided that
"the inhabitants of the ceded territory shall be incorporated in
the Union of the United States, and admitted as soon as possible,
according to the principles of the federal Constitution, to the
enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and immunities of citizens
of the United States, and in the meantime they shall be maintained
and protected in the free enjoyment of their liberty, property, and
the religion which they profess."
This evidently committed the government to the ultimate, but not
to the immediate, admission of Louisiana as a state, and postponed
its incorporation into the Union to the pleasure of Congress. In
regard to this, Mr. Jefferson, in a letter to Senator Breckinridge
of Kentucky, of August 12, 1803, used the following language:
"This treaty must, of course, be laid before both Houses,
because
Page 182 U. S. 253
both have important functions to exercise respecting it. They, I
presume, will see their duty to their country in ratifying and
paying for it so as to secure a good which would otherwise probably
be never again in their power. But I suppose they must then appeal
to the nation for an additional article to the Constitution
approving and confirming an act which the nation had not previously
authorized. The Constitution has made no provision for holding
foreign territory, still less for incorporating foreign nations
into our Union. The Executive, in seizing the fugitive occurrence
which so much advances the good of our country, have done an act
beyond the Constitution."
To cover the questions raised by this purchase, Mr. Jefferson
prepared two amendments to the Constitution, the first of which
declared that "the province of Louisiana is incorporated with the
United States and made part thereof," and the second of which was
couched in a little different language,
viz.:
"Louisiana, as ceded by France to the United States, is made a
part of the United States. Its white inhabitants shall be citizens,
and stand, as to their rights and obligations, on the same footing
as other citizens in analogous situations."
But by the time Congress assembled, October 17, 1803, either the
argument of his friends or the pressing necessity of the situation
seems to have dispelled his doubts regarding his power under the
Constitution, since, in his message to Congress, he referred the
whole matter to that body, saying that
"with the wisdom of Congress it will rest to take those ulterior
measures which may be necessary for the immediate occupation and
temporary government of the country, for its incorporation into the
Union."
Jefferson's Writings, vol. 8, p. 269.
The raising of money to provide for the purchase of this
territory, and the act providing a civil government, gave rise to
an animated debate in Congress, in which two questions were
prominently presented: first, whether the provision for the
ultimate incorporation of Louisiana into the Union was
constitutional; and, second, whether the seventh article of the
treaty admitting the ships of Spain and France for the next twelve
years
"into the ports of New Orleans, and in all other legal ports of
entry within the ceded territory, in the same manner as the ships
of
Page 182 U. S. 254
the United States coming directly from France or Spain, or any
of their colonies, without being subject to any other or greater
duty on merchandise or other or greater tonnage than that paid by
the citizens of the United States"
was an unlawful discrimination in favor of those ports and an
infringement upon Art. I, sec. 9, of the Constitution, that "no
preference shall be given by any regulation of commerce or revenue
to the ports of one state over those of another." This article of
the treaty contained the further stipulation that
"during the space of time above mentioned to other nation shall
have a right to the same privileges in the ports of the ceded
territory; . . . and it is well understood that the object of the
above article is to favor the manufactures, commerce, freight, and
navigation of France and Spain."
It is unnecessary to enter into the details of this debate. The
arguments of individual legislators are no proper subject for
judicial comment. They are so often influenced by personal or
political considerations, or by the assumed necessities of the
situation, that they can hardly be considered even as the
deliberate views of the persons who make them, much less as
dictating the construction to be put upon the Constitution by the
courts.
United States v. Union Pac. Railroad, 91 U. S.
72. Suffice it to say that the administration party took
the ground that, under the constitutional power to make treaties,
there was ample power to acquire territory, and to hold and govern
it under laws to be passed by Congress, and that as Louisiana was
incorporated into the Union as a territory, and not as a state, a
stipulation for citizenship became necessary; that as a state they
would not have needed a stipulation for the safety of their
liberty, property, and religion, but as territory this stipulation
would govern and restrain the undefined powers of Congress to "make
rules and regulations" for territories. The federalists admitted
the power of Congress to acquire and hold territory, but denied its
power to incorporate it into the Union under the Constitution as it
then stood.
They also attacked the seventh article of the treaty,
discriminating in favor of French and Spanish ships, as a distinct
violation of the Constitution against preference being given to
the
Page 182 U. S. 255
ports of one state over those of another. The administration
party, through Mr. Elliott of Vermont, replied to this that
"the states, as such, were equal and intended to preserve that
equality, and the provision of the Constitution alluded to was
calculated to prevent Congress from making any odious
discrimination or distinctions between particular states. It was
not contemplated that this provision would have application to
colonial or territorial acquisitions."
Said Mr. Nicholson of Maryland, speaking for the
administration:
"It [Louisiana] is in the nature of a colony whose commerce may
be regulated without any reference to the Constitution. Had it been
the island of Cuba which was ceded to us under a similar condition
of admitting French and Spanish vessels for a limited time into
Havana, could it possibly have been contended that this would be
giving a preference to the ports of one state over those of
another, or that the uniformity of duties, imposts, and excises
throughout the United States would have been destroyed? And because
Louisiana lies adjacent to our own territory, is it to be viewed in
a different light?"
As a sequence to this debate, two bills were passed, one October
31, 1803, 2 Stat. 245, authorizing the President to take possession
of the territory and to continue the existing government, and the
other November 10, 1803, 2 Stat. 245, making provision for the
payment of the purchase price. These acts continued in force until
March 26, 1804, when a new act was passed providing for a temporary
government, 2 Stat. 283, c. 38, and vesting all legislative powers
in a governor and legislative council, to be appointed by the
President. These statutes may be taken as expressing the views of
Congress first that territory may be lawfully acquired by treaty,
with a provision for its ultimate incorporation into the Union, and
second that a discrimination in favor of certain foreign vessels
trading with the ports of a newly acquired territory is no
violation of that clause of the Constitution, Art. I, sec. 9, that
declares that no preference shall be given to the ports of one
state over those of another. It is evident that the
constitutionality of this discrimination can only be supported upon
the theory that ports of territories are not ports of state within
the meaning of the Constitution.
Page 182 U. S. 256
The same construction was adhered to in the treaty with Spain
for the purchase of Florida, 8 Stat. 252, the sixth article of
which provided that the inhabitants should "be incorporated into
the Union of the United States, as soon as may be consistent with
the principles of the federal Constitution," and the fifteenth
article of which agreed that Spanish vessels coming directly from
Spanish ports and laden with productions of Spanish growth or
manufacture should be admitted, for the term of twelve years, to
the ports of Pensacola and St. Augustine "without paying other or
higher duties on their cargoes, or of tonnage, than will be paid by
the vessels of the United States," and that, "during the said term,
no other nation shall enjoy the same privileges within the ceded
territories."
So too, in the act annexing the Republic of Hawaii, there was a
provision continuing in effect the customs relations of the
Hawaiian islands with the United States and other countries, the
effect of which was to compel the collection in those islands of a
duty upon certain articles, whether coming from the United States
or other countries, much greater than the duty provided by the
general tariff law then in force. This was a discrimination against
the Hawaiian ports wholly inconsistent with the revenue clauses of
the Constitution if such clauses were there operative.
The very treaty with Spain under discussion in this case
contains similar discriminative provisions, which are apparently
irreconcilable with the Constitution if that instrument be held to
extend to these islands immediately upon their cession to the
United States. By article IV, the United States agree,
"for the term of ten years from the date of the exchange of the
ratifications of the present treaty, to admit Spanish ships and
merchandise to the ports of the Philippine islands on the same
terms as ships and merchandise of the United States"
-- a privilege not extending to any other ports. It was a clear
breach of the uniformity clause in question, and a manifest excess
of authority on the part of the commissioners, if ports of the
Philippine islands be ports of the United States.
So, too, by Art. XIII,
"Spanish scientific, literary, and artistic works . . . shall be
continued to be admitted free of
Page 182 U. S. 257
duty in such territories for the period of ten years, to be
reckoned from the date of the exchange of the ratifications of this
treaty."
This is also a clear discrimination in favor of Spanish literary
productions into particular ports.
Notwithstanding these provisions for the incorporation of
territories into the Union, Congress, not only in organizing the
Territory of Louisiana by Act of March 26, 1804, but all other
territories carved out of this vast inheritance, has assumed that
the Constitution did not extend to them of its own force, and has
in each case made special provision, either that their legislatures
shall pass no law inconsistent with the Constitution of the United
States, or that the Constitution or laws of the United States shall
be the supreme law of such territories. Finally, in Rev.Stat. sec.
1891, a general provision was enacted that
"the Constitution and all laws of the United States which are
not locally inapplicable shall have the same force and effect
within all the organized territories, and in every territory
hereafter organized, as elsewhere within the United States."
So, too, on March 6, 1820, 3 Stat. 545, c. 22, in an act
authorizing the people of Missouri to form a state government,
after a heated debate, Congress declared that in the Territory of
Louisiana north of 36�30' slavery should be forever
prohibited. It is true that, for reasons which have become
historical, this act was declared to be unconstitutional in
Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 393, but it is nonetheless a
distinct annunciation by Congress of power over property in the
territories, which it obviously did not possess in the several
states.
The researches of counsel have collated a large number of other
instances in which Congress has in its enactments recognized the
fact that provisions intended for the states did not embrace the
territories, unless specially mentioned. These are found in the
laws prohibiting the slave trade with "the United States or
territories thereof" or equipping ships "in any port or place
within the jurisdiction of the United States;" in the internal
revenue laws, in the early ones of which no provision was made for
the collection of taxes in the territory not included within the
boundaries of the existing states, and others of which extended
them expressly to the territories, or "within
Page 182 U. S. 258
the exterior boundaries of the United States;" and in the acts
extending the internal revenue laws to the territories of Alaska
and Oklahoma. It would prolong this opinion unnecessarily to set
forth the provisions of these acts in detail. It is sufficient to
say that Congress has or has not applied the revenue laws to the
territories as the circumstances of each case seemed to require,
and has specifically legislated for the territories whenever it was
its intention to execute laws beyond the limits of the states.
Indeed, whatever may have been the fluctuations of opinion in other
bodies (and even this Court has not been exempt from them),
Congress has been consistent in recognizing the difference between
the states and territories under the Constitution.
The decisions of this Court upon this subject have not been
altogether harmonious. Some of them are based upon the theory that
the Constitution does not apply to the territories without
legislation. Other cases, arising from territories where such
legislation has been had, contain language which would justify the
inference that such legislation was unnecessary, and that the
Constitution took effect immediately upon the cession of the
territory to the United States. It may be remarked, upon the
threshold of an analysis of these cases, that too much weight must
not be given to general expressions found in several opinions that
the power of Congress over territories is complete and supreme,
because these words may be interpreted as meaning only supreme
under the Constitution; nor, upon the other hand, to general
statements that the Constitution covers the territories as well as
the states, since in such cases it will be found that acts of
Congress had already extended the Constitution to such territories,
and that thereby it subordinated, not only its own acts, but those
of the territorial legislatures, to what had become the supreme law
of the land.
"It is a maxim not to be disregarded that general expressions,
in every opinion, are to be taken in connection with the case in
which those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case, they
may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a
subsequent suit when the very point is presented for decision. The
reason of this maxim is obvious. The question actually
Page 182 U. S. 259
before the Court is investigated with care, and considered in
its full extent. Other principles which may serve to illustrate it
are considered in their relation to the case decided, but their
possible bearing on all other cases is seldom completely
investigated."
Cohen v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S.
399.
The earliest case is that of
Hepburn v.
Ellzey, 2 Cranch 445, in which this Court held
that, under that clause of the Constitution limiting the
jurisdiction of the courts of the United States to controversies
between citizens of different
states, a citizen of the
District of Columbia could not maintain an action in the circuit
court of the United States. It was argued that the word "state," in
that connection, was used simply to denote a distinct political
society. "But," said the Chief Justice,
"as the act of Congress obviously used the word 'state' in
reference to that term as used in the Constitution, it becomes
necessary to inquire whether Columbia is a state in the sense of
that instrument. The result of that examination is a conviction
that the members of the American confederacy only are the states
contemplated in the Constitution, . . . and excludes from the term
the signification attached to it by writers on the law of
nations."
This case was followed in
Barney v.
Baltimore, 6 Wall. 280, and quite recently in
Hooe v. Jamieson, 166 U. S. 395. The
same rule was applied to citizens of territories in
New Orleans v.
Winter, 1 Wheat. 91, in which an attempt was made
to distinguish a territory from the District of Columbia. But it
was said that "neither of them is a
state in the sense in
which that term is used in the Constitution." In
Scott v.
Jones, 5 How. 343, and in
Miners' Bank
v. Iowa, 12 How. 1, it was held that, under the
Judiciary Act, permitting writs of error to the Supreme Court of a
state in cases where the validity of a
state statute is
drawn in question, an act of a territorial legislature was not
within the contemplation of Congress.
Loughborough v.
Blake, 5 Wheat. 317, was an action of trespass or,
as appears by the original record,
replevin, brought in
the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia to try the right of
Congress to impose a direct tax for general purposes on that
District. 3 Stat. 216, c. 60, Feb. 17, 1815. It was insisted that
Congress could act in a double capacity: in one as legislating
Page 182 U. S. 260
for the states; in the other as a local legislature for the
District of Columbia. In the latter character, it was admitted that
the power of levying direct taxes might be exercised, but for
District purposes only, as a state legislature might tax for state
purposes, but that it could not legislate for the District under
Art. 1, sec. 8, giving to Congress the power "to lay and collect
taxes, imposts, and excises," which "shall be uniform throughout
the United States," inasmuch as the District was no part of the
United States. It was held that the grant of this power was a
general one without limitation as to place, and consequently
extended to all places over which the government extends, and that
it extended to the District of Columbia as a constituent part of
the United States. The fact that Art. 1, sec. 2, declares that
"representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the
several states . . . according to their respective numbers"
furnished a standard by which taxes were apportioned, but not to
exempt any part of the country from their operation.
"The words used do not mean that direct taxes shall be imposed
on states only which are represented, or shall be apportioned to
representatives; but that direct taxation, in its application to
states, shall be apportioned to numbers."
That Art. I, sec. 9, � 4, declaring that direct taxes
shall be laid in proportion to the census, was applicable to the
District of Columbia,
"and will enable Congress to apportion on it its just and equal
share of the burden, with the same accuracy as on the respective
states. If the tax be laid in this proportion, it is within the
very words of the restriction. It is a tax in proportion to the
census or enumeration referred to."
It was further held that the words of the ninth section did
not
"in terms require that the system of direct taxation, when
resorted to, shall be extended to the territories, as the words of
the second section require that it shall be extended to all the
states. They therefore may, without violence, be understood to give
a rule when the territories shall be taxed, without imposing the
necessity of taxing them."
There could be no doubt as to the correctness of this
conclusion, so far at least, as it applied to the District of
Columbia. This District had been a part of the States of Maryland
and
Page 182 U. S. 261
Virginia. It had been subject to the Constitution, and was a
part of the United States. The Constitution had attached to it
irrevocably. There are steps which can never be taken backward. The
tie that bound the States of Maryland and Virginia to the
Constitution could not be dissolved without at least the consent of
the federal and state governments to a formal separation. The mere
cession of the District of Columbia to the federal government
relinquished the authority of the states, but it did not take it
out of the United States or from under the aegis of the
Constitution. Neither party had ever consented to that construction
of the cession. If, before the District was set off, Congress had
passed an unconstitutional act affecting its inhabitants, it would
have been void. If done after the District was created, it would
have been equally void; in other words, Congress could not do
indirectly, by carving out the District, what it could not do
directly. The District still remained a part of the United States,
protected by the Constitution. Indeed, it would have been a
fanciful construction to hold that territory which had been once a
part of the United States ceased to be such by being ceded directly
to the federal government.
In delivering the opinion, however, the Chief Justice made
certain observations which have occasioned some embarrassment in
other cases. "The power," said he,
"to lay and collect duties, imposts, and excises may be
exercised, and must be exercised, throughout the United States.
Does this term designate the whole, or any particular portion of
the American empire? Certainly this question can admit but of one
answer. It is the name given to our great Republic which is
composed of states and territories. The District of Columbia, or
the territory west of the Missouri, is not less within the United
States than Maryland or Pennsylvania, and it is not less necessary,
on the principles of our Constitution, that uniformity in the
imposition of imposts, duties, and excises should be observed in
the one than in the other. Since, then, the power to lay and
collect taxes, which includes direct taxes, is obviously
coextensive with the power to lay and collect duties, imposts, and
excises, and since the latter extends throughout the United States,
it follows that the power to impose direct taxes also extends
throughout
Page 182 U. S. 262
the United States."
So far as applicable to the District of Columbia, these
observations are entirely sound. So far as they apply to the
territories, they were not called for by the exigencies of the
case.
In line with
Loughborough v. Blake is the case of
Callan v. Wilson, 127 U. S. 540, in
which the provisions of the Constitution relating to trial by jury
were held to be in force in the District of Columbia. Upon the
other hand, in
De Geofroy v. Riggs, 133 U.
S. 258, the District of Columbia, as a political
community, was held to be one of "the states of the Union" within
the meaning of that term as used in a consular convention of
February 23, 1853, with France. The seventh article of that
convention provided that in all the states of the Union whose
existing laws permitted it, Frenchmen should enjoy the right of
holding, disposing of, and inheriting property in the same manner
as citizens of the United States, and as to the states of the Union
by whose existing laws aliens were not permitted to hold real
estate, the President engaged to recommend to them the passage of
such laws as might be necessary for the purpose of conferring this
right. The Court was of opinion that, if these terms "states of the
Union" were held to exclude the District of Columbia and the
territories, our government would be placed in the inconsistent
position of stipulating that French citizens should enjoy the right
of holding, disposing of, and inheriting property in like manner as
citizens of the United States in states whose laws permitted it,
and engaging that the President should recommend the passage of
laws conferring that right in states whose laws did not permit
aliens to hold real estate while at the same time refusing to
citizens of France holding property in the District of Columbia and
in some of the territories, where the power of the United States is
in that respect unlimited, a like release from the disabilities of
alienage,
"thus discriminating against them in favor of citizens of France
holding property in states having similar legislation. No plausible
motive can be assigned for such discrimination. A right which the
government of the United States apparently desires that citizens of
France should enjoy in all the states it would hardly refuse to
them in the district
Page 182 U. S. 263
embracing its capital or in any of its own territorial
dependencies."
This case may be considered as establishing the principle that,
in dealing with foreign sovereignties, the term "United States" has
a broader meaning than when used in the Constitution, and includes
all territories subject to the jurisdiction of the federal
government, wherever located. In its treaties and conventions with
foreign nations, this government is a unit. This is so not because
the territories comprised a part of the government established by
the people of the states in their Constitution, but because the
federal government is the only authorized organ of the territories,
as well as of the states, in their foreign relations. By Art. I,
Sec. 10, of the Constitution,
"no state shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or
confederation, . . . [or] enter into any agreement or compact with
another state, or with a foreign power."
It would be absurd to hold that the territories, which are much
less independent than the states and are under the direct control
and tutelage of the general government, possess a power in this
particular which is thus expressly forbidden to the states.
It may be added in this connection that, to put at rest all
doubts regarding the applicability of the Constitution to the
District of Columbia, Congress, by the Act of February 21, 1871, 16
Stat. 419, 426, c. 62, sec. 34, specifically extended the
Constitution and laws of the United States to this District.
The case of
American Ins. Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511, originated in a libel filed in
the District Court for South Carolina, for the possession of 356
bales of cotton which had been wrecked on the coast of Florida,
abandoned to the insurance companies, and subsequently brought to
Charleston. Canter claimed the cotton as
bona fide
purchaser at a marshal's sale at Key West by virtue of a decree of
a territorial court consisting of a notary and five jurors,
proceeding under an act of the Governor and Legislative Council of
Florida. The case turned upon the question whether the sale by that
court was effectual to divest the interest of the underwriters. The
district judge pronounced the proceedings a nullity, and rendered a
decree from which both parties appealed to the circuit court. The
circuit court
Page 182 U. S. 264
reversed the decree of the district court upon the ground that
the proceedings of the court at Key West were legal, and
transferred the property to Canter, the alleged purchaser.
The opinion of the circuit court was delivered by Mr. Justice
Johnson, of the Supreme Court, and is published in full in a note
in Peters' Reports. It was argued that the Constitution vested the
admiralty jurisdiction exclusively in the general government; that
the Legislature of Florida had exercised an illegal power in
organizing this Court, and that its decrees were void. On the other
hand, it was insisted that this was a court of separate and
distinct jurisdiction from the courts of the United States, and, as
such, its acts were not to be reviewed in a foreign tribunal such
as was the court of South Carolina;
"that the district of Florida was no part of the United States,
but only an acquisition or dependency, and as such the Constitution
per se had no binding effect in or over it."
"It becomes," said the court
"indispensable to the solution of these difficulties that we
should conceive a just idea of the relation in which Florida stands
to the United States. . . . And first, it is obvious that there is
a material distinction between the territory now under
consideration and that which is acquired from the aborigines
(whether by purchase or conquest)
within the acknowledged
limits of the United States, as also that which is acquired by the
establishment of a disputed line. As to both these, there can be no
question that the sovereignty of the state or territory within
which it lies, and of the United States, immediately attached,
producing a complete subjection to all the laws and institutions of
the two governments, local and general, unless modified by treaty.
The question now to be considered relates to territories previously
subject to the acknowledged jurisdiction of another sovereign, such
as was Florida to the Crown of Spain. And on this subject we have
the most explicit proof that the understanding of our public
functionaries is that the government and laws of the United States
do not extend to such territory by the mere act of cession. For in
the Act of Congress of March 30, 1822, sec. 9, we have an
enumeration of the acts of Congress which are to be held in force
in the territory, and in the tenth section, an enumeration, in the
nature of a bill
Page 182 U. S. 265
of rights, of privileges and immunities which could not be
denied to the inhabitants of the territory if they came under the
Constitution by the mere act of cession. . . . These states, this
territory, and future
states to be admitted into the Union
are the sole objects of the Constitution; there is no express
provision whatever made in the Constitution for the acquisition or
government of territories beyond those limits."
He further held that the right of acquiring territory was
altogether incidental to the treatymaking power, that their
government was left to Congress, that the Territory of Florida did
"not stand in the relation of a state to the United States," that
the acts establishing a territorial government were the
Constitution of Florida, that, while, under these acts, the
territorial legislature could enact nothing inconsistent with what
Congress had made inherent and permanent in the territorial
government, it had not done so in organizing the court at Key
West.
From the decree of the circuit court, the underwriters appealed
to this Court, and the question was argued whether the circuit
court was correct in drawing a distinction between territories
existing at the date of the Constitution and territories
subsequently acquired. The main contention of the appellants was
that the superior courts of Florida had been vested by Congress
with exclusive jurisdiction in all admiralty and maritime cases,
that salvage was such a case, and therefore any law of Florida
giving jurisdiction in salvage cases to any other court was
unconstitutional. On behalf of the purchaser, it was argued that
the Constitution and laws of the United States were not
per
se in force in Florida, nor the inhabitants citizens of the
United States; that the Constitution was established by the people
of the United States
for the United States; that if the
Constitution were in force in Florida, it was unnecessary to pass
an act extending the laws of the United States to Florida. "What is
Florida?" said Mr. Webster.
"It is no part of the United States. How can it be? How is it
represented? Do the laws of the United States reach Florida? Not
unless by particular provisions."
The opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in this case should be
read in connection with Art. 3, secs. 1 and 2, of the
Constitution,
Page 182 U. S. 266
vesting "the judicial power of the United States" in
"one Supreme Court and in such inferior courts as the Congress
may from time to time ordain and establish. The judges both of the
Supreme and inferior courts shall hold their offices during good
behavior,"
etc. He held that the Court "should take into view the relation
in which Florida stands to the United States;" that territory ceded
by treaty "becomes a part of the nation to which it is annexed,
either on the terms stipulated in the treaty of cession, or on such
as its new master shall impose." That Florida, upon the conclusion
of the treaty, became a territory of the United States and subject
to the power of Congress under the territorial clause of the
Constitution. The acts providing a territorial government for
Florida were examined in detail. He held that the judicial clause
of the Constitution, above quoted, did not apply to Florida; that
the judges of the superior courts of Florida held their office for
four years; that
"these courts are not, then, constitutional courts in which the
judicial power conferred by the Constitution on the general
government can be deposited;"
that "they are legislative courts, created in virtue of the
general right of sovereignty which exists in the government," or in
virtue of the territorial clause of the Constitution; that the
jurisdiction with which they are invested is not a part of judicial
power of the Constitution, but is conferred by Congress in the
exercise of those general powers which that body possesses over the
territories of the United States, and that, in legislating for
them, Congress exercises the combined powers of the general and of
a state government. The act of the territorial legislature creating
the court in question was held not to be "inconsistent with the
laws and Constitution of the United States," and the decree of the
circuit court was affirmed.
As the only judicial power vested in Congress is to create
courts whose judges shall hold their offices during good behavior,
it necessarily follows that if Congress authorizes the creation of
courts and the appointment of judges for a limited time, it must
act independently of the Constitution and upon territory which is
not part of the United States within the meaning of the
Constitution. In delivering his opinion in this
Page 182 U. S. 267
case Mr. Chief Justice Marshall made no reference whatever to
the prior case of
Loughborough v.
Blake, 5 Wheat. 317, in which he had intimated that
the territories were part of the United States. But if they be a
part of the United States, it is difficult to see how Congress
could create courts in such territories except under the judicial
clause of the Constitution. The power to make needful rules and
regulations would certainly not authorize anything inconsistent
with the Constitution if it applied to the territories. Certainly
no such court could be created within a state except under the
restrictions of the judicial clause. It is sufficient to say that
this case has ever since been accepted as authority for the
proposition that the judicial clause of the Constitution has no
application to courts created in the territories, and that, with
respect to them, Congress has a power wholly unrestricted by it. We
must assume as a logical inference from this case that the other
powers vested in Congress by the Constitution have no application
to these territories, or that the judicial clause is exceptional in
that particular.
This case was followed in
Benner v.
Porter, 9 How. 235, in which it was held that the
jurisdiction of these territorial courts ceased upon the admission
of Florida into the Union, Mr. Justice Nelson remarking of them (p.
50 U. S. 242),
that
"they are not organized under the Constitution nor subject to
its complex distribution of the powers of government as the organic
law, but are the creations exclusively of the legislative
department, and subject to its supervision and control. Whether or
not there are provisions in that instrument which extend to and act
upon these territorial governments it is not now material to
examine. We are speaking here of those provisions that refer
particularly to the distinction between federal and state
jurisdiction. . . . (p.
50 U. S. 244). Neither were
they organized by Congress under the Constitution, as they were
invested with powers and jurisdiction which that body were
incapable of conferring upon a court within the limits of a
state."
To the same effect are
Clinton v.
Englebrecht, 13 Wall. 434;
Good v. Martin,
95 U. S. 90,
95 U. S. 98, and
McAllister v. United States, 141 U.
S. 174.
That the power over the territories is vested in Congress
Page 182 U. S. 268
without limitation, and that this power has been considered the
foundation upon which the territorial governments rest, was also
asserted by Chief Justice Marshall in
McCulloch
v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 422,
and in
United States v.
Gratiot, 14 Pet. 526. So, too, in
Mormon Church
v. United States, 136 U. S. 1, in
holding that Congress had power to repeal the charter of the
church, Mr. Justice Bradley used the following forceful
language:
"The power of Congress over the territories of the United States
is general and plenary, arising from and incidental to the right to
acquire the territory itself, and from the power given by the
Constitution to make all needful rules and regulations respecting
the territory or other property belonging to the United States. It
would be absurd to hold that the United States has power to acquire
territory and no power to govern it when acquired. The power to
acquire territory, other than the territory northwest of the Ohio
River (which belonged to the United States at the adoption of the
Constitution) is derived from the treatymaking power and the power
to declare and carry on war. The incidents of these powers are
those of national sovereignty, and belong to all independent
governments. The power to make acquisitions of territory by
conquest, by treaty, and by cession is an incident of national
sovereignty. The Territory of Louisiana, when acquired from France,
and the territories west of the Rocky mountains, when acquired from
Mexico, became the absolute property and domain of the United
States, subject to such conditions as the government, in its
diplomatic negotiations, had seen fit to accept relating to the
rights of the people then inhabiting those territories. Having
rightfully acquired said territories, the United States government
was the only one which could impose laws upon them, and its
sovereignty over them was complete. . . . Doubtless Congress, in
legislating for the territories, would be subject to those
fundamental limitations in favor of personal rights which are
formulated in the Constitution and its amendments, but those
limitations would exist rather by inference and the general spirit
of the Constitution, from which Congress derives all its powers,
than by any express and direct application of its provisions."
See also, to the same
Page 182 U. S. 269
effect,
National Bank v. County of Yankton,
101 U. S. 129;
Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U. S. 15.
In
Webster v.
Reid, 11 How. 437, it was held that a law of the
Territory of Iowa, which prohibited the trial by jury of certain
actions at law founded on contract to recover payment for services,
was void, but the case is of little value as bearing upon the
question of the extension of the Constitution to that territory
inasmuch as the organic law of the Territory of Iowa, by express
provision and by reference, extended the laws of the United States,
including the Ordinance of 1787 (which provided expressly for jury
trials), so far as they were applicable, and the case was put upon
this ground. 5 Stat. 235, 239, sec. 12.
In
Reynolds v. United States, 98 U. S.
145, a law of the Territory of Utah providing for grand
juries of fifteen persons was held to be constitutional, though
Rev.Stat. sec. 808, required that a grand jury impaneled before any
circuit or district court of the United States shall consist of not
less than sixteen nor more than twenty-three persons. Section 808
was held to apply only to the circuit and district courts. The
territorial courts were free to act in obedience to their own
laws.
In
Ross' Case, 140 U. S. 453,
petitioner had been convicted by the American consular tribunal in
Japan of a murder committed upon an American vessel in the harbor
of Yokohama, and sentenced to death. There was no indictment by a
grand jury and no trial by a petit jury. This Court affirmed the
conviction, holding that the Constitution had no application, since
it was ordained and established "for the United States of America,"
and not for countries outside of their limits.
"The guaranties it affords against accusation of capital or
infamous crimes, except by indictment or presentment by a grand
jury, and for an impartial trial by a jury when thus accused, apply
only to citizens and others within the United States, or who are
brought there for trial for alleged offenses committed elsewhere,
and not to residents or temporary sojourners abroad."
In
Springville v. Thomas, 166 U.
S. 707, it was held that a verdict returned by less than
the whole number of jurors was invalid because in contravention of
the Seventh Amendment to the Constitution and the Act of Congress
of April 7, 1874,
Page 182 U. S. 270
18 Stat. 27, c. 80, which provide "that no party has been or
shall be deprived of the right of trial by jury in cases cognizable
at common law." It was also intimated that Congress "could not
impart the power to change the constitutional rule," which was
obviously true with respect to Utah, since the organic act of that
territory had expressly extended to it the Constitution and laws of
the United States. As we have already held, that provision, once
made, could not be withdrawn. If the Constitution could be
withdrawn directly, it could be nullified indirectly by acts passed
inconsistent with it. The Constitution would thus cease to exist as
such and become of no greater authority than an ordinary act of
Congress. In
American Pub. Co. v. Fisher, 166 U.
S. 464, a similar law providing for majority verdicts
was put upon the express ground above stated, that the organic act
of Utah extended the Constitution over that territory. These
rulings were repeated in
Thompson v. Utah, 170 U.
S. 343, and applied to felonies committed before the
territory became a state, although the state constitution continued
the same provision.
Eliminating, then, from the opinions of this Court all
expressions unnecessary to the disposition of the particular case,
and gleaning therefrom the exact point decided in each, the
following propositions may be considered as established:
1. That the District of Columbia and the territories are not
states within the judicial clause of the Constitution giving
jurisdiction in cases between citizens of different states;
2. That territories are not states within the meaning of
Rev.Stat. sec. 709, permitting writs of error from this Court in
cases where the validity of a
state statute is drawn in
question;
3. That the District of Columbia and the territories are states
as that word is used in treaties with foreign powers with respect
to the ownership, disposition, and inheritance of property;
4. That the territories are not within the clause of the
Constitution providing for the creation of a supreme court and such
inferior courts as Congress may see fit to establish;
5. That the Constitution does not apply to foreign countries or
to trials therein conducted, and that Congress may lawfully
Page 182 U. S. 271
provide for such trials before consular tribunals, without the
intervention of a grand or petit jury;
6. That where the Constitution has been once formally extended
by Congress to territories, neither Congress nor the territorial
legislature can enact laws inconsistent therewith.
The case of
Dred Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 393, remains to be considered.
This was an action of trespass
vi et armis brought in the
Circuit Court for the District of Missouri by Scott, alleging
himself to be a citizen of Missouri, against Sandford, a citizen of
New York. Defendant pleaded to the jurisdiction that Scott was not
a citizen of the State of Missouri, because a negro of African
descent whose ancestors were imported as negro slaves. Plaintiff
demurred to this plea, and the demurrer was sustained, whereupon,
by stipulation of counsel and with leave of the court, defendant
pleaded in bar the general issue, and specially that the plaintiff
was a slave and the lawful property of defendant, and, as such, he
had a right to restrain him. The wife and children of the plaintiff
were also involved in the suit.
The facts, in brief, were that plaintiff had been a slave
belonging to Dr. Emerson, a surgeon in the army; that, in 1834,
Emerson took the plaintiff from the State of Missouri to Rock
Island, Illinois, and subsequently to Fort Snelling, Minnesota
(then known as Upper Louisiana), and held him there until 1838.
Scott married his wife there, of whom the children were
subsequently born. In 1838, they returned to Missouri.
Two questions were presented by the record: first, whether the
circuit court had jurisdiction, and second, if it had jurisdiction,
was the judgment erroneous or not? With regard to the first
question, the Court stated that it was its duty
"to decide whether the facts stated in the plea are or are not
sufficient to show that the plaintiff is not entitled to sue as a
citizen in a court of the United States,"
and that the question was whether
"a negro whose ancestors were imported into this country and
sold as slaves became a member of the political community formed
and brought into existence by the Constitution of the United
States, and as such became entitled to all the rights and
privileges and immunities guaranteed by that instrument to the
citizen, one of which rights is the privilege of suing in a
court
Page 182 U. S. 272
of the United States."
It was held that he was not, and was not included under the word
"citizens" in the Constitution, and therefore could claim "none of
the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for and
secures to citizens of the United States;" that it did not follow,
because he had all the rights and privileges of a citizen of a
state, he must be a citizen of the United States; that no state
could by any law of its own "introduce a new member into the
political community created by the Constitution;" that the African
race was not intended to be included, and formed no part of the
people who framed and adopted the Declaration of Independence. The
question of the status of negroes in England and the several states
was considered at great length by the Chief Justice, and the
conclusion reached that Scott was not a citizen of Missouri, and
that the circuit court had no jurisdiction of the case.
This was sufficient to dispose of the case without reference to
the question of slavery, but, as the plaintiff insisted upon his
title to freedom and citizenship by the fact that he and his wife,
though born slaves, were taken by their owner and kept four years
in Illinois and Minnesota, they thereby became and upon their
return to Missouri became citizens of that state, the Chief Justice
proceeded to discuss the question whether Scott was still a slave.
As the Court had decided against his citizenship upon the plea in
abatement, it was insisted that further decision upon the question
of his freedom or slavery was extrajudicial, and mere
obiter
dicta. But the Chief Justice held that the correction of one
error in the court below did not deprive the appellate court of the
power of examining further into the record and correcting any other
material error which may have been committed; that the error of an
inferior court in actually pronouncing judgment for one of the
parties, in a case in which it had no jurisdiction, can be looked
into or corrected by this Court, even though it had decided a
similar question presented in the pleadings.
Proceeding to decide the case upon the merits, he held that the
territorial clause of the Constitution was confined to the
territory which belonged to the United States at the time the
Constitution
Page 182 U. S. 273
was adopted, and did not apply to territory subsequently
acquired from a foreign government.
In further examining the question as to what provision of the
Constitution authorizes the federal government to acquire territory
outside of the original limits of the United States, and what
powers it may exercise therein over the person or property of a
citizen of the United States, he made use of the following
expressions, upon which great reliance is placed by the plaintiff
in this case (p.
60 U. S.
446):
"There is certainly no power given by the Constitution to the
federal government to establish or maintain colonies bordering on
the United States or at a distance, to be ruled and governed at its
own pleasure, . . . and if a new state is admitted, it needs no
further legislation by Congress, because the Constitution itself
defines the relative rights and powers and duties of the state, and
the citizens of the state, and the federal government. But no power
is given to acquire a territory to be held and governed permanently
in that character."
He further held that citizens who migrate to a territory cannot
be ruled as mere colonists, and that, while Congress had the power
of legislating over territories until states were formed from them,
it could not deprive a citizen of his property merely because he
brought it into a particular territory of the United States, and
that this doctrine applied to slaves as well as to other property.
Hence it followed that the act of Congress which prohibited a
citizen from holding and owning slaves in territories north of
36�30' (known as the Missouri Compromise) was
unconstitutional and void, and the fact that Scott was carried into
such territory, referring to what is now known as Minnesota, did
not entitle him to his freedom.
He further held that whether he was made free by being taken
into the free State of Illinois and being kept there two years
depended upon the laws of Missouri, and not those of Illinois, and
that, by the decisions of the highest court of that state, his
status as a slave continued notwithstanding his residence of two
years in Illinois.
It must be admitted that this case is a strong authority in
favor of the plaintiff, and if the opinion of the Chief Justice
be
Page 182 U. S. 274
taken at its full value, it is decisive in his favor. We are
not, however, bound to overlook the fact that, before the Chief
Justice gave utterance to his opinion upon the merits, he had
already disposed of the case adversely to the plaintiff upon the
question of jurisdiction, and that, in view of the excited
political condition of the country at the time, it is unfortunate
that he felt compelled to discuss the question upon the merits,
particularly so in view of the fact that it involved a ruling that
an act of Congress which had been acquiesced in for thirty years
was declared unconstitutional. It would appear from the opinion of
Mr. Justice Wayne that the real reason for discussing these
constitutional questions was that "there had become such a
difference of opinion" about them "that the peace and harmony of
the country required the settlement of them by judicial decision."
P.
60 U. S. 455.
The attempt was not successful. It is sufficient to say that the
country did not acquiesce in the opinion, and that the Civil War,
which shortly thereafter followed, produced such changes in
judicial as well as public sentiment as to seriously impair the
authority of this case.
While there is much in the opinion of the Chief Justice which
tends to prove that he thought all the provisions of the
Constitution extended of their own force to the territories west of
the Mississippi, the question actually decided is readily
distinguishable from the one involved in the cause under
consideration. The power to prohibit slavery in the territories is
so different from the power to impose duties upon territorial
products, and depends upon such different provisions of the
Constitution, that they can scarcely be considered as analogous
unless we assume broadly that every clause of the Constitution
attaches to the territories as well as to the states -- a claim
quite inconsistent with the position of the Court in the
Canter case. If the assumption be true that slaves are
indistinguishable from other property, the inference from the
Dred Scott case is irresistible that Congress had no power
to prohibit their introduction into a territory. It would scarcely
be insisted that Congress could with one hand invite settlers to
locate in the territories of the United States, and with the other
deny them the right to take their property and belongings with
them. The two
Page 182 U. S. 275
are so inseparable from each other that one could scarcely be
granted and the other withheld without an exercise of arbitrary
power inconsistent with the underlying principles of a free
government. It might indeed be claimed with great plausibility that
such a law would amount to a deprivation of property within the
Fourteenth Amendment. The difficulty with the
Dred Scott
case was that the Court refused to make a distinction between
property in general and a wholly exceptional class of property. Mr.
Benton tersely stated the distinction by saying that the Virginian
might carry his slaves into the territories, but he could not carry
with him the Virginian law which made him a slave.
In his history of the
Dred Scott case, Mr. Benton
states that the doctrine that the Constitution extended to
territories as well as to states first made its appearance in the
Senate in the session of 1848-1849, by an attempt to amend a bill
giving territorial government to California, New Mexico, and Utah
(itself "hitched on" to a general appropriation bill), by adding
the words
"that the Constitution of the United States and all and singular
the several acts of Congress [describing them] be, and the same
hereby are, extended and given full force and efficacy in said
territories."
Says Mr. Benton:
"The novelty and strangeness of this proposition called up Mr.
Webster, who repulsed as an absurdity and as an impossibility the
scheme of extending the Constitution to the territories, declaring
that instrument to have been made for states, not territories; that
Congress governed the territories independently of the Constitution
and incompatibly with it; that no part of it went to a territory
but what Congress chose to send; that it could not act of itself
anywhere, not even in the states for which it was made, and that it
required an act of Congress to put it in operation before it had
effect anywhere. Mr. Clay was of the same opinion, and added:"
"Now, really, I must say the idea that,
eo instanti
upon the consummation of the treaty, the Constitution of the United
States spread itself over the acquired territory and carried along
with it the institution of slavery is so irreconcilable with my
comprehension or any reason I possess that I hardly know how to
meet it."
Upon the other hand, Mr. Calhoun
Page 182 U. S. 276
boldly avowed his intent to carry slavery into them under the
wing of the Constitution, and denounced as enemies of the south all
who opposed it.
The amendment was rejected by the House, and a contest brought
on which threatened the loss of the general appropriation bill in
which this amendment was incorporated, and the Senate finally
receded from its amendment. "Such," said Mr. Benton,
"were the portentous circumstances under which this new doctrine
first revealed itself in the American Senate, and then as needing
legislative sanction requiring an act of Congress to carry the
Constitution into the territories and to give it force and efficacy
there."
Of the
Dred Scott case, he says:
"I conclude this introductory note with recurring to the great
fundamental error of the court (father of all the political errors)
-- that of assuming the extension of the Constitution to the
territories. I call it 'assuming,' for it seems to be a naked
assumption without a reason to support it, or a leg to stand upon,
condemned by the Constitution itself and the whole history of its
formation and administration. Who were the parties to it? The
states alone. Their delegates framed it in the federal convention;
their citizens adopted it in the state conventions. The Northwest
Territory was then in existence, and it had been for three years,
yet it had no voice either in the framing or adopting of the
instrument, no delegate at Philadelphia, no submission of it to
their will for adoption. The preamble shows it made by states.
Territories are not alluded to in it."
Finally, in summing up the results of the decisions holding the
invalidity of the Missouri Compromise and the self-extension of the
Constitution to the territories, he declares
"that the decisions conflict with the uniform action of all the
departments of the federal government from its foundation to the
present time, and cannot be received as rules governing Congress
and the people without reversing that action, and admitting the
political supremacy of the court, and accepting an altered
Constitution from its hands and taking a new and portentous point
of departure in the working of the government."
To sustain the judgment in the case under consideration, it by
no means becomes necessary to show that none of the articles
Page 182 U. S. 277
of the Constitution apply to the Island of Porto Rico. There is
a clear distinction between such prohibitions as go to the very
root of the power of Congress to act at all, irrespective of time
of place, and such as are operative only "throughout the United
States" or among the several states.
Thus, when the Constitution declares that "no bill of attainder
or
ex post facto law shall be passed," and that "no title
of nobility shall be granted by the United States," it goes to the
competency of Congress to pass a bill
of that description.
Perhaps the same remark may apply to the First Amendment, that
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
to peacefully assemble and to petition the government for a redress
of grievances."
We do not wish, however, to be understood as expressing an
opinion how far the bill of rights contained in the first eight
amendments is of general and how far of local application.
Upon the other hand, when the Constitution declares that all
duties shall be uniform "throughout the United States," it becomes
necessary to inquire whether there be any territory over which
Congress has jurisdiction which is not a part of the "United
States," by which term we understand the states whose people
united to form the Constitution, and such as have since
been admitted to the Union upon an equality with them. Not only did
the people in adopting the Thirteenth Amendment thus recognize a
distinction between the United States and "any place subject to
their jurisdiction," but Congress itself, in the Act of March 27,
1804, 2 Stat. 298, c. 56, providing for the proof of public
records, applied the provisions of the act not only to "every court
and office within the United States," but to the "courts and
offices of the respective territories of the United States and
countries subject to the jurisdiction of the United States," as to
the courts and offices of the several states. This classification,
adopted by the Eighth Congress, is carried into the Revised
Statutes as follows:
"SEC. 905. The acts of the legislature of any state or
territory,
Page 182 U. S. 278
or of any country subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States, shall be authenticated,"
etc.
"SEC. 906. All records and exemplifications of books which may
be kept in any public office of and state or territory, or of any
country subject to the jurisdiction of the United States,"
etc.
Unless these words are to be rejected as meaningless, we must
treat them as a recognition by Congress of the fact that there may
be territories subject to the jurisdiction of the United States
which are not
of the United States.
In determining the meaning of the words of Article I, sec. 8,
"uniform throughout the United States," we are bound to consider
not only the provisions forbidding preference being given to the
ports of one state over those of another (to which attention has
already been called), but the other clauses declaring that no tax
or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any state, and that
no state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any imposts or
duties upon imports or exports, nor any duty on tonnage. The object
of all of these was to protect the states which united in forming
the Constitution from discriminations by Congress which would
operate unfairly or injuriously upon some states and not equally
upon others. The opinion of MR. JUSTICE WHITE in
Knowlton v.
Moore, 178 U. S. 41,
contains an elaborate historical review of the proceedings in the
convention which resulted in the adoption of these different
clauses and their arrangement, and he there comes to the conclusion
(p.
178 U. S. 105)
that,
"although the provision as to preference between ports and that
regarding uniformity of duties, imposts, and excises were one in
purpose, one in their adoption,"
they were originally placed together, and "became separated only
in arranging the Constitution for the purpose of style." Thus
construed together, the purpose is irresistible that the words
"throughout the United States" are indistinguishable from the words
"among or between the several states," and that these prohibitions
were intended to apply only to commerce between ports of the
several states as they then existed or should thereafter be
admitted to the Union.
Indeed, the practical interpretation put by Congress upon the
Constitution has been long continued and uniform to the effect
Page 182 U. S. 279
that the Constitution is applicable to territories acquired by
purchase or conquest only when and so far as Congress shall so
direct. Notwithstanding its duty to "guarantee to every state in
this Union a republican form of government" Art. IV, sec. 4, by
which we understand, according to the definition of Webster, "a
government in which the supreme power resides in the whole body of
the people, and is exercised by representatives elected by them,"
Congress did not hesitate, in the original organization of the
Territories of Louisiana, Florida, the Northwest Territory, and its
subdivisions of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, and Wisconsin,
and still more recently in the case of Alaska, to establish a form
of government bearing a much greater analogy to a British Crown
colony than a republican state of America, and to vest the
legislative power either in a governor and council, or a governor
and judges, to be appointed by the President. It was not until they
had attained a certain population that power was given them to
organize a legislature by vote of the people. In all these cases,
as well as in territories subsequently organized west of the
Mississippi, Congress thought it necessary either to extend to
Constitution and laws of the United States over them, or to declare
that the inhabitants should be entitled to enjoy the right of trial
by jury, of bail, and of the privilege of the writ of habeas
corpus, as well as other privileges of the bill of rights.
We are also of opinion that the power to acquire territory by
treaty implies not only the power to govern such territory, but to
prescribe upon what terms the United States will receive its
inhabitants, and what their status shall be in what Chief Justice
Marshall termed the "American empire." There seems to be no middle
ground between this position and the doctrine that, if their
inhabitants do not become, immediately upon annexation, citizens of
the United States, their children thereafter born, whether savages
or civilized, are such, and entitled to all the rights, privileges
and immunities of citizens. If such be their status, the
consequences will be extremely serious. Indeed, it is doubtful if
Congress would ever assent to the annexation of territory upon the
condition that its inhabitants, however foreign they may be to our
habits, traditions, and modes
Page 182 U. S. 280
of life, shall become at once citizens of the United States. In
all its treaties hitherto, the treatymaking power has made special
provision for this subject -- in the cases of Louisiana and
Florida, by stipulating that
"the inhabitants shall be incorporated into the Union of the
United States and admitted as soon as possible . . . to the
enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and immunities of citizens
of the United States;"
in the case of Mexico, that they should
"be incorporated into the Union, and be admitted at the proper
time (to be judged of by the Congress of the United States) to the
enjoyment of all the rights of citizens of the United States,"
in the case of Alaska, that the inhabitants who remained three
years, "with the exception of uncivilized native tribes, shall be
admitted to the enjoyment of all the rights," etc, and in the case
of Porto Rico and the Philippines, "that the civil rights and
political status of the native inhabitants . . . shall be
determined by Congress." In all these cases there is an implied
denial of the right of the inhabitants to American citizenship
until Congress by further action shall signify its assent
thereto.
Grave apprehensions of danger are felt by many eminent men -- a
fear lest an unrestrained possession of power on the part of
Congress may lead to unjust and oppressive legislation in which the
natural rights of territories, or their inhabitants, may be
engulfed in a centralized despotism. These fears, however, find no
justification in the action of Congress in the past century nor in
the conduct of the British Parliament towards its outlying
possessions since the American Revolution. Indeed, in the only
instance in which this Court has declared an act of Congress
unconstitutional as trespassing upon the rights of territories (the
Missouri Compromise), such action was dictated by motives of
humanity and justice, and so far commanded popular approval as to
be embodied in the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution. There
are certain principles of natural justice inherent in the
Anglo-Saxon character which need no expression in constitutions or
statutes to give them effect or to secure dependencies against
legislation manifestly hostile to their real interests. Even in the
Foraker Act itself, the constitutionality of which is so vigorously
assailed, power
Page 182 U. S. 281
was given to the legislative assembly of Porto Rico to repeal
the very tariff in question in this case, a power it has not seen
fit to exercise. The words of Chief Justice Marshall in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, with respect to the power of
Congress to regulate commerce, are pertinent in this connection:
"This power," said he,
"like all others vested in Congress, is complete in itself, may
be exercised to its utmost extent, and acknowledges no limitations
other than are prescribed in the Constitution. . . . The wisdom and
discretion of Congress, their identity with the people, and the
influence which their constituents possess at elections are in
this, as in many other instances -- as that, for example, of
declaring war -- the sole restraints on which they have relied to
secure them from its abuse. They are the restraints on which the
people must often rely solely in all representative
governments."
So too, in
Johnson v.
McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543,
21 U. S. 583,
it was said by him:
"The title by conquest is acquired and maintained by force. The
conqueror prescribes its limits. Humanity, however, acting on
public opinion, has established, as a general rule, that the
conquered shall not be wantonly oppressed and that their condition
shall remain as eligible as is compatible with the objects of the
conquest. Most usually, they are incorporated with the victorious
nation and become subjects or citizens of the government with which
they are connected. The new and old members of the society mingle
with each other, the distinction between them is gradually lost,
and they make one people. Where this incorporation is practicable,
humanity demands, and a wise policy requires, that the rights of
the conquered to property should remain unimpaired, that the new
subjects should be governed as equitably as the old, and that
confidence in their security should gradually banish the painful
sense of being separated from their ancient connections and united
by force to strangers."
"When the conquest is complete and the conquered inhabitants can
be blended with the conquerors
or safely governed as a distinct
people, public opinion, which not even the conqueror can
disregard, imposes these restraints upon him, and he cannot
Page 182 U. S. 282
neglect them without injury to his fame and hazard to his
power."
The following remarks of MR. JUSTICE WHITE in the case of
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 109,
in which the Court upheld the progressive features of the legacy
tax, are also pertinent:
"The grave consequences which it is asserted must arise in the
future if the right to levy a progressive tax be recognized
involves in its ultimate aspect the mere assertion that free and
representative government is a failure, and that the grossest
abuses of power are foreshadowed unless the courts usurp a purely
legislative function. If a case should ever arise where an
arbitrary and confiscatory exaction is imposed bearing the guise of
a progressive or any other form of tax, it will be time enough to
consider whether the judicial power can afford a remedy by applying
inherent and fundamental principles for the protection of the
individual, even though there be no express authority in the
Constitution to do so."
It is obvious that, in the annexation of outlying and distant
possessions, grave questions will arise from differences of race,
habits, laws, and customs of the people and from differences of
soil, climate, and production which may require action on the part
of Congress that would be quite unnecessary in the annexation of
contiguous territory inhabited only by people of the same race or
by scattered bodies of native Indians.
We suggest, without intending to decide, that there may be a
distinction between certain natural rights enforced in the
Constitution by prohibitions against interference with them and
what may be termed artificial or remedial rights which are peculiar
to our own system of jurisprudence. Of the former class are the
rights to one's own religious opinions and to a public expression
of them, or, as sometimes said, to worship God according to the
dictates of one's own conscience; the right to personal liberty and
individual property; to freedom of speech and of the press; to free
access to courts of justice, to due process of law, and to an equal
protection of the laws; to immunities from unreasonable searches
and seizures, as well as cruel and unusual punishments, and to such
other immunities as are indispensable
Page 182 U. S. 283
to a free government. Of the latter class are the rights to
citizenship, to suffrage,
Minor v.
Happersett, 21 Wall. 162, and to the particular
methods of procedure pointed out in the Constitution which are
peculiar to Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence, and some of which have
already been held by the states to be unnecessary to the proper
protection of individuals.
Whatever may be finally decided by the American people as to the
status of these islands and their inhabitants -- whether they shall
be introduced into the sisterhood of states or be permitted to form
independent governments -- it does not follow that, in the
meantime, awaiting that decision, the people are in the matter of
personal rights unprotected by the provisions of our Constitution
and subject to the merely arbitrary control of Congress. Even if
regarded as aliens, they are entitled under the principles of the
Constitution to be protected in life, liberty, and property. This
has been frequently held by this Court in respect to the Chinese,
even when aliens not possessed of the political rights of citizens
of the United States.
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.
S. 356;
Fong Yue Ting v. United States,
149 U. S. 698;
Lem Moon Sing, 158 U. S. 538,
158 U. S. 547;
Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.
S. 228. We do not desire, however, to anticipate the
difficulties which would naturally arise in this connection, but
merely to disclaim any intention to hold that the inhabitants of
these territories are subject to an unrestrained power on the part
of Congress to deal with them upon the theory that they have no
rights which it is bound to respect.
Large powers must necessarily be entrusted to Congress in
dealing with these problems, and we are bound to assume that they
will be judiciously exercised. That these powers may be abused is
possible. But the same may be said of its powers under the
Constitution as well as outside of it. Human wisdom has never
devised a form of government so perfect that it may not be
perverted to bad purposes. It is never conclusive to argue against
the possession of certain powers from possible abuses of them. It
is safe to say that, if Congress should venture upon legislation
manifestly dictated by selfish interests, it would receive quick
rebuke at the hands of the people. Indeed, it is scarcely possible
that Congress could do a greater injustice
Page 182 U. S. 284
to these islands than would be involved in holding that it could
not impose upon the states taxes and excises without extending the
same taxes to them. Such requirement would bring them at once
within our internal revenue system, including stamps, licenses,
excises, and all the paraphernalia of that system, and apply it to
territories which have had no experience of this kind, and where it
would prove an intolerable burden.
This subject was carefully considered by the Senate committee in
charge of the Foraker bill, which found, after an examination of
the facts, that property in Porto Rico was already burdened with a
private debt amounting probably to $30,000,000; that no system of
property taxation was or ever had been in force in the island, and
that it probably would require two years to inaugurate one and
secure returns from it; that the revenues had always been chiefly
raised by duties on imports and exports, and that our internal
revenue laws, if applied in that island, would prove oppressive and
ruinous to many people and interests; that to undertake to collect
our heavy internal revenue tax, far heavier than Spain ever imposed
upon their products and vocations, would be to invite violations of
the law so innumerable as to make prosecutions impossible, and to
almost certainly alienate and destroy the friendship and goodwill
of that people for the United States.
In passing upon the questions involved in this and kindred
cases, we ought not to overlook the fact that, while the
Constitution was intended to establish a permanent form of
government for the states which should elect to take advantage of
its conditions, and continue for an indefinite future, the vast
possibilities of that future could never have entered the minds of
its framers. The states had but recently emerged from a war with
one of the most powerful nations of Europe, were disheartened by
the failure of the confederacy, and were doubtful as to the
feasibility of a stronger union. Their territory was confined to a
narrow strip of land on the Atlantic coast from Canada to Florida,
with a somewhat indefinite claim to territory beyond the
Alleghenies, where their sovereignty was disputed by tribes of
hostile Indians supported, as was popularly believed, by the
British, who had never formally delivered possession
Page 182 U. S. 285
under the treaty of peace. The vast territory beyond the
Mississippi, which formerly had been claimed by France, since 1762
had belonged to Spain, still a powerful nation and the owner of a
great part of the Western Hemisphere. Under these circumstances, it
is little wonder that the question of annexing these territories
was not made a subject of debate. The difficulties of bringing
about a union of the states were so great, the objections to it
seemed so formidable, that the whole thought of the convention
centered upon surmounting these obstacles. The question of
territories was dismissed with a single clause, apparently
applicable only to the territories then existing, giving Congress
the power to govern and dispose of them.
Had the acquisition of other territories been contemplated as a
possibility, could it have been foreseen that, within little more
than one hundred years, we were destined to acquire not only the
whole vast region between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, but the
Russian possessions in America and distant islands in the Pacific,
it is incredible that no provision should have been made for them,
and the question whether the Constitution should or should not
extend to them have been definitely settled. If it be once conceded
that we are at liberty to acquire foreign territory, a presumption
arises that our power with respect to such territories is the same
power which other nations have been accustomed to exercise with
respect to territories acquired by them. If, in limiting the power
which Congress was to exercise within the United States, it was
also intended to limit it with regard to such territories as the
people of the United States should thereafter acquire, such
limitations should have been expressed. Instead of that, we find
the Constitution speaking only to states, except in the territorial
clause, which is absolute in its terms, and suggestive of no
limitations upon the power of Congress in dealing with them. The
states could only delegate to Congress such powers as they
themselves possessed, and as they had no power to acquire new
territory they had none to delegate in that connection. The logical
inference from this is that, if Congress had power to acquire new
territory, which is conceded, that power was not hampered by the
constitutional provisions. If, upon the other hand, we assume
Page 182 U. S. 286
that the territorial clause of the Constitution was not intended
to be restricted to such territory as the United States then
possessed, there is nothing in the Constitution to indicate that
the power of Congress in dealing with them was intended to be
restricted by any of the other provisions.
There is a provision that "new states may be admitted by the
Congress into this Union." These words, of course, carry the
Constitution with them, but nothing is said regarding the
acquisition of new territories or the extension of the Constitution
over them. The liberality of Congress in legislating the
Constitution into all our contiguous territories has undoubtedly
fostered the impression that it went there by its own force, but
there is nothing in the Constitution itself, and little in the
interpretation put upon it, to confirm that impression. There is
not even an analogy to the provisions of an ordinary mortgage, for
its attachment to after-acquired property, without which it covers
only property existing at the date of the mortgage. In short, there
is absolute silence upon the subject. The executive and legislative
departments of the government have for more than a century
interpreted this silence as precluding the idea that the
Constitution attached to these territories as soon as acquired, and
unless such interpretation be manifestly contrary to the letter or
spirit of the Constitution, it should be followed by the judicial
department. Cooley, Const.Lim. secs. 81-85.
Burrow-Giles
Lithographic Co. v. Sarony, 111 U. S. 53,
111 U. S. 57;
Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649,
143 U. S.
691.
Patriotic and intelligent men may differ widely as to the
desireableness of this or that acquisition, but this is solely a
political question. We can only consider this aspect of the case so
far as to say that no construction of the Constitution should be
adopted which would prevent Congress from considering each case
upon its merits, unless the language of the instrument imperatively
demand it. A false step at this time might be fatal to the
development of what Chief Justice Marshall called the American
empire. Choice in some cases, the natural gravitation of small
bodies towards large ones in others, the result of a successful war
in still others, may bring about conditions which would render the
annexation of distant possessions
Page 182 U. S. 287
desirable. If those possessions are inhabited by alien races,
differing from us in religion, customs, laws, methods of taxation,
and modes of thought, the administration of government and justice
according to Anglo-Saxon principles may for a time be impossible,
and the question at once arises whether large concessions ought not
to be made for a time, that ultimately our own theories may be
carried out and the blessings of a free government under the
Constitution extended to them. We decline to hold that there is
anything in the Constitution to forbid such action.
We are therefore of opinion that the Island of Porto Rico is a
territory appurtenant and belonging to the United States, but not a
part of the United States within the revenue clauses of the
Constitution; that the Foraker Act is constitutional, so far as it
imposes duties upon imports from such island, and that the
plaintiff cannot recover back the duties exacted in this case.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is therefore
Affirmed.
* In announcing the conclusion and judgment of the Court in this
case, MR. JUSTICE BROWN delivered an opinion. MR. JUSTICE WHITE
delivered a concurring opinion which was also concurred in by MR.
JUSTICE SHIRAS and MR. JUSTICE McKENNA. MR. JUSTICE GRAY also
delivered a concurring opinion. THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM dissented. Thus
it is seen that there is no opinion in which a majority of the
Court concurred. Under these circumstances, I have, after
consultation with MR. JUSTICE BROWN, who announced the judgment,
made headnotes of each of the sustaining opinions, and placed
before each the names of the justices or justice who concurred in
it.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS and
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, uniting in the judgment of affirmance:
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, in announcing the judgment of affirmance, has
in his opinion stated his reasons for his concurrence in such
judgment. In the result I likewise concur. As, however, the reasons
which cause me to do so are different from, if not in conflict
with, those expressed in that opinion, if its meaning is by me not
misconceived, it becomes my duty to state the convictions which
control me.
The recovery sought is the amount of duty paid on merchandise
which came into the United States from Porto Rico after July 1,
1900. The exaction was made in virtue of the act of Congress
approved April 12, 1900, entitled "An Act Temporarily to Provide
Revenue and a Civil government for Porto Rico, and for Other
Purposes." 31 Stat. 77. The right to recover is predicated on the
assumption that Porto Rico, by the ratification of the treaty with
Spain, became incorporated into the
Page 182 U. S. 288
United States, and therefore the act of Congress which imposed
the duty in question is repugnant to Article 1, sec. 8, clause 1,
of the Constitution, providing that
"the Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common
defense and general welfare of the United States; but all duties,
imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States."
Subsidiarily, it is contended that the duty collected was also
repugnant to the export and preference clauses of the Constitution.
But as the case concerns no duty on goods going from the United
States to Porto Rico, this proposition must depend also on the
hypothesis that the provisions of the Constitution referred to
apply to Porto Rico because that island has been incorporated into
the United States. It is hence manifest that this latter contention
is involved in the previous one, and need not be separately
considered.
The arguments at bar embrace many propositions which seem to me
to be irrelevant, or, if relevant, to be so contrary to reason and
so in conflict with previous decisions of this Court as to cause
them to require but a passing notice. To eliminate all
controversies of this character, and thus to come to the pivotal
contentions which the case involves, let me state and concede the
soundness of some principles, referring, in doing so, in the margin
to the authorities by which they are sustained, and making such
comment on some of them as may to me appear necessary.
First. The government of the United States was born of
the Constitution, and all powers which it enjoys or may exercise
must be either derived expressly or by implication from that
instrument. Ever then, when an act of any department is challenged
because not warranted by the Constitution, the existence of the
authority is to be ascertained by determining whether the power has
been conferred by the Constitution, either in express terms or by
lawful implication, to be drawn from the express authority
conferred, or deduced as an attribute which legitimately inheres in
the nature of the powers given, and which flows from the character
of the government established by the Constitution. In other words,
while confined to its constitutional
Page 182 U. S. 289
orbit, the government of the United States is supreme within its
lawful sphere. [
Footnote 1]
Second. Every function of the government being thus
derived from the Constitution, it follows that that instrument is
everywhere and at all times potential insofar as its provisions are
applicable. [
Footnote 2]
Third. Hence it is that, wherever a power is given by
the Constitution and there is a limitation imposed on the
authority, such restriction operates upon and confines every action
on the subject within its constitutional limits. [
Footnote 3]
Fourth. Consequently it is impossible to conceive that,
where conditions are brought about to which any particular
provision of the Constitution applies, its controlling influence
may be frustrated by the action of any or all of the departments of
the government. Those departments, when discharging, within the
limits of their constitutional power, the duties which rest on
them, may of course deal with the subjects committed to them in
such a way as to cause the matter dealt with to come under the
control of provisions of the Constitution which may not have been
previously applicable. But this does not conflict with the doctrine
just stated or presuppose that the Constitution may or may not be
applicable at the election of any agency of the government.
Fifth. The Constitution has undoubtedly conferred on
Congress the right to create such municipal organizations as it may
deem best for all the territories of the United States, whether
they have been incorporated or not, to give to the inhabitants as
respects the local governments such degree of representation as may
be conducive to the public wellbeing, to deprive such
Page 182 U. S. 290
territory of representative government if it is considered just
to do so, and to change such local governments at discretion.
[
Footnote 4]
The plenitude of the power of Congress as just stated is
conceded by both sides to this controversy. It has been manifest
from the earliest days, and so many examples are afforded of it
that to refer to them seems superfluous. However, there is an
instance which exemplifies the exercise of the power substantially
in all its forms, in such an apt way that reference is made to it.
The instance referred to is the District of Columbia, which has had
from the beginning different forms of government conferred upon it
by Congress, some largely representative, others only partially so,
until, at the present time, the people of the District live under a
local government totally devoid of local representation, in the
elective sense, administered solely by officers appointed by the
President, Congress, in which the District has no representative in
effect, acting as the local legislature.
In some adjudged cases, the power to locally govern at
discretion has been declared to arise as an incident to the right
to acquire territory. In others, it has been rested upon the clause
of sec. 3, Article IV, of the Constitution, which vests Congress
with the power to dispose of and make all needful rules and
regulations respecting the territory or other property of the
United States. [
Footnote 5] But
this divergence, if not conflict of opinion, does not imply that
the authority of Congress to govern the territories is outside of
the Constitution, since in either case the right is founded on the
Constitution, although referred to different provisions of that
instrument.
While, therefore, there is no express or implied limitation on
Congress in exercising its power to create local governments
for
Page 182 U. S. 291
any and all of the territories, by which that body is restrained
from the widest latitude of discretion, it does not follow that
there may not be inherent, although unexpressed, principles which
are the basis of all free government which cannot be with impunity
transcended. [
Footnote 6] But
this does not suggest that every express limitation of the
Constitution which is applicable has not force, but only signifies
that, even in cases where there is no direct command of the
Constitution which applies, there may nevertheless be restrictions
of so fundamental a nature that they cannot be transgressed
although not expressed in so many words in the Constitution.
Sixth. As Congress, in governing the territories, is
subject to the Constitution, it results that all the limitations of
the Constitution which are applicable to Congress in exercising
this authority necessarily limit its power on this subject. It
follows also that every provision of the Constitution which is
applicable to the territories is also controlling therein. To
justify a departure from this elementary principle by a criticism
of the opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Taney in
Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 393, appears to me to be
unwarranted. Whatever may be the view entertained of the
correctness of the opinion of the Court in that case, insofar as it
interpreted a particular provision of the Constitution concerning
slavery, and decided that, as so construed, it was in force in the
territories, this in no way affects the principle which that
decision announced -- that the applicable provisions of the
Constitution were operative. That doctrine was concurred in by the
dissenting judges, as the following excerpts demonstrate. Thus, Mr.
Justice McLean, in the course of his dissenting opinion, said (19
How.
60 U. S.
542):
"In organizing the government of a territory, Congress is
limited to means appropriate to the attainment of the
constitutional object. No powers can be exercised which are
prohibited by the Constitution, or which are contrary to its
spirit. "
Page 182 U. S. 292
Mr. Justice Curtis also, in the dissent expressed by him, said
(p.
60 U. S.
614):
"If, then, this clause does contain a power to legislate
respecting the territory, what are the limits of that power?"
"To this I answer that, in common with all other legislative
powers of Congress, it finds limits in the express prohibitions on
Congress not to do certain things; that, in the exercise of the
legislative power, Congress cannot pass an
ex post facto
law or bill of attainder, and so in respect to each of the other
prohibitions contained in the Constitution."
Seventh. In the case of the territories, as in every
other instance, when a provision of the Constitution is invoked,
the question which arises is not whether the Constitution is
operative, for that is self-evident, but whether the provision
relied on is applicable.
Eighth. As Congress derives its authority to levy local
taxes for local purposes within the territories not from the
general grant of power to tax as expressed in the Constitution, it
follows that its right to locally tax is not to be measured by the
provision empowering Congress "to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises," and is not restrained by the requirement of
uniformity throughout the United States. But the power just
referred to, as well as the qualification of uniformity, restrains
Congress from imposing an impost duty on goods coming into the
United States from a territory which has been incorporated into and
forms a part of the United States. This results because the clause
of the Constitution in question does not confer upon Congress power
to impose such an impost duty on goods coming from one part of the
United States to another part thereof, and such duty, besides,
would be repugnant to the requirement of uniformity throughout the
United States. [
Footnote 7]
To question the principle above stated on the assumption that
the rulings on this subject of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in
Loughborough v. Blake were mere
dicta seems to me
to be entirely inadmissible. And besides, if such view was
justified,
Page 182 U. S. 293
the principle would still find support in the decision in
Woodruff v. Parham, and that decision in this regard was
affirmed by this Court in
Brown v. Houston, and
Fairbank v. United States, supra.
From these conceded propositions it follows that Congress, in
legislating for Porto Rico, was only empowered to act within the
Constitution, and subject to its applicable limitations, and that
every provision of the Constitution which applied to a country
situated as was that island was potential in Porto Rico.
And the determination of what particular provision of the
Constitution is applicable, generally speaking, in all cases
involves an inquiry into the situation of the territory and its
relations to the United States. This is well illustrated by some of
the decisions of this Court which are cited in the margin.
[
Footnote 8] Some of these
decisions hold, on the one hand, that, growing out of the
presumably ephemeral nature of a territorial government, the
provisions of the Constitution relating to the life tenure of
judges is inapplicable to courts created by Congress, even in
territories which are incorporated into the United States, and
some, on the other hand, decide that the provisions as to common
law juries found in the Constitution are applicable under like
conditions -- that is to say, although the judge presiding over a
jury need not have the constitutional tenure, yet the jury must be
in accordance with the Constitution. And the application of the
provision of the Constitution relating to juries has been also
considered in a different aspect, the case being noted in the
margin. [
Footnote 9]
The question involved was the constitutionality of the statutes
of the United States conferring power on ministers and consuls
Page 182 U. S. 294
to try American citizens for crimes committed in certain foreign
countries. Rev.Stat. secs. 4083-4086. The Court held the provisions
in question not to be repugnant to the Constitution, and that a
conviction for a felony without a previous indictment by a grand
jury, or the summoning of a petty jury, was valid.
It was decided that the provisions of the Constitution relating
to grand and petty juries were inapplicable to consular courts
exercising their jurisdiction in certain countries foreign to the
United States. But this did not import that the government of the
United States, in creating and conferring jurisdiction on consuls
and ministers, acted outside of the Constitution, since it was
expressly held that the power to call such courts into being and to
confer upon them the right to try, in the foreign countries in
question, American citizens was deducible from the treatymaking
power as conferred by the Constitution. The Court said (p.
140 U. S.
463):
"The treatymaking power vested in our government extends to all
proper subjects of negotiation with foreign governments. It can,
equally with any of the former or present governments of Europe,
make treaties providing for the exercise of judicial authority in
other countries by its officers appointed to reside therein."
In other words, the case concerned not the question of a power
outside the Constitution, but simply whether certain provisions of
the Constitution were applicable to the authority exercised under
the circumstances which the case presented.
Albeit, as a general rule, the status of a particular territory
has to be taken in view when the applicability of any provision of
the Constitution is questioned, it does not follow, when the
Constitution has absolutely withheld from the government all power
on a given subject, that such an inquiry is necessary. Undoubtedly
there are general prohibitions in the Constitution in favor of the
liberty and property of the citizen which are not mere regulations
as to the form and manner in which a conceded power may be
exercised, but which are an absolute denial of all authority under
any circumstances or conditions to do particular acts. In the
nature of things, limitations of this character
Page 182 U. S. 295
cannot be under any circumstances transcended, because of the
complete absence of power.
The distinction which exists between the two characters of
restrictions -- those which regulate a granted power and those
which withdraw all authority on a particular subject -- has in
effect been always conceded, even by those who most strenuously
insisted on the erroneous principle that the Constitution did not
apply to Congress in legislating for the territories, and was not
operative in such districts of country. No one had more broadly
asserted this principle than Mr. Webster. Indeed, the support which
that proposition receives from expressions of that illustrious man
have been mainly relied upon to sustain it, and yet there can be no
doubt that, even while insisting upon such principle, it was
conceded by Mr. Webster that those positive prohibitions of the
Constitution which withhold all power on a particular subject were
always applicable. His views of the principal proposition and his
concession as to the existence of the qualification are clearly
shown by a debate which took place in the Senate on February 24,
1849, on an amendment offered by Mr. Walker extending the
Constitution and certain laws of the United States over California
and New Mexico. Mr. Webster, in support of his conception that the
Constitution did not, generally speaking, control Congress in
legislating for the territories or operate in such districts, said
as follows (20 Cong.Globe, App. p. 272):
"Mr. President, it is of importance that we should seek to have
clear ideas and correct notions of the question which this
amendment of the member from Wisconsin has presented to us, and
especially that we should seek to get some conception of what is
meant by the proposition in a law to 'extend the Constitution of
the United States to the territories.' Why sir -- the thing is
utterly impossible. All the legislation in the world, in this
general form, could not accomplish it. There is no cause for the
operation of the legislative power in such a matter as that. The
Constitution, what is it -- we extend the Constitution of the
United States by law to a territory? What is the Constitution of
the United States? Is not its very first principle that all within
its influence and comprehension shall
Page 182 U. S. 296
be represented in the legislature which it establishes, with not
only the right of debate and the right to vote in both Houses of
Congress, but a right to partake in the choice of the President and
Vice President? And can we by law extend these rights, or any of
them, to a territory of the United States? Everybody will see that
it is altogether impracticable."
Thereupon, the following colloquy ensued between Mr. Underwood
and Mr. Webster:
"Mr. Underwood: The learned Senator from Massachusetts says, and
says most appropriately and forcibly, that the principles of the
Constitution are obligatory upon us even while legislating for the
territories. That is true, I admit, in its fullest force, but if it
is obligatory upon us while legislating for the territories, is it
possible that it will not be equally obligatory upon the officers
who are appointed to administer the laws in these territories?"
"Mr. Webster: I never said it was not obligatory upon them. What
I said was that, in making laws for these territories, it was the
high duty of Congress to regard those great principles in the
Constitution intended for the security of personal liberty and for
the security of property."
"Mr. Underwood: . . . Suppose we provide by our legislation that
nobody shall be appointed to an office there who professes the
Catholic religion. What do we do by an act of this sort?"
"Mr. Webster: We violate the Constitution, which says that no
religious test shall be required as qualification for office."
And this was the state of opinion generally prevailing in the
Free Soil and Republican parties, since the resistance of those
parties to the extension of slavery into the territories, while in
a broad sense predicated on the proposition that the Constitution
was not generally controlling in the territories, was sustained by
express reliance upon the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution
forbidding Congress from depriving any person of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law. Every platform adopted by
those parties down to and including 1860, while propounding the
general doctrine, also in effect declared
Page 182 U. S. 297
the rule just stated. I append in the margin an excerpt from the
platform of the Free Soil party adopted in 1842. [
Footnote 10]
The conceptions embodied in these resolutions were in almost
identical language reiterated in the platform of the Liberty Party
in 1843, in that of the Free Soil Party in 1852, and in the
platform of the Republican Party in 1856. Stanwood, Hist. of
Presidency, pp. 218, 253, 254, and 271. In effect, the same thought
was repeated in the declaration of principles made by the
Republican Party convention in 1860, when Mr. Lincoln was
nominated, as will be seen from an excerpt therefrom set out in the
margin. [
Footnote 11]
The doctrine that those absolute withdrawals of power which
Page 182 U. S. 298
the Constitution has made in favor of human liberty are
applicable to every condition or status has been clearly pointed
out by this Court in
Chicago, Rock Island &c. Railway v.
McGlinn, (1885)
114 U. S. 542,
where, speaking through Mr. Justice Field, the Court said (p.
114 U. S.
546):
"It is a general rule of public law, recognized and acted upon
by the United States, that, whenever political jurisdiction and
legislative power over any territory are transferred from one
nation of sovereign to another, the municipal laws of the country
-- that is, laws which are intended for the protection of private
rights -- continue in force until abrogated or changed by the new
government or sovereign. By the cession, public property passes
from one government to the other, but private property remains as
before, and with it those municipal laws which are designed to
secure its peaceful use and enjoyment. As a matter of course, all
laws, ordinances, and regulations in conflict with the political
character, institutions, and constitution of the new government are
at once displaced. Thus, upon a cession of political jurisdiction
and legislative power -- and the latter is involved in the former
-- to the United States, the laws of the country in support of an
established religion, or abridging the freedom of the press, or
authorizing cruel and unusual punishments, and the like would at
once cease to be of obligatory force without any declaration to
that effect, and the laws of the country on other subjects would
necessarily be superseded by existing laws of the new government
upon the same matters. But with respect to other laws affecting the
possession, use, and transfer of property, and designed to secure
good order and peace in the community and promote its health and
prosperity which are strictly of a municipal character, the rule is
general that a change of government leaves them in force until, by
direct action of the new government, they are altered or repealed.
American
Ins. Co. v. Canter, 1 Pet. 511,
26 U. S.
542; Halleck, Int.Law, chap. 34, § 14."
There is in reason, then, no room in this case to contend that
Congress can destroy the liberties of the people of Porto Rico by
exercising in their regard powers against freedom and justice which
the Constitution has absolutely denied. There can
Page 182 U. S. 299
also be no controversy as to the right of Congress to locally
govern the Island of Porto Rico as its wisdom may decide, and in so
doing to accord only such degree of representative government as
may be determined on by that body. There can also be no contention
as to the authority of Congress to levy such local taxes in Porto
Rico as it may choose, even although the amount of the local burden
so levied be manifold more onerous than is the duty with which this
case is concerned. But, as the duty in question was not a local
tax, since it was levied in the United States on goods coming from
Porto Rico, it follows that, if that island was a part of the
United States, the duty was repugnant to the Constitution, since
the authority to levy an impost duty conferred by the Constitution
on Congress does not, as I have conceded, include the right to lay
such a burden on goods coming from one to another part of the
United States. And besides, if Porto Rico was a part of the United
States, the exaction was repugnant to the uniformity clause.
The sole and only issue, then, is not whether Congress has taxed
Porto Rico without representation -- for whether the tax was local
or national, it could have been imposed although Porto Rico had no
representative local government and was not represented in Congress
-- but is whether the particular tax in question was levied in such
form as to cause it to be repugnant to the Constitution. This is to
be resolved by answering the inquiry, had Porto Rico, at the time
of the passage of the act in question, been incorporated into and
become an integral part of the United States?
On the one hand, it is affirmed that, although Porto Rico had
been ceded by the treaty with Spain to the United States, the
cession was accompanied by such conditions as prevented that island
from becoming an integral part of the United States at least
temporarily and until Congress had so determined. On the other
hand, it is insisted that, by the fact of cession to the United
States alone, irrespective of any conditions found in the treaty,
Porto Rico became a part of the United States and was incorporated
into it. It is incompatible with the Constitution, it is argued,
for the government of the United States to accept a cession of
territory from a foreign country without
Page 182 U. S. 300
complete incorporation's following as an immediate result, and
therefore it is contended that it is immaterial to inquire what
were the conditions of the cession, since, if there were any which
were intended to prevent incorporation, they were repugnant to the
Constitution and void. The result of the argument is that the
government of the United States is absolutely without power to
acquire and hold territory as property or as appurtenant to the
United States. These conflicting contentions are asserted to be
sanctioned by many adjudications of this Court and by various acts
of the executive and legislative branches of the government, both
sides in many instances referring to the same decisions and to the
like acts but deducing contrary conclusions from them. From this it
comes to pass that it will be impossible to weigh the authorities
relied upon without ascertaining the subject matter to which they
refer in order to determine their proper influence. For this
reason, in the orderly discussion of the controversy, I propose to
consider the subject from the Constitution itself, as a matter of
first impression, from that instrument as illustrated by the
history of the government and as construed by the previous
decisions of this Court. By this process, if accurately carried
out, it will follow that the true solution of the question will be
ascertained both deductively and inductively, and the result,
besides, will be adequately proved.
It may not be doubted that, by the general principles of the law
of nations, every government which is sovereign within its sphere
of action possesses as an inherent attribute the power to acquire
territory by discovery, by agreement or treaty, and by conquest. It
cannot also be gainsaid that, as a general rule, wherever a
government acquires territory as a result of any of the modes above
stated, the relation of the territory to the new government is to
be determined by the acquiring power in the absence of stipulations
upon the subject. These general principles of the law of nations
are thus stated by Halleck in his treatise on International Law,
page 126:
"A state may acquire property or domain in various ways -- its
title may be acquired originally by mere occupancy, and confirmed
by the presumption arising from the lapse of time,
Page 182 U. S. 301
or by discovery and lawful possession, or by conquest, confirmed
by treaty or tacit consent, or by grant, cession, purchase, or
exchange; in fine, by any of the recognized modes by which private
property is acquired by individuals. It is not our object to enter
into any general discussion of these several modes of acquisition
any further than may be necessary to distinguish the character of
certain rights of property which are the peculiar objects of
international jurisprudence. Wheaton, Elm.Int.Law, pt. 2, c. 4,
secs. 1, 4, 5; Phillimore on Int.Law, vol. 1, secs. 221-227;
Grotius, de Jur.Bel. ac. Pac., lib. 2, c. 4; Vattel, Droit des
Gens, liv. 2, chs. 7 and 11; Rutherford, Institutes, b. 1, c. 3, b.
2, c. 9; Puffendorf, de Jur.Nat. et. Gent., lib. 4, chs. 4-6;
Moser, Versuch, etc., b. 5, c. 9; Martens, Precis du Droit des
Gens. secs. 35
et seq.; Schmaltz, Droit des Gens, liv. 4,
c. 1; Kluber, Droit des Gens, secs. 125, 126; Heffter, Droit
International, sec. 76; Ortolan, Domaine International, secs. 53
et seq.; Bowyer, Universal Public Law, c. 28; Bello,
Derecho Internacional, pt. 1, c. 4; Riquelme, Derecho, Pub.Int.,
lib. 1, title 1, c. 2; Burlamaqui, Droit de la Nat. et des Gens,
tome 4, pt. 3, c. 5."
Speaking of a change of sovereignty, Halleck says (pp. 76,
814):
"Ch. III, Sec. 23. The sovereignty of a state may be lost in
various ways. It may be vanquished by a foreign power, and become
incorporated into the conquering state as a province or as one of
its component parts, or it may voluntarily unite itself with
another in such a way that its independent existence as a state
will entirely cease."
"
* * * *"
"Ch. XXXIII, Sec. 3. If the hostile nation be subdued and the
entire state conquered, a question arises as to the manner in which
the conqueror may treat it without transgressing the just bounds
established by the rights of conquest. If he simply replaces the
former sovereign, and, on the submission of the people, governs
them according to the laws of the state, they can have no cause of
complaint. Again, if he incorporate them with his former states,
giving to them the rights, privileges, and immunities of his own
subjects, he does for them all that is due
Page 182 U. S. 302
from a humane and equitable conqueror to his vanquished foes.
But if the conquered are a fierce, savage, and restless people, he
may, according to the degree of their indocility, govern them with
a tighter rein so as to curb their 'impetuosity, and to keep them
under subjection.' Moreover, the rights of conquest may, in certain
cases, justify him in imposing a tribute or other burthen, either a
compensation for the expenses of the war or as a punishment for the
injustice he has suffered from them. . . . Vattel, Droit des Gens,
liv. 3, ch. 13, § 201; 2 Curtis, History, etc., liv. 7, cap.
8; Grotius, de Bel. ac P.lib. 3, caps. 8, 15; Puffendorf, de Jur.
Nat. et Gent. lib. 8, cap. 6, § 24; Real, Science du
Gouvernement, tome 5, ch. 2, § 5; Heffter, Droit
International, § 124; Abegg. Untersuchungen, etc., p. 86."
In
American Ins. Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511, the general doctrine was thus
summarized in the opinion delivered by Mr Chief Justice Marshall
(p.
26 U. S.
542):
"If it [conquered territory] be ceded by the treaty, the
acquisition is confirmed, and the ceded territory becomes a part of
the nation to which it is annexed either on the terms stipulated in
the treaty of cession or
on such as its new master shall
impose."
When our forefathers threw off their allegiance to Great Britain
and established a republican government, assuredly they deemed that
the nation which they called into being was endowed with those
general powers to acquire territory which all independent
governments in virtue of their sovereignty enjoyed. This is
demonstrated by the concluding paragraph of the Declaration of
Independence, which reads as follows:
"As free and independent states, they [the United States of
America] have full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract
alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things
which independent states may of right do."
That under the Confederation it was considered that the
government of the United States had authority to acquire territory
like any other sovereignty is clearly established by the eleventh
of the Articles of Confederation.
The decisions of this Court leave no room for question that,
under the Constitution, the government of the United States,
Page 182 U. S. 303
in virtue of its sovereignty, supreme within the sphere of its
delegated power, has the full right to acquire territory enjoyed by
every other sovereign nation.
In
American Insurance Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511, the Court, by Mr. Chief Justice
Marshall, said (p.
26 U. S.
542):
"The Constitution confers absolutely on the government of the
Union the powers of making war and of making treaties;
consequently, that government possesses the power of acquiring
territory, either by conquest or by treaty."
In
United States v.
Huckabee, (1872) 16 Wall. 414, the Court, speaking
through Mr. Justice Clifford, said (p.
83 U. S.
434):
"Power to acquire territory either by conquest or treaty is
vested by the Constitution in the United States. Conquered
territory, however, is usually held as a mere military occupation
until the fate of the nation from which it is conquered is
determined; but if the nation is entirely subdued, or in case it be
destroyed and ceases to exist, the right of occupation becomes
permanent, and the title vests absolutely in the conqueror.
American
Ins. Co. v. Canter, 1 Pet. 511;
Shanks v.
Dupont, 3 Pet. 246;
United States v.
Rice, 4 Wheat. 254;
The Amy Warwick, 2
Sprague 143;
Johnson v. McIntosh, 8
Wheat. 588. Complete conquest, by whatever mode it may be
perfected, carries with it all the rights of the former government
-- or, in other words, the conqueror, by the completion of his
conquest, becomes the absolute owner of the property conquered from
the enemy nation or state. His rights are no longer limited to mere
occupation of what he has taken into his actual possession, but
they extend to all the property and rights of the conquered state,
including even debts, as well as personal and real property.
Halleck, International Law 839;
Elphinstone v.
Bedreechund, 1 Knapp's Privy Council Cases 329; Vattel 365; 3
Phillimore, International Law 505."
In
Mormon Church v. United States, (1889)
136 U. S.
1, Mr. Justice Bradley, announcing the opinion of the
Court, declared (p.
136 U. S. 42, L.
ed. p. 491):
"The power to acquire territory, other than the territory
northwest of the Ohio River (which belonged to the United States at
the adoption of the Constitution) is derived from the treatymaking
power and the power to declare and carry
Page 182 U. S. 304
on war. The incidents of these powers are those of national
sovereignty, and belong to all independent governments. The power
to make acquisitions of territory by conquest, by treaty, and by
cession is an incident of national sovereignty. The Territory of
Louisiana, when acquired from France, and the territories west of
the Rocky mountains, when acquired from Mexico, became the absolute
property and domain of the United States, subject to such
conditions as the government, in its diplomatic negotiations, had
seen fit to accept relating to the rights of the people then
inhabiting those territories."
Indeed, it is superfluous to cite authorities establishing the
right of the government of the United States to acquire territory
in view of the possession of the Northwest Territory when the
Constitution was framed and the cessions to the general government
by various states subsequent to the adoption of the Constitution,
and in view also of the vast extension of the territory of the
United States brought about since the existence of the Constitution
by substantially every form of acquisition known to the law of
nations. Thus, in part at least,
"the title of the United States to Oregon was founded upon
original discovery and actual settlement by citizens of the United
States, authorized or approved by the government of the United
States."
Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 50. The
province of Louisiana was ceded by France in 1803; the Floridas
were transferred by Spain in 1819; Texas was admitted into the
Union by compact with Congress in 1845; California and New Mexico
were acquired by the treaty with Mexico of 1848, and other western
territory from Mexico by the treaty of 1853; numerous islands have
been brought within the dominion of the United States under the
authority of the Act of August 18, 1856, c. 164, usually designated
as the Guano Islands Act, reenacted in Revised Statutes, sections
5570-5578; Alaska was ceded by Russia in 1867; Medway Island, the
western end of the Hawaiian group, 1,200 miles from Honolulu, was
acquired in 1867, and $50,000 was expended in efforts to make it a
naval station; on the renewal of a treaty with Hawaii November 9,
1887, Pearl harbor was leased for a permanent naval station; by
joint resolution of Congress, the Hawaiian Islands came under
Page 182 U. S. 305
the sovereignty of the United States in 1898, and on April 30,
1900, an act for the government of Hawaii was approved, by which
the Hawaiian islands were given the status of an incorporated
territory; on May 21, 1890, there was proclaimed by the President
an agreement, concluded and signed with Germany and Great Britain,
for the joint administration of the Samoan Islands, 26 Stat. 1497,
and on February 16, 1900, 31 Stat. 67, there was proclaimed a
convention between the United States, Germany, and Great Britain by
which Germany and Great Britain renounced in favor of the United
States all their rights and claims over and in respect to the
Island of Tutuilla and all other islands of the Samoan group east
of longitude 171� west of Greenwich. And finally, the treaty
with Spain which terminated the recent war was ratified.
It is worthy of remark that, beginning in the administration of
President Jefferson, the acquisition of foreign territory above
referred to were largely made while that political party was in
power which announced as its fundamental tenet the duty of strictly
construing the Constitution, and it is true to say that all shades
of political opinion have admitted the power to acquire, and lent
their aid to its accomplishment. And the power has been asserted in
instances where it has not been exercised. Thus, during the
administration of President Pierce, in 1854, a draft of a treaty
for the annexation of Hawaii was agreed upon, but, owing to the
death of the King of the Hawaiian islands, was not executed. The
second article of the proposed treaty provided as follows (Ex.Doc.
Senate, 55th Congress, 2d sess., Report No. 681, Calendar No. 747,
p. 91):
"
Article II"
"The Kingdom of the Hawaiian Islands shall be incorporated into
the American Union as a state, enjoying the same degree of
sovereignty as other states, and admitted as such as soon as it can
be done in consistency with the principles and requirements of the
federal Constitution, to all the rights, privileges, and immunities
of a state as aforesaid, on a perfect equality with the other
states of the Union."
"It is insisted, however, conceding the right of the
government
Page 182 U. S. 306
of the United States to acquire territory, as all such territory
when acquired becomes absolutely incorporated into the United
States, every provision of the Constitution which would apply under
that situation is controlling in such acquired territory. This,
however, is but to admit the power to acquire and immediately to
deny its beneficial existence."
The general principle of the law of nations, already stated, is
that acquired territory, in the absence of agreement to the
contrary, will bear such relation to the acquiring government as
may be by it determined. To concede to the government of the United
States the right to acquire, and to strip it of all power to
protect the birthright of its own citizens and to provide for the
wellbeing of the acquired territory by such enactments as may in
view of its condition be essential, is, in effect, to say that the
United States is helpless in the family of nations, and does not
possess that authority which has at all times been treated as an
incident of the right to acquire. Let me illustrate the accuracy of
this statement. Take a case of discovery. Citizens of the United
States discover an unknown island, peopled with an uncivilized
race, yet rich in soil, and valuable to the United States for
commercial and strategic reasons. Clearly, by the law of nations,
the right to ratify such acquisition and thus to acquire the
territory would pertain to the government of the United States.
Johnson v.
McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543,
21 U. S. 595;
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367,
41 U. S. 409;
Jones v. United States, 137 U. S. 202,
137 U. S. 212;
Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1,
152 U. S. 50. Can
it be denied that such right could not be practically exercised if
the result would be to endow the inhabitants with citizenship of
the United States and to subject them, not only to local, but also
to an equal proportion of national, taxes, even although the
consequence would be to entail ruin on the discovered territory,
and to inflict grave detriment on the United States, to arise both
from the dislocation of its fiscal system and the immediate
bestowal of citizenship on those absolutely unfit to receive
it?
The practice of the government has been otherwise. As early as
1856, Congress enacted the Guano Islands Act, heretofore referred
to, which, by section 1, provided that when any
Page 182 U. S. 307
citizen of the United States shall
"discover a deposit of guano on any island, rock, or key not
within the lawful jurisdiction of any other government and not
occupied by the citizens of any other government, and shall take
peaceable possession thereof, and occupy the same, said island,
rock, or key may, at the discretion of the President of the United
States, be considered
as appertaining to the United
States."
11 Stat. 119, c. 164; Rev.Stat. § 5570. Under the act
referred to, it was stated in argument that the government now
holds and protects American citizens in the occupation of some
seventy islands. The statute came under consideration in
Jones
v. United States, 137 U. S. 202,
where the question was whether or not the act was valid, and it was
decided that the act was a lawful exercise of power, and that
islands thus acquired were "appurtenant" to the United States. The
court, in the course of the opinion, speaking through MR. JUSTICE
Gray, said (p.
137 U. S.
212):
"By the law of nations, recognized by all civilized states,
dominion of new territory may be acquired by discovery and
occupation, as well as by cession or conquest, and when citizens or
subjects of one nation, in its name and by its authority or with
its assent, take and hold actual, continuous, and useful possession
(although only for the purpose of carrying on a particular
business, such as catching and curing fish or working mines) of
territory unoccupied by any other government of its citizens, the
nation to which they belong may exercise such jurisdiction and for
such period as it sees fit over territory so acquired. This
principle affords ample warrant for the legislation of Congress
concerning guano islands. Vattel, lib. 1, c. 18; Wheaton,
International Law, 8th ed. secs. 161, 165, 176, note 104; Halleck,
International Law, c. 6, secs. 7, 15; 1 Phillimore, International
Law, 3d ed. §§ 227, 229-230, 232, 242; 1 Calvo, Droit
International, 4th ed. §§ 266, 277, 300;
Whiton v.
Albany County Ins. Co., 109 Mass. 24, 31."
And these considerations concerning discovery are equally
applicable to ownership resulting from conquest. A just war is
declared, and, in its prosecution, the territory of the enemy is
invaded and occupied. Would not the war, even if waged
successfully, be fraught with danger if the effect of occupation
was
Page 182 U. S. 308
to necessarily incorporate an alien and hostile people into the
United States? Take another illustration. Suppose, at the
termination of a war, the hostile government had been overthrown,
and the entire territory or a portion thereof was occupied by the
United States, and there was no government to treat with or none
willing to cede by treaty, and thus it became necessary for the
United States to hold the conquered country for an indefinite
period, or at least until such time as Congress deemed that it
should be either released or retained because it was apt for
incorporation into the United States. If holding was to have the
effect which is now claimed for it, would not the exercise of
judgment respecting the retention be so fraught with danger to the
American people that it could not be safely exercised?
Yet again. Suppose the United States, in consequence of outrages
perpetrated upon its citizens, was obliged to move its armies or
send its fleets to obtain redress, and it came to pass that an
expensive war resulted and culminated in the occupation of a
portion of the territory of the enemy, and that the retention of
such territory -- an event illustrated by examples in history --
could alone enable the United States to recover the pecuniary loss
it had suffered. And suppose further that to do so would require
occupation for an indefinite period, dependent upon whether or not
payment was made of the required indemnity. It being true that
incorporation must necessarily follow the retention of the
territory, it would result that the United States must abandon all
hope of recouping itself for the loss suffered by the unjust war,
and hence the whole burden would be entailed upon the people of the
United States. This would be a necessary consequence because, if
the United States did not hold the territory as security for the
needed indemnity, it could not collect such indemnity, and on the
other hand, if incorporation must follow from holding the
territory, the uniformity provision of the Constitution would
prevent the assessment of the cost of the war solely upon the newly
acquired country. In this as in the case of discovery, the
traditions and practices of the government demonstrate the
unsoundness of the contention. Congress, on May 13, 1846, declared
that
Page 182 U. S. 309
war existed with Mexico. In the summer of that year, New Mexico
and California were subdued by the American arms, and the military
occupation which followed continued until after the treaty of peace
was ratified in May, 1848. Tampico, a Mexican port, was occupied by
our forces on November 15, 1846, and possession was not surrendered
until after the ratification. In the spring of 1847, President
Polk, through the Secretary of the Treasury, prepared a tariff of
duties on imports and tonnage which was put in force in the
conquered country. 1 Senate Documents, First Session, 30th
Congress, pp. 562, 569. By this tariff,
duties were laid as
well on merchandise exported from the United States as from
other countries, except as to supplies for our army, and on May 10,
1847, an exemption from tonnage duties was accorded to "all vessels
chartered by the United States to convey supplies of any and all
descriptions to our army and navy, and actually laden with
supplies."
Ib., 583. An interesting debate respecting the
constitutionality of this action of the President is contained in
18 Cong.Globe, First Session, 30th Congress at pp. 478, 479,
484-489, 495, 498, etc.
In
Fleming v.
Page, 9 How. 603, it was held that the revenue
officials properly treated Tampico as a port of a foreign country
during the occupation by the military forces of the United States,
and that duties on imports into the United States from Tampico were
lawfully levied under the general tariff act of 1846. Thus,
although Tampico was in the possession of the United States, and
the Court expressly held that, in an international sense, the port
was a part of the territory of the United States, yet it was
decided that, in the sense of the revenue laws, Tampico was a
foreign country. The special tariff act promulgated by President
Polk was in force in New Mexico and California until after notice
was received of the ratification of the treaty of peace. In
Cross v.
Harrison, 16 How. 164, certain collections of
impost duties on goods brought from foreign countries into
California prior to the time when official notification had been
received in California that the treaty of cession had been
ratified, as well as impost duties levied after the receipt of such
notice, were called in question. The duties collected prior to the
receipt of notice were laid at the rate fixed by the tariff
promulgated by the President;
Page 182 U. S. 310
those laid after the notification conformed to the general
tariff laws of the United States. The Court decided that all the
duties collected were valid. The Court undoubtedly, in the course
of its opinion, said that, immediately upon the ratification of the
treaty, California became a part of the United States and subject
to its revenue laws. However, the opinion pointedly referred to a
letter of the Secretary of the Treasury directing the enforcement
of the tariff laws of the United States, upon the express ground
that Congress had enacted laws which recognized the treaty of
cession. Besides, the decision was expressly placed upon the
conditions of the treaty, and it was stated in so many words that a
different rule would have been applied had the stipulations in the
treaty been of a different character.
But, it is argued, all the instances previously referred to may
be conceded, for they but illustrate the rule
inter arma sitent
leges. Hence, they do not apply to acts done after the
cessation of hostilities when a treaty of peace has been concluded.
This not only begs the question, but also embodies a fallacy. A
case has been supposed in which it was impossible to make a treaty
because of the unwillingness or disappearance of the hostile
government, and therefore the occupation necessarily continued
although actual war had ceased. The fallacy lies in admitting the
right to exercise the power, if only it is exerted by the military
arm of the government, but denying it wherever the civil power
comes in to regulate and make the conditions more in accord with
the spirit of our free institutions. Why it can be thought,
although under the Constitution the military arm of the government
is in effect the creature of Congress, that such arm may exercise a
power without violating the Constitution, and yet Congress -- the
creator -- may not regulate, I fail to comprehend.
This further argument, however, is advanced. Granting that
Congress may regulate without incorporating where the military arm
has taken possession of foreign territory and where there has been
or can be no treaty, this does not concern the decision of this
case, since there is here involved no regulation, but an actual
cession to the United States of territory by treaty. The general
rule of the law of nations, by which the acquiring
Page 182 U. S. 311
government fixes the status of acquired territory, it is urged,
does not apply to the government of the United States, because it
is incompatible with the Constitution that that government should
hold territory under a cession and administer it as a dependency
without its becoming incorporated. This claim, I have previously
said, rests on the erroneous assumption that the United States,
under the Constitution, is stripped of those powers which are
absolutely inherent in and essential to national existence. The
certainty of this is illustrated by the examples already made use
of in the supposed cases of discovery and conquest.
If the authority by treaty is limited as is suggested, then it
will be impossible to terminate a successful war by acquiring
territory through a treaty without immediately incorporating such
territory into the United States. Let me, however, eliminate the
case of war, and consider the treatymaking power as subserving the
purposes of the peaceful evolution of national life. Suppose the
necessity of acquiring a naval station or a coaling station on an
island inhabited with people utterly unfit for American citizenship
and totally incapable of bearing their proportionate burden of the
national expense. Could such island, under the rule which is now
insisted upon, be taken? Suppose, again, the acquisition of
territory for an inter-oceanic canal where an inhabited strip of
land on either side is essential to the United States for the
preservation of the work. Can it be denied that, if the
requirements of the Constitution as to taxation are to immediately
control, it might be impossible by treaty to accomplish the desired
result?
While no particular provision of the Constitution is referred
to, to sustain the argument that it is impossible to acquire
territory by treaty without immediate and absolute incorporation,
it is said that the spirit of the Constitution excludes the
conception of property or dependencies possessed by the United
States and which are not so completely incorporated as to be in all
respects a part of the United States; that the theory upon which
the Constitution proceeds is that of confederated and independent
states, and that no territory therefore can be acquired which does
not contemplate statehood, and excludes the acquisition of
Page 182 U. S. 312
any territory which is not in a position to be treated as an
integral part of the United States. But this reasoning is based on
political, and not judicial, considerations. Conceding that the
conception upon which the Constitution proceeds is that no
territory, as a general rule, should be acquired unless the
territory may reasonably be expected to be worthy of statehood, the
determination of when such blessing is to be bestowed is wholly a
political question, and the aid of the judiciary cannot be invoked
to usurp political discretion in order to save the Constitution
from imaginary or even real dangers. The Constitution may not be
saved by destroying its fundamental limitations.
Let me come, however, to a consideration of the express powers
which are conferred by the Constitution to show how unwarranted is
the principle of immediate incorporation which is here so
strenuously insisted on. In doing so, it is conceded at once that
the true rule of construction is not to consider one provision of
the Constitution alone, but to contemplate all, and therefore to
limit one conceded attribute by those qualifications which
naturally result from the other powers granted by that instrument,
so that the whole may be interpreted by the spirit which vivifies,
and not by the letter which killeth. Undoubtedly, the power to
carry on war and to make treaties implies also the exercise of
those incidents which ordinarily inhere in them. Indeed, in view of
the rule of construction which I have just conceded -- that all
powers conferred by the Constitution must be interpreted with
reference to the nature of the government and be construed in
harmony with related provisions of the Constitution -- it seems to
me impossible to conceive that the treatymaking power, by a mere
cession, can incorporate an alien people into the United States
without the express or implied approval of Congress. And from this
it must follow that there can be no foundation for the assertion
that, where the treatymaking power has inserted conditions which
preclude incorporation until Congress has acted in respect thereto,
such conditions are void and incorporation results in spite
thereof. If the treatymaking power can absolutely, without the
consent of Congress, incorporate territory, and if that power
may
Page 182 U. S. 313
not insert conditions against incorporation, it must follow that
the treatymaking power is endowed by the Constitution with the most
unlimited right, susceptible of destroying every other provision of
the Constitution -- that is, it may wreck our institutions. If the
proposition be true, then millions of inhabitants of alien
territory, if acquired by treaty, can, without the desire or
consent of the people of the United States speaking through
Congress, be immediately and irrevocably incorporated into the
United States, and the whole structure of the government be
overthrown. While thus aggrandizing the treatymaking power on the
one hand, the construction at the same time minimizes it, on the
other, in that it strips that authority of any right to acquire
territory upon any condition which would guard the people of the
United States from the evil of immediate incorporation. The
treatymaking power, then, under this contention, instead of having
the symmetrical functions which belong to it from its very nature,
becomes distorted -- vested with the right to destroy, upon the one
hand, and deprived of all power to protect the government, on the
other.
And, looked at from another point of view, the effect of the
principle asserted is equally antagonistic not only to the express
provisions, but to the spirit of the Constitution in other
respects. Thus, if it be true that the treatymaking power has the
authority which is asserted, what becomes of that branch of
Congress which is peculiarly the representative of the people of
the United States, and what is left of the functions of that body
under the Constitution? For, although the House of Representatives
might be unwilling to agree to the incorporation of alien races, it
would be impotent to prevent its accomplishment, and the express
provisions conferring upon Congress the power to regulate commerce,
the right to raise revenue -- bills for which, by the Constitution,
must originate in the House of Representatives -- and the authority
to prescribe uniform naturalization laws, would be in effect set at
naught by the treatymaking power. And the consequent result --
incorporation -- would be beyond all future control of or remedy by
the American people, since at once and without hope of redress or
power of change, incorporation by the treaty would have been
brought about.
Page 182 U. S. 314
The inconsistency of the position is at once manifest. The basis
of the argument is that the treaty must be considered to have
incorporated, because acquisition presupposes the exercise of
judgment as to fitness for immediate incorporation. But the
deduction drawn is, although the judgment exercised is against
immediate incorporation and this result is plainly expressed, the
conditions are void because no judgment against incorporation can
be called into play.
All the confusion and dangers above indicated, however, it is
argued, are more imaginary than real, since, although it be
conceded that the treatymaking power has the right by cession to
incorporate without the consent of Congress, that body may correct
the evil by availing itself of the provision of the Constitution
giving to Congress the right to dispose of the territory and other
property of the United States. This assumes that there has been
absolute incorporation by the treatymaking power, on the one hand,
and yet asserts that Congress may deal with the territory as if it
had not been incorporated into the United States. In other words,
the argument adopts conflicting theories of the Constitution, and
applies them both at the same time. I am not unmindful that there
has been some contrariety of decision on the subject of the meaning
of the clause empowering Congress to dispose of the territories and
other property of the United States, some adjudged cases treating
that article as referring to property as such, and others deriving
from it the general grant of power to govern territories. In view,
however, of the relations of the territories to the government of
the United States at the time of the adoption of the Constitution,
and the solemn pledge then existing that they should forever
"remain a part of the Confederacy of the United States of America,"
I cannot resist the belief that the theory that the disposing
clause relates as well to a relinquishment or cession of
sovereignty as to a mere transfer of rights of property is
altogether erroneous.
Observe again the inconsistency of this argument. It considers,
on the one hand, that so vital is the question of incorporation
that no alien territory may be acquired by a cession without
absolutely endowing the territory with incorporation and
Page 182 U. S. 315
the inhabitants with resulting citizenship, because, under our
system of government, the assumption that a territory and its
inhabitants may be held by any other title than one incorporating
is impossible to be thought of. And yet, to avoid the evil
consequences which must follow from accepting this proposition, the
argument is that all citizenship of the United States is precarious
and fleeting, subject to be sold at any moment like any other
property. That is to say, to protect a newly acquired people in
their presumed rights, it is essential to degrade the whole body of
American citizenship.
The reasoning which has sometimes been indulged in by those who
asserted that the Constitution was not at all operative in the
territories is that, as they were acquired by purchase, the right
to buy included the right to sell. This has been met by the
proposition that, if the country purchased and its inhabitants
became incorporated into the United States, it came under the
shelter of the Constitution, and no power existed to sell American
citizens. In conformity to the principles which I have admitted, it
is impossible for me to say at one and the same time that territory
is an integral part of the United States protected by the
Constitution, and yet the safeguards, privileges, rights, and
immunities which arise from this situation are so ephemeral in
their character that, by a mere act of sale, they may be destroyed.
And, applying this reasoning to the provisions of the treaty under
consideration, to me it seems indubitable that, if the treaty with
Spain incorporated all the territory ceded into the United States,
it resulted that the millions of people to whom that treaty related
were, without the consent of the American people as expressed by
Congress, and without any hope of relief, indissolubly made a part
of our common country.
Undoubtedly, the thought that, under the Constitution, power to
dispose of people and territory, and thus to annihilate the rights
of American citizens, was contrary to the conceptions of the
Constitution entertained by Washington and Jefferson. In the
written suggestions of Mr. Jefferson, when Secretary of State,
reported to President Washington in March, 1792, on the subject of
proposed negotiations between the United States and Spain which
were intended to be communicated by way of instruction
Page 182 U. S. 316
to the commissioners of the United States appointed to manage
such negotiations, it was observed, in discussing the possibility
as to compensation being demanded by Spain "for the ascertainment
of our right" to navigate the lower part of the Mississippi, as
follows:
"We have nothing else [than a relinquishment of certain claims
on Spain] to give in exchange. For, as to territory, we have
neither the right nor the disposition to alienate an inch of what
belongs to any member of our Union. Such a proposition, therefore,
is totally inadmissible, and not to be treated for a moment."
Ford's Writings of Jefferson, vol. v, p. 476.
The rough draft of these observations was submitted to Mr.
Hamilton, then Secretary of the Treasury, for suggestions
previously to sending it to the President sometime before March 5,
and Hamilton made the following (among other) notes upon it:
"Page 25. Is it true that the United States have no right to
alienate an inch of the territory in question except in
the case of necessity intimated in another place? Or will it be
useful to avow the denial of such a right? It is apprehended that
the doctrine which restricts the alienation of territory to cases
of
extreme necessity is applicable rather to
peopled territory than to waste and uninhabited districts.
Positions restraining the right of the United States to accommodate
to exigencies which may arise ought ever to be advanced with great
caution."
Ford's Writings of Jefferson, vol. 5, p. 443.
Respecting this note, Mr. Jefferson commented as follows:
"The power to alienate the unpeopled territories of any state is
not among the enumerated powers given by the Constitution to the
general government, and if we may go out of that instrument and
accommodate to exigencies which may arise by alienating
the
unpeopled territory of a state, we may accommodate
ourselves a little more by alienating that which is
peopled, and still a little more by selling the
people themselves. A shade or two more in the degree of
exigency is all that will be requisite, and of that degree we shall
ourselves be the judges. However, may it not be hoped that these
questions are forever laid to rest by the Twelfth Amendment, once
made a part of the Constitution, declaring expressly that 'the
powers not delegated to the
Page 182 U. S. 317
United States by the Constitution are reserved to the states
respectively?' And if the general government has no power to
alienate the territory of a state, it is too irresistible an
argument to deny ourselves the use of it on the present
occasion."
Ib.
The opinions of Mr. Jefferson, however, met the approval of
President Washington. On March 18, 1792, in enclosing to the
commissioners to Spain their commission, he said, among other
things:
"You will herewith receive your commission, as also observations
on these several subjects reported to the President and approved by
him, which will therefore serve as instructions for you. These
expressing minutely the sense of our government, and what they wish
to have done, it is unnecessary for me to do more here than desire
you to pursue these objects unremittingly,"
etc. Ford's Writings of Jefferson, vol. v, p. 456.
When the subject matter to which the negotiations related is
considered, it becomes evident that the word "state," as above
used, related merely to territory which was either claimed by some
of the states, as Mississippi Territory was by Georgia, or to the
Northwest Territory, embraced within the Ordinance of 1787, or the
territory south of the Ohio (Tennessee), which had also been
endowed with all the rights and privileges conferred by that
ordinance, and all which territory had originally been ceded by
states to the United States under express stipulations that such
ceded territory should be ultimately formed into states of the
Union. And this meaning of the word "state" is absolutely in accord
with what I shall hereafter have occasion to demonstrate was the
conception entertained by Mr. Jefferson of what constituted the
United States.
True, from the exigency of a calamitous war or the necessity of
a settlement of boundaries, it may be that citizens of the United
States may be expatriated by the action of the treatymaking power,
impliedly or expressly ratified by Congress.
But the arising of these particular conditions cannot justify
the general proposition that territory which is an integral part of
the United States may, as a mere act of sale, be disposed of. If,
however, the right to dispose of an incorporated American territory
and citizens by the mere exertion of the power to sell
Page 182 U. S. 318
be conceded,
arguendo, it would not relieve the
dilemma. It is ever true that, where a malign principle is adopted,
as long as the error is adhered to it must continue to produce its
baleful results. Certainly, if there be no power to acquire subject
to a condition, it must follow that there is no authority to
dispose of subject to conditions, since it cannot be that the mere
change of form of the transaction could bestow a power which the
Constitution has not conferred. It would follow, then, that any
conditions annexed to a disposition which looked to the protection
of the people of the United States, or to enable them to safeguard
the disposal of territory, would be void, and thus it would be that
either the United States must hold on absolutely or must dispose of
unconditionally.
A practical illustration will at once make the consequences
clear. Suppose Congress should determine that the millions of
inhabitants of the Philippine islands should not continue
appurtenant to the United States, but that they should be allowed
to establish an autonomous government, outside of the Constitution
of the United States, coupled, however, with such conditions
providing for control as far only as essential to the guaranty of
life and property and to protect against foreign encroachment. If
the proposition of incorporation be well founded, at once the
question would arise whether the ability to impose these conditions
existed, since no power was conferred by the Constitution to annex
conditions which would limit the disposition. And if it be that the
question of whether territory is immediately fit for incorporation
when it is acquired is a judicial, and not a legislative, one, it
would follow that the validity of the conditions would also come
within the scope of judicial authority, and thus the entire
political policy of the government be alone controlled by the
judiciary.
The theory as to the treatymaking power upon which the argument
which has just been commented upon rests, it is now proposed to be
shown, is refuted by the history of the government from the
beginning. There has not been a single cession made from the time
of the Confederation up to the present day, excluding the recent
treaty with Spain, which has not contained stipulations to the
effect that the United States, through Congress,
Page 182 U. S. 319
would either not disincorporate or would incorporate the ceded
territory into the United States. There were such conditions in the
deed of cession by Virginia when it conveyed the Northwest
Territory to the United States. Like conditions were attached by
North Carolina to the cession whereby the territory south of the
Ohio, now Tennessee, was transferred. Similar provisions were
contained in the cession by Georgia of the Mississippi Territory,
now the states of Alabama and Mississippi. Such agreements were
also expressed in the treaty of 1803, ceding Louisiana; that of
1819, ceding the Floridas, and in the treaties of 1848 and 1853, by
which a large extent of territory was ceded to this country, as
also in the Alaska treaty of 1867. To adopt the limitations on the
treatymaking power now insisted upon would presuppose that every
one of these conditions thus sedulously provided for were
superfluous, since the guaranties which they afforded would have
obtained, although they were not expressly provided for.
When the various treaties by which foreign territory has been
acquired are considered in the light of the circumstances which
surrounded them, it becomes to my mind clearly established that the
treatymaking power was always deemed to be devoid of authority to
incorporate territory into the United States without the assent,
express or implied, of Congress, and that no question to the
contrary has ever been even mooted. To appreciate this, it is
essential to bear in mind what the words "United States" signified
at the time of the adoption of the Constitution. When, by the
treaty of peace with Great Britain, the independence of the United
States was acknowledged, it is unquestioned that all the territory
within the boundaries defined in that treaty, whatever may have
been the disputes as to title, substantially belonged to particular
states. The entire territory was part of the United States, and all
the native white inhabitants were citizens of the United States and
endowed with the rights and privileges arising from that relation.
When, as has already been said, the Northwest Territory was ceded
by Virginia, it was expressly stipulated that the rights of the
inhabitants in this regard should be respected. The ordinance of
1787, providing for the government of the Northwest Territory,
fulfilled
Page 182 U. S. 320
this promise on behalf of the Confederation. Without undertaking
to reproduce the text of the ordinance, it suffices to say that it
contained a bill of rights, a promise of ultimate statehood, and it
provided (italics mine) that
"The said territory and the states which may be formed therein
shall ever remain a part of this Confederacy of the United
States of America, subject to the Articles of Confederation,
and to such alterations therein as shall be constitutionally made,
and to all the acts and ordinances of the United States in Congress
assembled conformably thereto."
It submitted the inhabitants to a liability for a tax to pay
their proportional part of the public debt and the expenses of the
government, to be assessed by the rule of apportionment which
governed the states of the Confederation. It forbade slavery within
the territory, and contained a stipulation that the provisions of
the ordinance should ever remain unalterable unless by common
consent.
Thus it was, at the adoption of the Constitution, the United
States, as a geographical unit and as a governmental conception
both in the international and domestic sense, consisted not only of
states, but also of territories, all the native white inhabitants
being endowed with citizenship, protected by pledges of a common
union, and, except as to political advantages, all enjoying equal
rights and freedom, and safeguarded by substantially similar
guaranties, all being under the obligation to contribute their
proportionate share for the liquidation of the debt and future
expenses of the general government.
The opinion has been expressed that the Ordinance of 1787 became
inoperative and a nullity on the adoption of the Constitution
(Taney, C.J., in
Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 438), while, on the other hand,
it has been said that the Ordinance of 1787 was "the most solemn of
all engagements," and became a part of the Constitution of the
United States by reason of the sixth article, which provided
that
"all debts contracted and engagements entered into before the
adoption of this Constitution shall be as valid against the United
States under this Constitution as under the Confederation."
Per Baldwin, J., concurring opinion in
Pollard v.
Kibbe, 14 Pet. 417, and per Catron, J., in
dissenting opinion in
Strader
Page 182 U. S. 321
v. Graham, 10 How. 98. Whatever view may be taken of
this difference of legal opinion, my mind refuses to assent to the
conclusion that, under the Constitution, the provision of the
Northwest Territory Ordinance making such territory forever a part
of the Confederation was not binding on the government of the
United States when the Constitution was formed. When it is borne in
mind that large tracts of this territory were reserved for
distribution among the Continental soldiers, it is impossible for
me to believe that it was ever considered that the result of the
cession was to take the Northwest Territory out of the Union, the
necessary effect of which would have been to expatriate the very
men who by their suffering and valor had secured the liberty of
their united country. Can it be conceived that North Carolina,
after the adoption of the Constitution, would cede to the general
government the territory south of the Ohio River, intending thereby
to expatriate those dauntless mountaineers of North Carolina who
had shed lustre upon the Revolutionary arms by the victory of
King's Mountain? And the rights bestowed by Congress after the
adoption of the Constitution, as I shall proceed to demonstrate,
were utterly incompatible with such a theory.
Beyond question, in one of the early laws enacted at the first
session of the First Congress, the binding force of the ordinance
was recognized, and certain of its provisions concerning the
appointment of officers in the territory were amended to conform
the ordinance to the new Constitution. 1 Stat. 50.
In view of this, it cannot, it seems to me, be doubted that the
United States continued to be composed of states and territories,
all forming an integral part thereof and incorporated therein, as
was the case prior to the adoption of the Constitution.
Subsequently, the territory now embraced in the State of Tennessee
was ceded to the United States by the State of North Carolina. In
order to insure the rights of the native inhabitants, it was
expressly stipulated that the inhabitants of the ceded territory
should enjoy all the rights, privileges, benefits, and advantages
set forth in the ordinance "of the late Congress for the government
of the western territory of the United
Page 182 U. S. 322
States." A condition was, however, inserted in the cession that
no regulation should be made by Congress tending to emancipate
slaves. By Act of April 2, 1790, 1 Stat. 106, c. 6, this cession
was accepted. And at the same session, on May 26, 1790, an act was
passed for the government of this territory, under the designation
of "the territory of the United States south of the Ohio River." 1
Stat. 123, c. 14. This act, except as to the prohibition which was
found in the Northwest Territory Ordinance as to slavery, in
express terms declared that the inhabitants of the territory should
enjoy all the rights conferred by that ordinance.
A government for the Mississippi Territory was organized on
April 7, 1798. 1 Stat. 549, c. 28. The land embraced was claimed by
the State of Georgia, and her rights were saved by the act. The
sixth section thereof provided as follows:
"SEC. 6.
And be it further enacted that from and after
the establishment of the said government, the people of the
aforesaid territory shall be entitled to and enjoy, all and
singular, the rights, privileges, and advantages granted to the
people of the territory of the United States northwest of the River
Ohio in and by the aforesaid ordinance of the thirteenth day of
July, in the year one thousand seven hundred and eighty-seven, in
as full and ample a manner as the same are possessed and enjoyed by
the people of the said last-mentioned territory."
Thus, clearly defined by boundaries, by common citizenship, by
like guaranties, stood the United States when the plan of acquiring
by purchase from France the province of Louisiana was conceived by
President Jefferson. Naturally, the suggestion which arose was the
power on the part of the government of the United States, under the
Constitution, to incorporate into the United States -- a Union then
composed, as I have stated, of states and territories -- a foreign
province inhabited by an alien people, and thus make them partakers
in the American commonwealth. Mr. Jefferson, not doubting the power
of the United States to acquire, consulted Attorney General Lincoln
as to the right by treaty to stipulate for incorporation. By that
officer Mr. Jefferson was in effect advised that the power to
incorporate -- that is, to share the privileges and immunities
Page 182 U. S. 323
of the people of the United States with a foreign population --
required the consent of the people of the United States, and it was
suggested, therefore, that, if a treaty of cession were made
containing such agreements, it should be put in the form of a
change of boundaries, instead of a cession, so as thereby to bring
the territory within the United States. The letter of Mr. Lincoln
was sent by President Jefferson to Mr. Gallatin, the Secretary of
the Treasury. Mr. Gallatin did not agree as to the propriety of the
expedient suggested by Mr. Lincoln. In a letter to President
Jefferson in effect so stating, he said:
"But does any constitutional objection really exist? To me it
would appear (1) that the United States as a nation have an
inherent right to acquire territory; (2) that, whenever that
acquisition is by treaty, the same constituted authorities in which
the treatymaking power is vested have a constitutional right to
sanction the acquisition; (3) that, whenever the territory has been
acquired, Congress have the power either of admitting into the
Union as a new state or of annexing to a state, with the consent of
that state, or of making regulations for the government of such
territory."
Gallatin's Writings, vol. 1, p. 11, etc.
To this letter President Jefferson replied in January, 1803,
clearly showing that he thought there was no question whatever of
the right of the United States to acquire, but that he did not
believe incorporation could be stipulated for and carried into
effect without the consent of the people of the United States. He
said (italics mine):
"You are right, in my opinion, as to Mr. L.'s proposition:
there is no constitutional difficulty as to the acquisition of
territory, and whether, when acquired, it may be taken into the
Union by the Constitution as it now stands will become a
question of expediency. I think it will be safer not to permit the
enlargement of the Union but by amendment of the Constitution."
Gallatin's Writings, vol. 1, p. 115.
And the views of Mr. Madison, then Secretary of State, exactly
conformed to those of President Jefferson, for, on March 2, 1803,
in a letter to the commissioners who were negotiating the treaty,
he said:
"To incorporate the inhabitants of the hereby ceded
territory
Page 182 U. S. 324
with the citizens of the United States, being a provision which
cannot now be made, it is to be expected from the character and
policy of the United States that such incorporation will take place
without unnecessary delay."
State Papers II, 540.
Let us pause for a moment to accentuate the irreconcilable
conflict which exists between the interpretation given to the
Constitution at the time of the Louisiana treaty by Jefferson and
Madison, and the import of that instrument as now insisted upon.
You are to negotiate, said Madison to the commissioners, to obtain
a cession of the territory, but you must not under any
circumstances agree "
to incorporate the inhabitants of the
hereby ceded territory with the citizens of the United States,
being a provision which cannot now be made." Under the theory
now urged, Mr. Madison should have said: You are to negotiate for
the cession of the Territory of Louisiana to the United States, and
if deemed by you expedient in accomplishing this purpose, you may
provide for the immediate incorporation of the inhabitants of the
acquired territory into the United States. This you can freely do
because the Constitution of the United States has conferred upon
the treatymaking power the absolute right to bring all the alien
people residing in acquired territory into the United States, and
thus divide with them the rights which peculiarly belong to the
citizens of the United States. Indeed, it is immaterial whether you
make such agreements, since, by the effect of the Constitution,
without reference to any agreements which you may make for that
purpose, all the alien territory and its inhabitants will instantly
become incorporated into the United States if the territory is
acquired.
Without going into details, it suffices to say that a compliance
with the instructions given them would have prevented the
negotiators on behalf of the United States from inserting in the
treaty any provision looking even to the ultimate incorporation of
the acquired territory into the United States. In view of the
emergency and exigencies of the negotiations, however, the
commissioners were constrained to make such a stipulation, and the
treaty provided as follows:
"Art. III. The inhabitants of the ceded territory shall be
incorporated in the Union of the United States, and admitted
Page 182 U. S. 325
as soon as possible, according to the principles of the federal
Constitution, to the enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and
immunities of citizens of the United States, and in the meantime
they shall be maintained and protected in the free enjoyment of
their liberty, property, and the religion which they profess."
8 Stat. 202.
Weighing the provisions just quoted, it is evident they refute
the theory of incorporation arising at once from the mere force of
a treaty, even although such result be directly contrary to any
provisions which a treaty may contain. Mark the language. It
expresses a promise: "The inhabitants of the ceded territory
shall be incorporated in the Union of the United States. .
. ." Observe how guardedly the fulfillment of this pledge is
postponed until its accomplishment is made possible by the will of
the American people, since it is to be executed only "
as soon
as possible according to the principles of the federal
Constitution." If the view now urged be true, this wise
circumspection was unnecessary, and, indeed, as I have previously
said, the entire proviso was superfluous, since everything which it
assured for the future was immediately and unalterably to
arise.
It is said, however, that the treaty for the purchase of
Louisiana took for granted that the territory ceded would be
immediately incorporated into the United States, and hence the
guaranties contained in the treaty related not to such
incorporation, but was a pledge that the ceded territory was to be
made a part of the Union as a state. The minutest analysis,
however, of the clauses of the treaty fails to disclose any
reference to a promise of statehood, and hence it can only be that
the pledges made referred to incorporation into the United States.
This will further appear when the opinions of Jefferson and Madison
and their acts on the subject are reviewed. The argument proceeds
upon the theory that the words of the treaty "shall be incorporated
into the Union of the United States" could only have referred to a
promise of statehood, since the then existing and incorporated
territories were not a part of the Union of the United States, as
that Union consisted only of the states. But this has been shown to
be unfounded,
Page 182 U. S. 326
since the "Union of the United States" was composed of states
and territories, both having been embraced within the boundaries
fixed by the treaty of peace between Great Britain and the United
States which terminated the Revolutionary War, the latter, the
territories, embracing districts of country which were ceded by the
states to the United States under the express pledge that they
should forever remain a part thereof. That this conception of the
Union composing the United States was the understanding of
Jefferson and Madison, and indeed of all those who participated in
the events which preceded and led up to the Louisiana treaty,
results from what I have already said, and will be additionally
demonstrated by statements to be hereafter made. Again, the
inconsistency of the argument is evident. Thus, while the premise
upon which it proceeds is that foreign territory, when acquired,
becomes at once a part of the United States, despite conditions in
the treaty expressly excluding such consequence, it yet endeavors
to escape the refutation of such theory which arises from the
history of the government by the contention that the territories
which were a part of the United States were not component
constituents of the Union which composed the United States. I do
not understand how foreign territory which has been acquired by
treaty can be asserted to have been absolutely incorporated into
the United States as a part thereof despite conditions to the
contrary inserted in the treaty, and yet the assertion be made that
the territories which, as I have said, were in the United States
originally as a part of the states, and which were ceded by them
upon express condition that they should forever so remain a part of
the United States, were not a part of the Union composing the
United States. The argument, indeed, reduces itself to this --
that, for the purpose of incorporating foreign territory into the
United States, domestic territory must be disincorporated. In other
words, that the Union must be, at least in theory, dismembered for
the purpose of maintaining the doctrine of the immediate
incorporation of alien territory.
That Mr. Jefferson deemed the provision of the treaty relating
to incorporation to be repugnant to the Constitution is
unquestioned. While he conceded, as has been seen, the right
Page 182 U. S. 327
to acquire, he doubted the power to incorporate the territory
into the United States without the consent of the people by a
constitutional amendment. In July, 1803, he proposed two drafts of
a proposed amendment, which he thought ought to be submitted to the
people of the United States to enable them to ratify the terms of
the treaty. The first of these, which is dated July, 1803, is
printed in the margin. [
Footnote
12]
The second and revised amendment was as follows:
"Louisiana, as ceded by France to the United States, is made a
part of the United States. Its white inhabitants shall be citizens,
and stand, as to their rights and obligations, on the same footing
with other citizens of the United States in analogous situations.
Save only that, as to the portion thereof lying north of the
latitude of the mouth of Arcana River, no new state shall be
established nor any grants of land made therein other than to
Indians in exchange for equivalent portions of lands occupied by
them until an amendment of the Constitution shall be made for those
purposes."
"Florida also, whensoever it may be rightfully obtained, shall
become a part of the United States. Its white inhabitants shall
thereupon become citizens, and shall stand, as to their rights and
obligations, on the same footing with other citizens of the United
States in analogous situations."
Ford's Writings of Jefferson, vol. 8, p. 241.
It is strenuously insisted that Mr. Jefferson's conviction on
the subject of the repugnancy of the treaty to the Constitution
was
Page 182 U. S. 328
based alone upon the fact that he thought the treaty exceeded
the limits of the Constitution because he deemed that it provided
for the admission, according to the Constitution, of the acquired
territory as a new state or states into the Union, and hence, for
the purpose of conferring this power, he drafted the amendment. The
contention is refuted by two considerations -- the first because
the two forms of amendment which Mr. Jefferson prepared did not
purport to confer any power upon Congress to admit new states, and
second, they absolutely forbade Congress from admitting a new state
out of a described part of the territory without a further
amendment to the Constitution. It cannot be conceived that Mr.
Jefferson would have drafted an amendment to cure a defect which he
thought existed, and yet say nothing in the amendment on the
subject of such defect. And, moreover, it cannot be conceived that
he drafted an amendment to confer a power he supposed to be wanting
under the Constitution, and thus ratify the treaty, and yet in the
very amendment withhold in express terms, as to a part of the ceded
territory, the authority which it was the purpose of the amendment
to confer.
I excerpt in the margin [
Footnote 13] two letters from Mr. Jefferson, one
Page 182 U. S. 329
written under date of July 7, 1803, to William Dunbar, and the
other dated September 7, 1803, to Wilson Cary Nicholas, which show
clearly the difficulties which were in the mind of Mr. Jefferson,
and which remove all doubt concerning the meaning of the amendment
which he wrote and the adoption of which he deemed necessary to
cure any supposed want of power concerning the treaty would be
provided for.
These letters show that Mr. Jefferson bore in mind the fact that
the Constitution in express terms delegated to Congress the power
to admit new states, and therefore no further authority on this
subject was required. But he thought this power in Congress was
confined to the area embraced within the limits of the United
States, as existing at the adoption of the Constitution. To fulfill
the stipulations of the treaty so as to cause the ceded territory
to become a part of the United States, Mr. Jefferson deemed an
amendment to the Constitution to be essential. For this reason, the
amendment which he formulated declared that the territory ceded was
to be
"
a part of the United States, and its white inhabitants
shall be citizens, and stand, as to their rights and obligations,
on the same footing with other citizens of the United States in
analogous situations."
What these words meant is not open to doubt when it is observed
that they were but the paraphrase of the following words, which
were contained in the first proposed amendment which Mr. Jefferson
wrote: "[v]esting the inhabitants thereof with all rights possessed
by other territorial citizens of the United States" --
which clearly show that it was the want of power to incorporate the
ceded country into the United States as a territory which was in
Mr. Jefferson's mind, and to accomplish which result
Page 182 U. S. 330
he thought an amendment to the Constitution was required. This
provision of the amendment applied to all of the territory ceded,
and therefore brought it all into the United States, and hence
placed it in a position where the power of Congress to admit new
states would have attached to it. As Mr. Jefferson deemed that
every requirement of the treaty would be fulfilled by
incorporation, and that it would be unwise to form a new state out
of the upper part of the new territory, after thus providing for
the complete execution of the treaty by incorporation of all the
territory into the United States, he inserted a provision
forbidding Congress from admitting a new state out of a part of
the territory.
With the debates which took place on the subject of the treaty I
need not particularly concern myself. Some shared Mr. Jefferson's
doubts as to the right of the treatymaking power to incorporate the
territory into the United States without an amendment of the
Constitution; others deemed that the provision of the treaty was
but a promise that Congress would ultimately incorporate as a
territory, and, until by the action of Congress this latter result
was brought about, full power of legislation to govern as deemed
best was vested in Congress. This latter view prevailed. Mr.
Jefferson's proposed amendment to the Constitution therefore was
never adopted by Congress, and hence was never submitted to the
people.
An act was approved on October 31, 1803, 2 Stat. 245,
"to enable the President of the United States to take possession
of the territories ceded by France to the United States by the
treaty concluded at Paris on the 30th of April last, and for the
temporary government thereof."
The provisions of this act were absolutely incompatible with the
conception that the territory had been incorporated into the United
States by virtue of the cession. On November 10, 1803, 2 Stat. 245,
an act was passed providing for the issue of stock to raise the
funds to pay for the territory. On February 24, 1804, 2 Stat. 251,
an act was approved which expressly extended certain revenue and
other laws over the ceded country. On March 26, 1804, 2 Stat. 283,
an act was passed dividing the "province of Louisiana" into Orleans
Territory on the south and the District of Louisiana to
Page 182 U. S. 331
the north. This act extended over the Territory of Orleans a
large number of the general laws of the United States, and provided
a form of government. For the purposes of government, the District
of Louisiana was attached to the Territory of Indiana, which had
been carved out of the Northwest Territory. Although the area
described as Orleans Territory was thus under the authority of a
territorial government, and many laws of the United States had been
extended by act of Congress to it, it was manifest that Mr.
Jefferson thought that the requirement of the treaty that it should
be incorporated into the United States had not been complied
with.
In a letter written to Mr. Madison on July 14, 1804, Mr.
Jefferson, speaking of the treaty of cession, said (Ford's Writings
of Jefferson, vol. 8, p. 313):
"The enclosed reclamations of Girod & Chote against the
claims of Bapstroop to a monopoly of the Indian commerce supposed
to be under the protection of the third article of the Louisiana
convention, as well as some other claims to abusive grants, will
probably force us to meet that question. The article has been
worded with remarkable caution on the part of our negotiators. It
is that the inhabitants shall be admitted as soon as possible,
according to the principles of our Constitution, to the enjoyment
of all the rights of citizens, and, in the meantime,
en
attendant, shall be maintained in their liberty, property, and
religion. That is, that they shall continue under the protection of
the treaty until the principles of our Constitution can be extended
to them, when the protection of the treaty is to cease, and that of
our own principles to take its place. But as this could not be done
at once, it has been provided to be as soon as our rules will
admit. Accordingly, Congress has begun by extending about twenty
particular laws by their titles to Louisiana. Among these is the
act concerning intercourse with the Indians, which establishes a
system of commerce with them admitting no monopoly. That class of
rights therefore are now taken from under the treaty and placed
under the principles of our laws. I imagine it will be necessary to
express an opinion to Governor Claiborne on this subject, after you
shall have made up one. "
Page 182 U. S. 332
In another letter to Mr. Madison, under date of August 15, 1804,
Mr. Jefferson said (
Ib. p. 315):
"I am so much impressed with the expediency of putting a
termination to the right of France to patronize the rights of
Louisiana, which will cease with their complete adoption as
citizens of the United States, that I hope to see that take place
on the meeting of Congress."
At the following session of Congress, on March 2, 1805, 2 Stat.
322, c. 23, an act was approved, which, among other purposes,
doubtless was intended to fulfill the hope expressed by Mr.
Jefferson in the letter just quoted. That act, in the first
section, provided that the inhabitants of the Territory of Orleans
"
shall be entitled to and enjoy all the rights, privileges, and
advantages secured by the said ordinance [that is, the
ordinance of 1787]
and now enjoyed by the people of the
Mississippi territory." As will be remembered, the ordinance
of 1787 had been extended to that territory. 1 Stat. 550, c. 28.
Thus, strictly in accord with the thought embodied in the
amendments contemplated by Mr. Jefferson, citizenship was
conferred, and the Territory of Orleans was incorporated into the
United States to fulfill the requirements of the treaty by placing
it exactly in the position which it would have occupied had it been
within the boundaries of the United States as a territory at the
time the Constitution was framed. It is pertinent to recall that
the treaty contained stipulations giving certain preferences and
commercial privileges for a stated period to the vessels of French
and Spanish subjects, and that, even after the action of Congress
above stated, this condition of the treaty continued to be
enforced, thus demonstrating that even after the incorporation of
the territory, the express provisions conferring a temporary right
which the treaty had stipulated for and which Congress had
recognized were not destroyed, the effect being that incorporation
as to such matter was for the time being in abeyance.
The upper part of the province of Louisiana, designated by the
Act of March 26, 1804, 2 Stat. 283, c. 38, as the District of
Louisiana, and by the Act of March 3, 1805, 2 Stat. 331, c. 27, as
the Territory of Louisiana, was created the Territory of
Missouri
Page 182 U. S. 333
on June 4, 1812. 2 Stat. 743, c. 95. By this latter act, though
the Ordinance of 1787 was not in express terms extended over the
territory -- probably owing to the slavery agitation -- the
inhabitants of the territory were accorded substantially all the
rights of the inhabitants of the Northwest Territory. Citizenship
was in effect recognized in the ninth sec., while the fourteenth
section contained an elaborate declaration of the rights secured to
the people of the territory.
Pausing to analyze the practical construction which resulted
from the acquisition of the vast domain covered by the Louisiana
purchase, it indubitably results first, that it was conceded by
every shade of opinion that the government of the United States had
the undoubted right to acquire, hold, and govern the territory as a
possession, and that incorporation into the United States could
under no circumstances arise solely from a treaty of cession, even
although it contained provisions for the accomplishment of such
result; second, it was strenuously denied by many eminent men that,
in acquiring territory, citizenship could be conferred upon the
inhabitants within the acquired territory -- in other words, that
the territory could be incorporated into the United States without
an amendment to the Constitution; and, third, that the opinion
which prevailed was that, although the treaty might stipulate for
incorporation and citizenship under the Constitution, such
agreements by the treatymaking power were but promises depending
for their fulfillment on the future action of Congress. In
accordance with this view, the territory acquired by the Louisiana
Purchase was governed as a mere dependency until, conformably to
the suggestion of Mr. Jefferson, it was by the action of Congress
incorporated as a territory into the United States, and the same
rights were conferred in the same mode by which other territories
had previously been incorporated -- that is, by bestowing the
privileges of citizenship and the rights and immunities which
pertained to the Northwest Territory.
Florida was ceded by treaty signed on February 22, 1819. 8 Stat.
252. While drafted in accordance with the precedent afforded by the
treaty ceding Louisiana, the Florida treaty was slightly modified
in its phraseology, probably to meet the view
Page 182 U. S. 334
that, under the Constitution, Congress had the right to
determine the time when incorporation was to arise. Acting under
the precedent afforded by the Louisiana case, Congress adopted a
plan of government which was wholly inconsistent with the theory
that the territory had been incorporated. General Jackson was
appointed governor under this act, and exercised a degree of
authority entirely in conflict with the conception that the
territory was a part of the United States in the sense of
incorporation, and that those provisions of the Constitution which
would have been applicable under that hypothesis were then in
force. It will serve no useful purpose to go through the gradations
of legislation adopted as to Florida. Suffice it to say that in
1822 (3 Stat. 654, c. 13), an act was passed as in the case of
Missouri, and presumably for the same reason, which, while not
referring to the Northwest Territory ordinance,
in effect
endowed the inhabitants of that territory with the rights granted
by such ordinance.
This treaty also, it is to be remarked, contained discriminatory
commercial provisions incompatible with the conception of immediate
incorporation arising from the treaty, and they were enforced by
the executive officers of the government.
The intensity of the political differences which existed at the
outbreak of hostilities with Mexico and at the termination of the
war with that country, and the subject around which such conflicts
of opinion centered, probably explain why the treaty of peace with
Mexico departed from the form adopted in the previous treaties
concerning Florida and Louisiana. That treaty, instead of
expressing a cession in the form previously adopted, whether
intentionally or not I am unable, of course, to say, resorted to
the expedient suggested by Attorney General Lincoln to President
Jefferson, and accomplished the cession
by changing the
boundaries of the two countries; in other words, by bringing the
acquired territory within the described boundaries of the United
States. The treaty, besides, contained a stipulation for
rights of citizenship -- in other words, a provision equivalent in
terms to those used in the previous treaties to which I have
referred. The controversy which was then flagrant on the subject of
slavery prevented the passage of a
Page 182 U. S. 335
bill giving California a territorial form of government, and
California, after considerable delay, was therefore directly
admitted into the Union as a state. After the ratification of the
treaty, various laws were enacted by Congress which in effect
treated the territory as acquired by the United States, and the
executive officers of the government, conceiving that these acts
were an implied or express ratification of the provisions of the
treaty by Congress, acted upon the assumption that the provisions
of the treaty were thus made operative, and hence incorporation had
thus become efficacious.
Ascertaining the general rule from the provisions of this latter
treaty and the practical execution which it received, it will be
seen that the precedents established in the cases of Louisiana and
Florida were departed from to a certain extent -- that is, the rule
was considered to be that where the treaty, in express terms,
brought the territory within the boundaries of the United States
and provided for incorporation, and the treaty was expressly or
impliedly recognized by Congress, the provisions of the treaty
ought to be given immediate effect. But this did not conflict with
the general principles of the law of nations which I have at the
outset stated, but enforced it, since the action taken assumed not
that incorporation was brought about by the treatymaking power
wholly without the consent of Congress, but only that, as the
treaty provided for incorporation in express terms, and Congress
had acted without repudiating it, its provisions should be at once
enforced.
Without referring in detail to the acquisition from Russia of
Alaska, it suffices to say that that treaty also contained
provisions for incorporation, and was acted upon exactly in accord
with the practical construction applied in the case of the
acquisitions from Mexico, as just stated. However, the treaty
ceding Alaska contained an express provision excluding from
citizenship the uncivilized native tribes, and it has been nowhere
contended that this condition of exclusion was inoperative because
of the want of power under the Constitution in the treatymaking
authority to so provide, which must be the case if the limitation
on the treatymaking power, which is here asserted, be well founded.
The treaty concerning Alaska, therefore, adds
Page 182 U. S. 336
cogency to the conception established by every act of the
government from the foundation -- that the condition of a treaty,
when expressly or impliedly ratified by Congress, becomes the
measure by which the rights arising from the treaty are to be
adjusted.
The demonstration which it seems to me is afforded by the review
which has preceded is, besides, sustained by various other acts of
the government which to me are wholly inexplicable except upon the
theory that it was admitted that the government of the United
States had the power to acquire and hold territory without
immediately incorporating it. Take, for instance, the simultaneous
acquisition and admission of Texas, which was admitted into the
Union as a state by joint resolution of Congress, instead of by
treaty. To what grant of power under the Constitution can this
action be referred unless it be admitted that Congress is vested
with the right to determine when incorporation arises? It cannot be
traced to the authority conferred on Congress to admit new states,
for to adopt that theory would be to presuppose that this power
gave the prerogative of conferring statehood on wholly foreign
territory. But this I have incidentally shown is a mistaken
conception. Hence it must be that the action of Congress at one and
the same time fulfilled the function of incorporation, and, this
being so, the privilege of statehood was added. But I shall not
prolong this opinion by occupying time in referring to the many
other acts of the government which further refute the correctness
of the propositions which are here insisted on and which I have
previously shown to be without merit. In concluding my appreciation
of the history of the government, attention is called to the
Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which to my mind seems to
be conclusive. The first section of the amendment, the italics
being mine, reads as follows:
"Sec. 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States
or any place
subject to their jurisdiction."
Obviously this provision recognized that there may be places
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, but which are
not
Page 182 U. S. 337
incorporated into it, and hence are not within the United States
in the completest sense of those words.
Let me now proceed to show that the decisions of this Court,
without a single exception, are absolutely in accord with the true
rule as evolved from a correct construction of the Constitution as
a matter of first impression, and as shown by the history of the
government which has been previously epitomized. As it is
appropriate here, I repeat the quotation which has heretofore been
made from the opinion, delivered by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, in
American Insurance Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511, where, considering the Florida
treaty, the Court said (p.
26 U. S. 542):
"The usage of the world is, if a nation be not entirely subdued,
to consider the holding of conquered territory as a mere military
occupation until its fate shall be determined at the treaty of
peace. If it be ceded by the treaty the acquisition is confirmed,
and the ceded territory becomes a part of the nation to which it is
annexed, either on the terms stipulated in the treaty of cession or
on such as its new master shall impose."
In
Fleming v. Page, the Court, speaking through Mr.
Chief Justice Taney, discussing the acts of the military forces of
the United States while holding possession of Mexican territory,
said (9 How.
50 U. S.
614):
"The United States, it is true, may extend its boundaries by
conquest or treaty, and may demand the cession of territory as the
condition of peace in order to indemnify its citizens for the
injuries they have suffered, or to reimburse the government for the
expenses of the war. But this can be done only by the treatymaking
power or the legislative authority."
In
Cross v.
Harrison, 16 How. 164, the question for decision,
as I have previously observed, was as to the legality of certain
duties collected both before and after the ratification of the
treaty of peace, on foreign merchandise imported into California.
Part of the duties collected were assessed upon importations made
by local officials before notice had been received of the
ratification of the treaty of peace, and when duties were laid
under a tariff which had been promulgated by the President. Other
duties were imposed subsequent to the receipt of notification of
the ratification, and these latter duties were laid
Page 182 U. S. 338
according to the tariff as provided in the laws of the United
States. All the exactions were upheld. The Court decided that,
prior to and up to the receipt of notice of the ratification of the
treaty, the local government lawfully imposed the tariff then in
force in California, although it differed from that provided by
Congress, and that subsequent to the receipt of notice of the
ratification of the treaty the duty prescribed by the act of
Congress, which the President had ordered the local officials to
enforce, could be lawfully collected. The opinion undoubtedly
expressed the thought that, by the ratification of the treaty in
question, which, as I have shown, not only included the ceded
territory within the boundaries of the United States, but also
expressly provided for incorporation, the territory had become a
part of the United States, and the body of the opinion quoted the
letter of the Secretary of the Treasury, which referred to the
enactment of laws of Congress by which the treaty had been
impliedly ratified. The decision of the Court as to duties imposed
subsequent to the receipt of notice of the ratification of the
treaty of peace undoubtedly took the fact I have just stated into
view, and in addition was unmistakably proceeded upon the nature of
the rights which the treaty conferred. No comment can obscure or do
away with the patent fact -- namely, that it was unequivocally
decided that if different provisions had been found in the treaty,
a contrary result would have followed. Thus, speaking through Mr.
Justice Wayne, the Court said (16 How.
57 U. S.
197):
"By the ratification of the treaty, California became a part of
the United States. And
as there is nothing differently
stipulated in the treaty with respect to commerce, it became
instantly bound and privileged by the laws which Congress had
passed to raise a revenue from duties on imports and tonnage."
It is, then, as I think, indubitably settled by the principles
of the law of nations, by the nature of the government created
under the Constitution, by the express and implied powers conferred
upon that government by the Constitution, by the mode in which
those powers have been executed from the beginning, and by an
unbroken lien of decisions of this Court, first announced by
Marshall and followed and lucidly expounded
Page 182 U. S. 339
by Taney, that the treatymaking power cannot incorporate
territory into the United States without the express or implied
assent of Congress, that it may insert in a treaty conditions
against immediate incorporation, and that, on the other hand, when
it has expressed in the treaty the conditions favorable to
incorporation, they will, if the treaty be not repudiated by
Congress, have the force of the law of the land, and therefore by
the fulfillment of such conditions cause incorporation to result.
It must follow, therefore, that, where a treaty contains no
conditions for incorporation, and, above all, where it not only has
no such conditions, but expressly provides to the contrary, that
incorporation does not arise until, in the wisdom of Congress, it
is deemed that the acquired territory has reached that state where
it is proper that it should enter into and form a part of the
American family.
Does, then, the treaty in question contain a provision for
incorporation, or does it, on the contrary, stipulate that
incorporation shall not take place from the mere effect of the
treaty and until Congress has so determined? is then the only
question remaining for consideration.
The provisions of the treaty with respect to the status of Porto
Rico and its inhabitants are as follows:
"
Article II"
"Spain cedes to the United States the Island of Porto Rico and
other islands now under Spanish sovereignty in the West Indies, and
the island of Guam, in the Marianas or Ladrones."
"
Article IX"
"Spanish subjects, natives of the Peninsula, residing in the
territory over which Spain by the present treaty relinquishes or
cedes her sovereignty, may remain in such territory or may remove
therefrom, retaining in either event all their rights of property,
including the right to sell or dispose of such property or of its
proceeds, and they shall also have the right to carry on their
industry, commerce, and professions, being subject in respect
thereof to such laws as are applicable to other foreigners. In case
they remain in the territory, they may preserve
Page 182 U. S. 340
their allegiance to the Crown of Spain by making, before a court
of record, within a year from the date of the exchange of
ratifications of this treaty, a declaration of their decision to
preserve such allegiance, in default of which declaration they
shall be held to have renounced it and to have adopted the
nationality of the territory in which they may reside."
The civil rights and political status of the native inhabitants
of the territories hereby ceded to the United States shall be
determined by the Congress.
"
Article X"
The inhabitants of the territories over which Spain relinquishes
or cedes her sovereignty shall be secured in the free exercise of
their religion.
It is to me obvious that the above-quoted provisions of the
treaty do not stipulate for incorporation, but, on the contrary,
expressly provide that the "civil rights and political status of
the native inhabitants of the territories hereby ceded" shall be
determined by Congress. When the rights to which this careful
provision refers are put in juxtaposition with those which have
been deemed essential from the foundation of the government to
bring about incorporation, all of which have been previously
referred to, I cannot doubt that the express purpose of the treaty
was not only to leave the status of the territory to be determined
by Congress, but to prevent the treaty from operating to the
contrary. Of course, it is evident that the express or implied
acquiescence by Congress in a treaty so framed cannot import that a
result was brought about which the treaty itself -- giving effect
to its provisions -- could not produce. And in addition, the
provisions of the act by which the duty here in question was
imposed, taken as a whole, seem to me plainly to manifest the
intention of Congress that, for the present, at least, Porto Rico
is not to be incorporated into the United States.
The fact that the act directs the officers to swear to support
the Constitution does not militate against this view, for, as I
have conceded, whether the island be incorporated or not, the
applicable provisions of the Constitution are there in force. A
Page 182 U. S. 341
further analysis of the provisions of the act seems to me not to
be required in view of the fact that as the act was reported from
the committee it contained a provision conferring citizenship upon
the inhabitants of Porto Rico, and this was stricken out in the
Senate. The argument therefore can only be that rights were
conferred which, after consideration, it was determined should not
be granted. Moreover I fail to see how it is possible, on the one
hand, to declare that Congress in passing the act had exceeded its
powers by treating Porto Rico as not incorporated into the United
States, and at the same time it be said that the provisions of the
act itself amount to an incorporation of Porto Rico into the United
States, although the treaty had not previously done so. It in
reason cannot be that the act is void because it seeks to keep the
island disincorporated, and at the same time, that material
provisions are not to be enforced because the act does incorporate.
Two irreconcilable views of that act cannot be taken at the same
time, the consequence being to cause it to be unconstitutional.
In what has preceded, I have in effect considered every
substantial proposition, and have either conceded or reviewed every
authority referred to as establishing that immediate incorporation
resulted from the treaty of cession which is under consideration.
Indeed, the whole argument in favor of the view that immediate
incorporation followed upon the ratification of the treaty in its
last analysis necessarily comes to this: since it has been decided
that incorporation flows from a treaty which provides for that
result when its provisions have been expressly or impliedly
approved by Congress, it must follow that the same effect flows
from a treaty which expressly stipulates to the contrary, even
although the condition to that end has been approved by Congress.
That is to say, the argument is this: because a provision for
incorporation, when ratified, incorporates, therefore a provision
against incorporation must also produce the very consequence which
it expressly provides against.
The result of what has been said is that, while in an
international sense Porto Rico was not a foreign country, since it
was subject to the sovereignty of and was owned by the United
States, it was foreign to the United States in a domestic
sense,
Page 182 U. S. 342
because the island had not been incorporated into the United
States, but was merely appurtenant thereto as a possession. As a
necessary consequence, the impost in question assessed on coming
from Porto Rico into the United States after the cession was within
the power of Congress, and that body was not, moreover, as to such
impost, controlled by the clause requiring that imposts should be
uniform throughout the United States -- in other words, the
provision of the Constitution just referred to was not applicable
to Congress in legislating for Porto Rico.
Incidentally I have heretofore pointed out that the arguments of
expediency pressed with so much earnestness and ability concern the
legislative, and not the judicial, department of the government.
But it may be observed that, even if the disastrous consequences
which are foreshadowed as arising from conceding that the
government of the United States may hold property without
incorporation were to tempt me to depart from what seems to me to
be the plain line of judicial duty, reason admonishes me that so
doing would not serve to prevent the grave evils which it is
insisted must come, but, on the contrary, would only render them
more dangerous. This must be the result since, as already said, it
seems to me it is not open to serious dispute that the military arm
of the government of the United States may hold and occupy
conquered territory without incorporation for such length of time
as may seem appropriate to Congress in the exercise of its
discretion. The denial of the right of the civil power to do so
would not, therefore, prevent the holding of territory by the
United States if it was deemed best by the political department of
the government, but would simply necessitate that it should be
exercised by the military, instead of by the civil, power.
And to me it further seems apparent that another and more
disastrous result than that just stated would follow as a
consequence of an attempt to cause judicial judgment to invade the
domain of legislative discretion. Quite recently, one of the
stipulations contained in the treaty with Spain which is now under
consideration came under review by this Court. By the provision in
question, Spain relinquished "all claim of sovereignty
Page 182 U. S. 343
over and title to Cuba." It was further provided in the treaty
as follows:
"And as the island is upon the evacuation by Spain to be
occupied by the United States, the United States will, so long as
such occupation shall last, assume and discharge the obligations
that may under international law result from the fact of its
occupation, and for the protection of life and property."
It cannot, it is submitted, be questioned that, under this
provision of the treaty, as long as the occupation of the United
States lasts, the benign sovereignty of the United States extends
over and dominates the island of Cuba. Likewise, it is not, it
seems to me, questionable that the period when that sovereignty is
to cease is to be determined by the legislative department of the
government of the United States in the exercise of the great duties
imposed upon it, and with the sense of the responsibility which it
owes to the people of the United States, and the high respect which
it, of course, feels for all the moral obligations by which the
government of the United States may, either expressly or impliedly,
be bound. Considering the provisions of this treaty, and reviewing
the pledges of this government extraneous to that instrument, by
which the sovereignty of Cuba is to be held by the United States
for the benefit of the people of Cuba and for their account, to be
relinquished to them when the conditions justify its
accomplishment, this Court unanimously held in
Neely v.
Henkel, 180 U. S. 109,
that Cuba was not incorporated into the United States, and was a
foreign country. It follows from this decision that it is lawful
for the United States to take possession of and hold in the
exercise of its sovereign power a particular territory without
incorporating it into the United States, if there be obligations of
honor and good faith which, although not expressed in the treaty,
nevertheless sacredly bind the United States to terminate the
dominion and control when, in its political discretion, the
situation is ripe to enable it to do so. Conceding, then, for the
purpose of the argument, it to be true that it would be a violation
of duty under the Constitution for the legislative department, in
the exercise of its discretion, to accept a cession of and
permanently hold territory which is not
Page 182 U. S. 344
intended to be incorporated, the presumption necessarily must be
that that department, which within its lawful sphere is but the
expression of the political conscience of the people of the United
States, will be faithful to its duty under the Constitution, and
therefore, when the unfitness of particular territory for
incorporation is demonstrated, the occupation will terminate. I
cannot conceive how it can be held that pledges made to an alien
people can be treated as more sacred than is that great pledge
given by every member of every department of the government of the
United States to support and defend the Constitution.
But if it can be supposed -- which, of course, I do not think to
be conceivable -- that the judiciary would be authorized to draw to
itself by an act of usurpation purely political functions, upon the
theory that, if such wrong is not committed a greater harm will
arise, because the other departments of the government will forget
their duty to the Constitution and wantonly transcend its
limitations, I am further admonished that any judicial action in
this case which would be predicated upon such an unwarranted
conception would be absolutely unavailing. It cannot be denied
that, under the rule clearly settled in
Neely v. Henkel,
180 U. S. 109, the
sovereignty of the United States may be extended over foreign
territory to remain paramount until, in the discretion of the
political department of the government of the United States, it be
relinquished. This method, then, of dealing with foreign territory,
would in any event be available. Thus, the enthralling of the
treatymaking power, which would result from holding that no
territory could be acquired by treaty of cession without immediate
incorporation, would only result in compelling a resort to the
subterfuge of relinquishment of sovereignty, and thus indirection
would take the place of directness of action -- a course which
would be incompatible with the dignity and honor of the
government.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS and MR. JUSTICE
McKENNA concur in this opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 176;
Martin
v. Hunter, 1 Wheat. 326;
New
Orleans v. United States, 10 Pet. 662,
35 U. S. 736;
De Geofroy v. Riggs, 133 U. S. 258,
133 U. S. 266;
United States v. Gettysburg Electric Railway, 160 U.
S. 668,
160 U. S. 679,
and cases cited.
[
Footnote 2]
The City of Panama, 101 U. S. 453,
101 U. S. 460;
Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149
U. S. 716,
149 U. S.
738.
[
Footnote 3]
Monongahela Navigation Company v. United States,
148 U. S. 312,
148 U. S. 336;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U.
S. 447,
154 U. S. 479;
United States v. Joint Traffic Association, 171
U. S. 571.
[
Footnote 4]
United States v. Kagama, 118 U.
S. 375,
118 U. S. 378;
Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1,
152 U. S. 48.
[
Footnote 5]
Sere v. Pitot,
6 Cranch 332,
10 U. S. 336;
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 421;
American Ins. Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511,
26 U. S. 542;
United States v.
Gratiot, 14 Pet. 526,
39 U. S. 537;
Dred Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 448;
Clinton v.
Englebrecht, 13 Wall. 434,
80 U. S. 447;
Hamilton v.
Dillin, 21 Wall. 73,
88 U. S. 93;
National Bank v. County of Yankton, 101 U.
S. 129,
101 U. S. 132;
The City of Panama, 101 U. S. 453,
101 U. S. 457;
Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U. S. 15;
United States v. Kagama, 118 U. S. 375,
118 U. S. 380;
Mormon Church v. United States, 136 U. S.
1,
136 U. S. 42;
Boyd v. Thayer, 143 U. S. 135,
143 U. S.
169.
[
Footnote 6]
Mormon Church v. United States, 136 U. S.
1,
136 U. S. 44.
[
Footnote 7]
Loughborough v.
Blake, 5 Wheat. 317,
18 U. S. 322;
Woodruff v.
Parham, 8 Wall. 123,
75 U. S. 133;
Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 622,
114 U. S. 628;
Fairbank v. United States, 181 U.
S. 283.
[
Footnote 8]
American Insurance Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 51;
Benner v.
Porter, 9 How. 235;
Webster v.
Reid, 11 How. 437,
52 U. S. 460;
Clinton v.
Englebrecht, 13 Wall. 434;
Reynolds v. United
States, 98 U. S. 145;
Callan v. Wilson, 127 U. S. 540;
McAllister v. United States, 141 U.
S. 174;
Springville v. Thomas, 166 U.
S. 707;
Bauman v. Ross, 167 U.
S. 548;
Thompson v. Utah, 170 U.
S. 343;
Capital Traction Co. v. Hof,
174 U. S. 1;
Black v. Jackson, 177 U. S.
363.
[
Footnote 9]
In re Ross, 140 U. S. 453,
140 U. S.
461-463.
[
Footnote 10]
Extract from the Free Soil Party Platform of 1842 (Standwood,
Hist. of Presidency, p. 240):
"
Resolved, That our fathers ordained the Constitution
of the United States in order, among other great national objects,
to establish justice, promote the general welfare, and secure the
blessings of liberty, but expressly denied to the federal
government which they created, all constitutional power to deprive
any person of life, liberty, or property without due legal
process."
"
Resolved, That, in the judgment of this convention,
Congress has no more power to make a slave than to make a king; no
more power to institute or establish slavery than to institute or
establish a monarchy. No such power can be found among those
specifically conferred by the Constitution or derived by any just
implication from them."
"
Resolved, That it is the duty of the federal
government to relieve itself from all responsibility for the
existence or continuance of slavery wherever the government
possesses constitutional authority to legislate on that subject,
and is thus responsible for its existence."
"
Resolved, That the true, and in the judgment of this
convention the only safe, means of preventing the extension of
slavery into territory now free is to prohibit its existence in all
such territory by an act of Congress."
[
Footnote 11]
Excerpt from Declarations Made in the Platform of the Republican
Party in 1860 (Stanwood, Hist. of Presidency, p. 293):
"8. That the normal condition of all the territory of the United
States is that of freedom; that as our republican fathers, when
they had abolished slavery in all our national territory, ordained
that no person should be deprived of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, it becomes our duty, by legislation,
whenever such legislation is necessary, to maintain this provision
of the Constitution against all attempts to violate it, and we deny
the authority of Congress, of a territorial legislature, or of any
individual to give legal existence to slavery in any territory of
the United States."
[
Footnote 12]
First draft of Mr. Jefferson's proposed amendment to the
Constitution:
"The province of Louisiana is incorporated with the United
States and made part thereof. The rights of occupancy in the soil
and of self-government are confirmed to Indian inhabitants as they
now exist."
It then proceeded with other provisions relative to Indian
rights and possession and exchange of lands, and forbidding
Congress to dispose of the lands otherwise than is therein provided
without further amendment to the Constitution. This draft closes
thus:
"Except as to that portion thereof which lies south of the
latitude of 31�, which, whenever they deem expedient, they
may enact into a territorial government, either separate or as
making part with one on the eastern side of the river, vesting the
inhabitants thereof with all rights possessed by other territorial
citizens of the United States."
Writings of Jefferson, edited by Ford, vol. 8, p. 241.
[
Footnote 13]
Letter to William Dunbar of July 7, 1803:
"Before you receive this, you will have heard through the
channel of the public papers of the cession of Louisiana by France
to the United States. The terms as stated in the National
Intelligencer are accurate. That the treaty may be ratified in
time, I have found it necessary to convene Congress on the 17th of
October, and it is very important for the happiness of the country
that they should possess all information which can be obtained
respecting it, that they make the best arrangements practicable for
its good government. It is most necessary because they will be
obliged to ask from the people an amendment of the Constitution
authorizing their receiving the province into the Union and
providing for its government, and limitations of power which shall
be given by that amendment will be unalterable but by the same
authority."
Jefferson's Writings, vol. 8, p. 254.
Letter to Wilson Cary Nicholas of September 7, 1803:
"I am aware of the force of the observations you make on the
power given by the Constitution to Congress to admit new states
into the Union without restraining the subject to the territory
then constituting the United States. But when I consider that the
limits of the United States are precisely fixed by the treaty of
1783, that the Constitution expressly declares itself to be made
for the United States, I cannot help believing that the intention
was to permit Congress to admit into the Union new states which
should be formed out of the territory for which and under whose
authority alone they were then acting. I do not believe it was
meant that they might receive England, Ireland, Holland, etc., into
it, which would be the case under your construction. When an
instrument admits two constructions, the one safe, the other
dangerous, the one precise, the other indefinite, I prefer that
which is safe and precise. I had rather ask an enlargement of power
from the nation where it is found necessary than to assume it by a
construction which would make our powers boundless."
Writings of Jefferson, vol. 8, p. 247.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, concurring:
Page 182 U. S. 345
Concurring in the judgment of affirmance in this case, and in
substance agreeing with the opinion of MR. JUSTICE WHITE, I will
sum up the reasons for my concurrence in a few propositions which
may also indicate my position in other cases now standing for
judgment.
The cases now before the Court do not touch the authority of the
United States over the territories in the strict and technical
sense, being those which lie within the United States, as bounded
by the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the Dominion of Canada and the
Republic of Mexico, and the territories of Alaska and Hawaii; but
they relate to territory in the broader sense, acquired by the
United States by war with a foreign state.
As Chief Justice Marshall said:
"The Constitution confers absolutely on the government of the
Union the powers of making war and of making treaties;
consequently, that government possesses the power of acquiring
territory, either by conquest or by treaty. The usage of the world
is, if a nation be not entirely subdued, to consider the holding of
conquered territory as a mere military occupation, until its fate
shall be determined at the treaty of peace. If it be ceded by the
treaty, the acquisition is confirmed, and the ceded territory
becomes a part of the nation to which it is annexed, either on the
terms stipulated in the treaty of cession, or on such as its new
master shall impose."
American Insurance Co. v.
Canter, (1828) 1 Pet. 511,
26 U. S.
542.
The civil government of the United States cannot extend
immediately, and of its own force, over territory acquired by war.
Such territory must necessarily, in the first instance, be governed
by the military power under the control of the President as
Commander in Chief. Civil government cannot take effect at once, as
soon as possession is acquired under military authority, or even as
soon as that possession is confirmed by treaty. It can only be put
in operation by the action of the appropriate political department
of the government at such time and in such degree as that
department may determine. There must of necessity be a transition
period.
In a conquered territory, civil government must take effect
either by the action of the treatymaking power, or by that of
Page 182 U. S. 346
the Congress of the United States. The office of a treaty of
cession ordinarily is to put an end to all authority of the foreign
government over the territory, and to subject the territory to the
disposition of the government of the United States.
The government and disposition of territory so acquired belong
to the government of the United States, consisting of the
President, the Senate, elected by the states, and the House of
Representatives, chosen by and immediately representing the people
of the United States. Treaties by which territory is acquired from
a foreign state usually recognize this.
It is clearly recognized in the recent treaty with Spain,
especially in the ninth article, by which
"the civil rights and political status of the native inhabitants
of the territories hereby ceded to the United States shall be
determined by the Congress."
By the fourth and thirteenth articles of the treaty, the United
States agree that, for ten years, Spanish ships and merchandise
shall be admitted to the ports of the Philippine islands on the
same terms as ships and merchandise of the United States, and
Spanish scientific, literary, and artistic works not subversive of
public order shall continue to be admitted free of duty into all
the ceded territories. Neither of these provisions could be carried
out if the Constitution required the customs regulations of the
United States to apply in those territories.
In the absence of congressional legislation, the regulation of
the revenue of the conquered territory, even after the treaty of
cession, remains with the executive and military authority.
So long as Congress has not incorporated the territory into the
United States, neither military occupation nor cession by treaty
makes the conquered territory domestic territory, in the sense of
the revenue laws; but those laws concerning "foreign countries"
remain applicable to the conquered territory until changed by
Congress. Such was the unanimous opinion of this Court, as declared
by Chief Justice Taney in
Fleming v.
Page, 9 How. 603,
50 U. S.
617.
If Congress is not ready to construct a complete government for
the conquered territory, it may establish a temporary government,
which is not subject to all the restrictions of the
Constitution.
Page 182 U. S. 347
Such was the effect of the Act of Congress of April 12, 1900, c.
191, entitled "An Act Temporarily to Provide Revenues and a Civil
government for Porto Rico, and for Other Purposes." By the third
section of that act, it was expressly declared that the duties
thereby established on merchandise and articles going into Porto
Rico from the United States, or coming into the United States from
Porto Rico, should cease, in any event, on March 1, 1902, and
sooner if the Legislative Assembly of Porto Rico should enact and
put into operation a system of local taxation to meet the
necessities of the government established by that act.
The system of duties temporarily established by that act during
the transition period was within the authority of Congress under
the Constitution of the United States.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM,
dissenting:
This is an action brought to recover moneys exacted by the
collector of customs at the port of New York as import duties on
two shipments of fruit from ports in the Island of Porto Rico to
the port of New York in November, 1900.
The treaty ceding Porto Rico to the United States was ratified
by the Senate February 6, 1899; Congress passed an act to carry out
its obligations March 3, 1899, and the ratifications were
exchanged, and the treaty proclaimed April 11, 1899. Then followed
the act approved April 12, 1900. 31 Stat. 77, c. 191.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, and
myself are unable to concur in the opinions and judgment of the
Court in this case. The majority widely differ in the reasoning by
which the conclusion is reached, although there seems to be
concurrence in the view that Porto Rico belongs to the United
States, but nevertheless, and notwithstanding the act of Congress,
is not a part of the United States subject to the provisions of the
Constitution in respect of the levy of taxes, duties, imposts, and
excises.
Page 182 U. S. 348
The inquiry is whether the Act of April 12, 1900, so far as it
requires the payment of import duties on merchandise brought from a
port of Porto Rico as a condition of entry into other ports of the
United States, is consistent with the federal Constitution.
The act creates a civil government for Porto Rico, with a
governor, secretary, attorney general, and other officers,
appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate, who, together with five other persons, likewise so
appointed and confirmed, are constituted an executive council;
local legislative powers are vested in a legislative assembly
consisting of the executive council and a house of delegates to be
elected; courts are provided for, and, among other things, Porto
Rico is constituted a judicial district, with a district judge,
attorney, and marshal, to be appointed by the President for the
term of four years. The district court is to be called the District
Court of the United States for Porto Rico, and to possess, in
addition to the ordinary jurisdiction of district courts of the
United States, jurisdiction of all cases cognizant in the circuit
courts of the United States. The act also provides that
"writs of error and appeals from the final decisions of the
Supreme Court of Porto Rico and the district court of the United
States shall be allowed and may be taken to the Supreme Court of
the United States in the same manner and under the same regulations
and in the same cases as from the supreme courts of the territories
of the United States, and such writs of error and appeal shall be
allowed in all cases where the Constitution of the United States,
or a treaty thereof, or an act of Congress is brought in question
and the right claimed thereunder is denied."
It was also provided that the inhabitants continuing to reside
in Porto Rico, who were Spanish subjects on April 11, 1899, and
their children born subsequent thereto (except such as should elect
to preserve their allegiance to the Crown of Spain), together with
citizens of the United States residing in Porto Rico, should
"constitute a body politic under the name of The People of Porto
Rico, with governmental powers as hereinafter conferred, and with
power to sue and be sued as such. "
Page 182 U. S. 349
All officials authorized by the act are required to,
"before entering upon the duties of their respective offices,
take an oath to support the Constitution of the United States and
the laws of Porto Rico."
The second third, fourth, fifth and thirty-eighth sections of
the act are printed in the margin.*
Page 182 U. S. 350
It will be seen that duties are imposed upon "merchandise coming
into Porto Rico from the United States;" "merchandise
Page 182 U. S. 351
coming into the United States from Porto Rico;" taxes upon
"articles of merchandise of Porto Rican manufacture coming into the
United States and withdrawn from consumption or sale" "equal to the
internal revenue tax imposed in the United States upon like
articles of domestic manufacture;" and "on all articles of
merchandise of United States manufacture coming into Porto Rico,"
"a tax equal in rate and amount to the internal revenue tax imposed
in Porto Rico upon the like articles of Porto Rican
manufacture."
And it is also provided that all duties collected in Porto Rico
on imports from foreign countries and on "merchandise coming into
Porto Rico from the United States," and "the gross amount of all
collections of duties and taxes in the United States upon articles
of merchandise coming from Porto Rico," shall be held as a separate
fund and placed "at the disposal of the President to be used for
the government and benefit of Porto Rico" until the local
government is organized, when
"all collections of taxes and duties under this act shall be
paid into the treasury of Porto Rico, instead of being paid into
the Treasury of the United States."
The first clause of sec. 8 of Article I of the Constitution
Page 182 U. S. 352
provides:
"The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises, to pay the debts, and provide for the common
defense and general welfare of the United States; but all duties,
imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States."
Clauses four, five, and six of section nine are:
"No capitation, or other direct, tax shall be laid, unless in
proportion to the census or enumeration hereinbefore directed to be
taken."
"No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any
state."
"No preference shall be given by any regulation of commerce or
revenue to the ports of one state over those of another; nor shall
vessels bound to or from one state be obliged to enter, clear, or
pay duties in another."
This act on its face does not comply with the rule of
uniformity, and that fact is admitted.
The uniformity required by the Constitution is a geographical
uniformity, and is only attained when the tax operates with the
same force and effect in every place where the subject of it is
found.
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S.
41;
Head Money Cases, 112
U. S. 594. But it is said that Congress, in attempting
to levy these duties, was not exercising power derived from the
first clause of sec. 8, or restricted by it, because, in dealing
with the territories, Congress exercises unlimited powers of
government, and, moreover, that these duties are merely local
taxes.
This Court, in 1820, when Marshall was Chief Justice, and
Washington, William Johnson, Livingston, Todd, Duvall, and Story
were his associates, took a different view of the power of Congress
in the matter of laying and collecting taxes, duties, imposts, and
excises in the territories, and its ruling in
Loughborough v.
Blake, 5 Wheat. 317, has never been overruled.
It is said in one of the opinions of the majority that the Chief
Justice "made certain observations which have occasioned some
embarrassment in other cases." Manifestly this is so in this case,
for it is necessary to overrule that decision in order to reach the
result herein announced.
Page 182 U. S. 353
The question in
Loughborough v. Blake was whether
Congress had the right to impose a direct tax on the District of
Columbia apart from the grant of exclusive legislation, which
carried the power to levy local taxes. The Court held that Congress
had such power under the clause in question. The reasoning of Chief
Justice Marshall was directed to show that the grant of the power
"to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises," because
it was general and without limitation as to place, consequently
extended "to all places over which the government extends," and he
declared that, if this could be doubted, the doubt was removed by
the subsequent words, which modified the grant, "but all duties,
imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States." He then said:
"It will not be contended that the modification of the power
extends to places to which the power itself does not extend. The
power, then, to lay and collect duties, imposts, and excises may be
exercised, and must be exercised, throughout the United States.
Does this term designate the whole, or any particular portion of
the American empire? Certainly this question can admit of but one
answer. It is the name given to our great republic, which is
composed of states and territories. The District of Columbia, or
the territory west of the Missouri, is not less within the United
States than Maryland or Pennsylvania, and it is not less necessary,
on the principles of our Constitution, that uniformity in the
imposition of imposts, duties, and excises should be observed in
the one than in the other. Since, then, the power to lay and
collect taxes, which includes direct taxes, is obviously
coextensive with the power to lay and collect duties, imposts, and
excises, and since the latter extends throughout the United States,
it follows that the power to impose direct taxes also extends
throughout the United States."
It is wholly inadmissible to reject the process of reasoning by
which the Chief Justice reached and tested the soundness of his
conclusion, as merely
obiter.
Nor is there any intimation that the ruling turned on the theory
that the Constitution irrevocably adhered to the soil of Maryland
and Virginia, and therefore accompanied the parts which were ceded
to form the District, or that "the tie" between
Page 182 U. S. 354
those states and the Constitution "could not be dissolved
without at least the consent of the federal and state governments
to a formal separation," and that this was not given by the cession
and its acceptance in accordance with the constitutional provision
itself, and hence that Congress was restricted in the exercise of
its powers in the District, while not so in the territories.
So far from that, the Chief Justice held the territories as well
as the District to be part of the United States for the purposes of
national taxation, and repeated in effect what he had already said
in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 408:
"Throughout this vast republic, from the St. Croix to the Gulf
of Mexico, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, revenue is to be
collected and expended, armies are to be marched and
supported."
Conceding that the power to tax for the purposes of territorial
government is implied from the power to govern territory, whether
the latter power is attributed to the power to acquire or the power
to make needful rules and regulations, these particular duties are
nevertheless not local in their nature, but are imposed as in the
exercise of national powers. The levy is clearly a regulation of
commerce, and a regulation affecting the states and their people as
well as this territory and its people. The power of Congress to act
directly on the rights and interests of the people of the states
can only exist if and as granted by the Constitution. And by the
Constitution Congress is vested with power "to regulate commerce
with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the
Indian tribes." The territories are indeed not mentioned by name,
and yet commerce between the territories and foreign nations is
covered by the clause, which would seem to have been intended to
embrace the entire internal as well as foreign commerce of the
country.
It is evident that Congress cannot regulate commerce between a
territory and the states and other territories in the exercise of
the bare power to govern the particular territory, and as this act
was framed to operate and does operate on the people of the states,
the power to so legislate is apparently
Page 182 U. S. 355
rested on the assumption that the right to regulate commerce
between the states and territories comes within the commerce clause
by necessary implication.
Stoutenburgh v. Hennick,
129 U. S. 141.
Accordingly, the Act of Congress of August 8, 1890, entitled "An
Act to Limit the Effect of the Regulations of Commerce between the
Several states, and with Foreign Countries in Certain Cases,"
applied in terms to the territories as well as to the states.
In any point of view, the imposition of duties on commerce
operates to regulate commerce, and is not a matter of local
legislation, and it follows that the levy of these duties was in
the exercise of the national power to do so, and subject to the
requirement of geographical uniformity.
The fact that the proceeds are devoted by the act to the use of
the territory does not make national taxes local. Nobody disputes
the source of the power to lay and collect duties geographically
uniform and apply the proceeds by a proper appropriation act to the
relief of a particular territory, but the destination of the
proceeds would not change the source of the power to lay and
collect. And that suggestion certainly is not strengthened when
based on the diversion of duties collected from all parts of the
United States to a territorial treasury before reaching the
Treasury of the United States. Clause 7 of sec. 9 of Article I
provides that "no money shall be drawn from the Treasury but in
consequence of appropriations made by law," and the proposition
that this may be rendered inapplicable if the money is not
permitted to be paid in so as to be susceptible of being drawn out
is somewhat startling.
It is also urged that Chief Justice Marshall was entirely in
fault because, while the grant was general and without limitation
as to place, the words "throughout the United States" imposed a
limitation as to place so far as the rule of uniformity was
concerned -- namely, a limitation to the states as such.
Undoubtedly the view of the Chief Justice was utterly
inconsistent with that contention, and, in addition to what has
been quoted, he further remarked:
"If it be said that the principle of uniformity, established in
the Constitution, secures the District from oppression in the
imposition of indirect taxes, it is
Page 182 U. S. 356
not less true that the principle of apportionment, also
established in the Constitution, secures the District from any
oppressive exercise of the power to lay and collect direct
taxes."
It must be borne in mind that the grant was of the absolute
power of taxation for national purposes, wholly unlimited as to
place, and subject to only one exception and two qualifications.
The exception was that exports could not be taxed at all. The
qualifications were that direct taxes must be imposed by the rule
of apportionment, and indirect taxes by the rule of uniformity.
License Tax
Cases, 5 Wall. 462. But, as the power necessarily
could be exercised throughout every part of the national domain,
state, territory, district, the exception and the qualifications
attended its exercise. That is to say, the protection extended to
the people of the states extended also to the people of the
district and the territories.
In
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, it is
shown that the words "throughout the United States" are but a
qualification introduced for the purpose of rendering the
uniformity prescribed geographical, and not intrinsic, as would
have resulted if they had not been used.
As the grant of the power to lay taxes and duties was
unqualified as to place, and the words were added for the sole
purpose of preventing the uniformity required from being intrinsic,
the intention thereby to circumscribe the area within which the
power could operate not only cannot be imputed, but the contrary
presumption must prevail.
Taking the words in their natural meaning -- in the sense in
which they are frequently and commonly used -- no reason is
perceived for disagreeing with the Chief Justice in the view that
they were used in this clause to designate the geographical unity
known as "The United States," "our great republic, which is
composed of states and territories."
Other parts of the Constitution furnish illustrations of the
correctness of this view. Thus the Constitution vests Congress with
the power "to establish an uniform rule of naturalization, and
uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcy throughout the United
States."
Page 182 U. S. 357
This applies to the territories as well as the states, and has
always been recognized in legislation as binding.
Aliens in the territories are made citizens of the United
States, and bankrupts residing in the territories are discharged
from debts owing citizens of the states, pursuant to uniform rules
and laws enacted by Congress in the exercise of this power.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that
"all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United
States and of the state wherein they reside,"
and this Court naturally held, in the
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36, that the United States included
the District and the territories. Mr. Justice Miller observed:
"It had been said by eminent judges that no man was a citizen of
the United States except as he was a citizen of one of the states
composing the Union. Those, therefore, who had been born and
resided always in the District of Columbia or in the territories,
though within the United States, were not citizens. Whether this
proposition was sound or not had never been judicially
decided."
And he said the question was put at rest by the amendment, and
the distinction between citizenship of the United States and
citizenship of a state was clearly recognized and established.
"Not only may a man be a citizen of the United States without
being a citizen of a state, but an important element is necessary
to convert the former into the latter. He must reside within the
state to make him a citizen of it, but it is only necessary that he
should be born or naturalized in the United States to be a citizen
of the Union."
No person is eligible to the office of President unless he has
"attained the age of thirty-five years, and been fourteen years a
resident within the United States." Clause 5, sec. 1, Art. II.
Would a native-born citizen of Massachusetts be ineligible if he
had taken up his residence and resided in one of the territories
for so many years that he had not resided altogether fourteen years
in the states? When voted for, he must be a citizen of one of the
states (clause 3, sec. 1, Art. II; art. 12), but as to length of
time must residence in the territories be counted against him?
Page 182 U. S. 358
The Fifteenth Amendment declares that
"the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be
denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account
of race, color, or previous condition of servitude."
Where does that prohibition on the United States especially
apply if not in the territories?
The Thirteenth Amendment says that neither slavery nor
involuntary servitude "shall exist within the United States or any
place subject to their jurisdiction." Clearly this prohibition
would have operated in the territories if the concluding words had
not been added. The history of the times shows that the addition
was made in view of the then condition of the country -- the
amendment passed the house January 31, 1865 -- and it is, moreover,
otherwise applicable than to the territories. Besides, generally
speaking, when words are used simply out of abundant caution, the
fact carries little weight.
Other illustrations might be adduced, but it is unnecessary to
prolong this opinion by giving them.
I repeat that no satisfactory ground has been suggested for
restricting the words "throughout the United States," as qualifying
the power to impose duties, to the states, and that conclusion is
the more to be avoided when we reflect that it rests, in the last
analysis, on the assertion of the possession by Congress of
unlimited power over the territories.
The government of the United States is the government ordained
by the Constitution and possesses the powers conferred by the
Constitution.
"This original and supreme will organizes the government, and
assigns to different departments their respective powers. It may
either stop here or establish certain limits not to be transcended
by those departments. The government of the United States is of the
latter description. The powers of the legislature are defined and
limited, and that those limits may not be mistaken or forgotten,
the Constitution is written. To what purpose are powers limited,
and to what purpose is that limitation committed to writing, if
these limits may at any time be passed by those intended to be
restrained?"
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 176. The opinion of the Court, by
Chief Justice Marshall, in that case was delivered at
Page 182 U. S. 359
the February term, 1803, and at the October term, 1885, the
Court, in
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.
S. 356, speaking through Mr. Justice Matthews, said:
"When we consider the nature and theory of our institutions of
government, the principles upon which they are supposed to rest,
and review the history of their development, we are constrained to
conclude that they do not mean to leave room for the play and
action of purely personal and arbitrary power. Sovereignty itself
is, of course, not subject to law, for it is the author and source
of law; but in our system, while sovereign powers are delegated to
the agencies of government, sovereignty itself remains with the
people, by whom and for whom all government exists and acts. And
the law is the definition and limitation of power."
From
Marbury v. Madison to the present day, no
utterance of this Court has intimated a doubt that in its operation
on the people, by whom and for whom it was established, the
national government is a government of enumerated powers, the
exercise of which is restricted to the use of means appropriate and
plainly adapted to constitutional ends, and which are "not
prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the
Constitution."
The powers delegated by the people to their agents are not
enlarged by the expansion of the domain within which they are
exercised. When the restriction on the exercise of a particular
power by a particular agent is ascertained, that is an end of the
question.
To hold otherwise is to overthrow the basis of our
constitutional law, and moreover, in effect, to reassert the
proposition that the states, and not the people, created the
government.
It is again to antagonize Chief Justice Marshall, when he
said:
"The government of the Union, then (whatever may be the
influence of this fact on the case), is emphatically and truly a
government of the people. In form and in substance, it emanates
from them. Its powers are granted by them, and are to be exercised
directly on them and for their benefit. This government is
acknowledged by all to be one of enumerated powers."
4 Wheat.
17 U. S.
404.
The prohibitory clauses of the Constitution are many, and
Page 182 U. S. 360
they have been repeatedly given effect by this Court in respect
of the territories and the District of Columbia.
The underlying principle is indicated by Chief Justice Taney in
The Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 492, where he maintained the right of
the American citizen to free transit in these words:
"Living, as we do, under a common government charged with the
great concerns of the whole Union, every citizen of the United
States, from the most remote states or territories, is entitled to
free access, not only to the principal departments established at
Washington, but also to its judicial tribunals and public offices
in every state and Territory of the Union. . . . For all the great
purposes for which the federal government was formed, we are one
people, with one common country. We are all citizens of the United
States, and, as members of the same community, must have the right
to pass and repass through every part of it without interruption,
as freely as in our own states."
In
Cross v.
Harrison, 16 How. 197, it was held that, by the
ratification of the treaty with Mexico, "California became a part
of the United States," and that
"the right claimed to land foreign goods within the United
States at any place out of a collection district, if allowed, would
be a violation of that provision in the Constitution which enjoins
that all duties, imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout
the United States."
In
Dred Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 393, the Court was unanimous in
holding that the power to legislate respecting a territory was
limited by the restrictions of the Constitution, or, as Mr. Justice
Curtis put it, by "the express prohibitions on Congress not to do
certain things."
Mr. Justice McLean said: "No powers can be exercised which are
prohibited by the Constitution, or which are contrary to its
spirit."
Mr. Justice Campbell:
"I look in vain, among the discussions of the time, for the
assertion of a supreme sovereignty for Congress over the territory
then belonging to the United States, or that they might thereafter
acquire. I seek in vain for an annunciation that a consolidated
power had been inaugurated,
Page 182 U. S. 361
whose subject comprehended an empire, and which had no
restriction but the discretion of Congress."
Chief Justice Taney:
"The powers over person and property of which we speak are not
only not granted to Congress, but are in express terms denied, and
they are forbidden to exercise them. And this prohibition is not
confined to the states, but the words are general, and extend to
the whole territory over which the Constitution gives it power to
legislate, including those portions of it remaining under
territorial government, as well as that covered by states. It is a
total absence of power everywhere within the dominion of the United
States, and places the citizens of a territory, so far as these
rights are concerned, on the same footing with citizens of the
states, and guards them as firmly and plainly against any inroads
which the general government might attempt under the plea of
implied or incidental powers."
Many of the later cases were brought from territories over which
Congress had professed to "extend the Constitution," or from the
District after similar provision, but the decisions did not rest
upon the view that the restrictions on Congress were self-imposed,
and might be withdrawn at the pleasure of that body.
Capital Traction Co. v. Hof, 174 U. S.
1, is a fair illustration, for it was there ruled,
citing
Webster v.
Reid, 11 How. 437;
Callan v. Wilson,
127 U. S. 550;
Thompson v. Utah, 170 U. S. 343,
that
"it is beyond doubt at the present day that the provisions of
the Constitution of the United States securing the right of trial
by jury, whether in civil or in criminal cases, are applicable to
the District of Columbia."
No reference whatever was made to section 34 of the Act of
February 21, 1871, 16 Stat. 419, c. 62, which, in providing for the
election of a delegate for the District, closed with the words:
"The person having the greatest number of legal votes shall be
declared by the governor to be duly elected, and a certificate
thereof shall be given accordingly, and the Constitution and all
the laws of the United States which are not locally inapplicable
shall have the same force and effect within the said District of
Columbia as elsewhere within the United States. "
Page 182 U. S. 362
Nor did the Court, in
Bauman v. Ross, 167 U.
S. 548, attribute the application of the Fifth Amendment
to the act of Congress, although it was cited to another point.
The truth is that, as Judge Edmunds wrote,
"the instances in which Congress has declared, in statutes
organizing territories, that the Constitution and laws should be in
force there are no evidence that they were not already there, for
Congress and all legislative bodies have often made enactments that
in effect merely declared existing law. In such cases, they declare
a preexisting truth to ease the doubts of casuists."
Cong.Rec. 56th Cong. 1st Sess., p. 3507.
In
Callan v. Wilson, 127 U. S. 540,
which was a criminal prosecution in the District of Columbia, MR.
JUSTICE HARLAN, speaking for the Court, said:
"There is nothing in the history of the Constitution or of the
original amendments to justify the assertion that the people of
this District may be lawfully deprived of the benefit of any of the
constitutional guaranties of life, liberty, and property --
especially of the privilege of trial by jury in criminal
cases."
And further:
"We cannot think that the people of this District have in that
regard less rights than those accorded to the people of the
territories of the United States."
In
Thompson v. Utah, 170 U. S. 343, it
was held that a statute of the State of Utah providing for the
trial of criminal cases other than capital by a jury of eight was
invalid as applied on a trial for a crime committed before Utah was
admitted; that it was not
"competent for the State of Utah, upon its admission into the
Union, to do in respect of Thompson's crime what the United States
could not have done while Utah was a territory,"
and that an act of Congress providing for a trial by a jury of
eight persons in the Territory of Utah would have been in conflict
with the Constitution.
Article VI of the Constitution ordains:
"This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which
shall be made in pursuance thereof and all treaties made, or which
shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be
the supreme law of the land."
And, as Mr. Justice Curtis observed in
United States v.
Morris,
Page 182 U. S. 363
1 Curtis 50,
"nothing can be clearer than the intention to have the
Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United States in equal
force throughout every part of the territory of the United States,
alike in all places at all times."
But it is said that an opposite result will be reached if the
opinion of Chief Justice Marshall in
American
Insurance Company v. Canter, 1 Pet. 511, be
read
"in connection with Art. III, secs. 1 and 2 of the Constitution,
vesting 'the judicial power of the United States' in 'one Supreme
Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to
time ordain and establish. The judges both of the Supreme and
inferior courts shall hold their offices during good
behavior,'"
etc. And it is argued:
"As the only judicial power vested in Congress is to create
courts whose judges shall hold their offices during good behavior,
it necessarily follows that if Congress authorizes the creation of
courts and the appointment of judges for a limited time, it must
act independently of the Constitution, and upon territory which is
not part of the United States within the meaning of the
Constitution."
And further that, if the territories
"be a part of the United States, it is difficult to see how
Congress could create courts in such territories except under the
judicial clause of the Constitution."
By the ninth clause of section 8 of Article I, Congress is
vested with power "to constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme
Court," while by sec. 1 of Article III, the power is granted to it
to establish inferior courts in which the judicial power of the
government treated of in that article is vested.
That power was to be exerted over the controversies therein
named, and did not relate to the general administration of justice
in the territories, which was committed to courts established as
part of the territorial government.
What the Chief Justice said was:
"These courts, then, are not constitutional courts in which the
judicial power conferred by the Constitution on the general
government can be deposited. They are incapable of receiving it.
They are legislative courts, created in virtue of the general right
of sovereignty which exists in the government, or in virtue of
that
Page 182 U. S. 364
clause which enables Congress to make all needful rules and
regulations respecting the territory belonging to the United
States. The jurisdiction with which they are invested is not a part
of that judicial power which is defined in the third article of the
Constitution, but is conferred by Congress in the execution of
those general powers which that body possesses over the territories
of the United States."
The Chief Justice was dealing with the subject in view of the
nature of the judicial department of the government and the
distinction between federal and state jurisdiction, and the
conclusion was, to use the language of MR. JUSTICE HARLAN in
McAllister v. United States, 141 U.
S. 174,
"that courts in the territories, created under the plenary
municipal authority that Congress possesses over the territories of
the United States, are not courts of the United States created
under the authority conferred by that article."
But it did not therefore follow that the territories were not
parts of the United States, and that the power of Congress in
general over them was unlimited; nor was there in any of the
discussions on this subject the least intimation to that
effect.
And this may justly be said of expressions in some other cases
supposed to give color to this doctrine of absolute dominion in
dealing with civil rights.
In
Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U. S. 15, Mr.
Justice Matthews said:
"The personal and civil rights of the inhabitants of the
territories are secured to them, as to other citizens, by the
principles of constitutional liberty which restrain all the
agencies of government, state and national. Their political rights
are franchises, which they hold as privileges in the legislative
discretion of the Congress of the United States."
In the
Mormon Church Case, 136 U.
S. 44, Mr. Justice Bradley observed:
"Doubtless Congress, in legislating for the territories, would
be subject to those fundamental limitations in favor of personal
rights which are formulated in the Constitution and its amendments,
but these limitations would exist rather by inference and the
general spirit of the Constitution, from which Congress derives all
its powers, than by any express and direct application of its
provisions. "
Page 182 U. S. 365
That able judge was referring to the fact that the Constitution
does not expressly declare that its prohibitions operate on the
power to govern the territories, but, because of the implication
that an express provision to that effect might be essential, three
members of the Court were constrained to dissent, regarding it, as
was said, "of vital consequence that absolute power should never be
conceded as belonging under our system of government to any one of
its departments."
What was ruled in
Murphy v. Ramsey is that in places
over which Congress has exclusive local jurisdiction, its power
over the political status is plenary.
Much discussion was had at the bar in respect of the citizenship
of the inhabitants of Porto Rico, but we are not required to
consider that subject at large in these cases. It will be time
enough to seek a ford when, if ever, we are brought to the
stream.
Yet although we are confined to the question of the validity of
certain duties imposed after the organization of Porto Rico as a
territory of the United States, a few observations and some
references to adjudged cases may well enough be added in view of
the line of argument pursued in the concurring opinion.
In
American Insurance Company v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 541 -- in which, by the way, the
Court did not accept the views of Mr. Justice Johnson in the
circuit court or of Mr. Webster in argument -- Chief Justice
Marshall said:
"The course which the argument has taken will require that, in
deciding this question, the Court should take into view the
relation in which Florida stands to the United States. The
Constitution confers absolutely on the government of the Union the
powers of making war and of making treaties; consequently that
government possesses the power of acquiring territory, either by
conquest or by treaty. The usage of the world is, if a nation be
not entirely subdued, to consider the holding of conquered
territory as a mere military occupation until its fate shall be
determined at the treaty of peace. If it be ceded by the treaty,
the acquisition is confirmed, and the ceded territory becomes a
part of the nation to which it is annexed, either on the terms
stipulated in the treaty of cession or on such as its new master
shall impose.
Page 182 U. S. 366
On such transfer of territory, it has never been held that the
relations of the inhabitants with each other undergo any change.
Their relations with their former sovereign are dissolved, and new
relations are created between them and the government which has
acquired their territory. The same act which transfers their
country transfers the allegiance of those who remain in it, and the
law, which may be denominated political, is necessarily changed,
although that which regulates the intercourse and general conduct
of individuals remains in force until altered by the newly created
power of the state. On the second of February, 1819, Spain ceded
Florida to the United States. The sixth article of the treaty of
cession contains the following provision:"
"The inhabitants of the territories which his Catholic Majesty
cedes to the United States by this treaty shall be incorporated in
the Union of the United States as soon as may be consistent with
the principles of the federal Constitution, and admitted to the
enjoyment of the privileges, rights, and immunities of the citizens
of the United States."
"This treaty is the law of the land, and admits the inhabitants
of Florida to the enjoyment of the privileges, rights, and
immunities of the citizens of the United States. It is unnecessary
to inquire whether this is not their condition independent of
stipulation. They do not, however, participate in political power;
they do not share in the government till Florida shall become a
state. In the meantime, Florida continues to be a territory of the
United States, governed by virtue of that clause in the
Constitution which empowers Congress 'to make all needful rules and
regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to
the United States.' Perhaps the power of governing a territory
belonging to the United States, which has not, by becoming a state,
acquired the means of self-government, may result necessarily from
the facts that it is not within the jurisdiction of any particular
state, and is within the power and jurisdiction of the United
States. The right to govern may be the inevitable consequence of
the right to acquire territory. Whichever may be the source whence
the power is derived, the possession of it is unquestioned. "
Page 182 U. S. 367
General Halleck (Int.Law, 1st ed., c. 33, § 14), after
quoting from Chief Justice Marshall, observed:
"This is now a well settled rule of the law of nations, and is
universally admitted. Its provisions are clear and simple and
easily understood, but it is not so easy to distinguish between
what are
political and what are
municipal laws,
and to determine
when and
how far the
constitution and laws of the conqueror change or replace those of
the conquered. And in case the government of the new state is a
constitutional government of limited and divided powers, questions
necessarily arise respecting the authority, which, in the absence
of legislative action, can be exercised in the conquered territory
after the cessation of war and the conclusion of a treaty of peace.
The determination of these questions depends upon the institutions
and laws of the new sovereign, which, though conformable to the
general rule of the law of nations, affect the construction and
application of that rule to particular cases."
In
United States v.
Percheman, 7 Pet. 87, the Chief Justice said:
"The people change their allegiance; their relation to their
ancient sovereign is dissolved; but their relations to each other,
and their rights of property, remain undisturbed. If this be the
modern rule even in cases of conquest, who can doubt its
application to the case of an amicable cession of territory? . . .
The cession of a territory by its name from one sovereign to
another, conveying the compound idea of surrendering at the same
time the lands and the people who inhabit them, would be
necessarily understood to pass the sovereignty only, and not to
interfere with private property."
Again, the court in
Pollard's Lessee v.
Hagan, 3 How. 225:
"Every nation acquiring territory, by treaty or otherwise, must
hold it subject to the constitution and laws of its own government,
and not according to those of the government ceding it."
And in
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v.
McGlinn, 114 U. S.
546:
"It is a general rule of public law, recognized and acted upon
by the United States, that whenever
Page 182 U. S. 368
political jurisdiction and legislative power over any territory
are transferred from one nation or sovereign to another, the
municipal laws of the country -- that is, laws which are intended
for the protection of private rights -- continue in force until
abrogated or changed by the new government or sovereign. By the
cession, public property passes from one government to the other,
but private property remains as before, and with it those municipal
laws which are designed to secure its peaceful use and enjoyment.
As a matter of course, all laws, ordinances, and regulations in
conflict with the political character, institutions, and
constitution of the new government are at once displaced. Thus,
upon a cession of political jurisdiction and legislative power --
and the latter is involved in the former -- to the United States,
the laws of the country in support of an established religion, or
abridging the freedom of the press, or authorizing cruel and
unusual punishments, and the like, would at once cease to be of
obligatory force without any declaration to that effect, and the
laws of the country on other subjects would necessarily be
superseded by existing laws of the new government upon the same
matters. But, with respect to other laws affecting the possession,
use, and transfer of property and designed to secure good order and
peace in the community and promote its health and prosperity, which
are strictly of a municipal character, the rule is general that a
change of government leaves them in force until, by direct action
of the new government, they are altered or repealed."
When a cession of territory to the United States is completed by
the ratification of a treaty, it was stated in
Cross
v. Harrison, 16 How. 198, that the land ceded
becomes a part of the United States, and that, as soon as it
becomes so, the territory is subject to the acts which were in
force to regulate foreign commerce with the United States, after
those had ceased which had been instituted for its regulation as a
belligerent right, and the latter ceased after the ratification of
the treaty. This statement was made by the justice delivering the
opinion, as the result of the discussion and argument which he had
already set forth. It was his summing up of what he supposed was
decided on that subject in the case in which he was writing.
Page 182 U. S. 369
The new master was, in the instance of Porto Rico, the United
States, a constitutional government with limited powers, and the
terms which the Constitution itself imposed, or which might be
imposed in accordance with the Constitution, were the terms on
which the new master took possession.
The power of the United States to acquire territory by conquest,
by treaty, or by discovery and occupation is not disputed, nor is
the proposition that in all international relations, interests, and
responsibilities, the United States is a separate, independent, and
sovereign nation; but it does not derive its powers from
international law, which, though a part of our municipal law, is
not a part of the organic law of the land. The source of national
power in this country is the Constitution of the United States, and
the government, as to our internal affairs, possesses no inherent
sovereign power not derived from that instrument and inconsistent
with its letter and spirit.
Doubtless the subjects of the former sovereign are brought by
the transfer under the protection of the acquiring power, and are
so far forth impressed with its nationality, but it does not follow
that they necessarily acquire the full status of citizens. The
ninth article of the treaty ceding Porto Rico to the United States
provided that Spanish subjects, natives of the Peninsula, residing
in the ceded territory might remain or remove, and in case they
remained, might preserve their allegiance to the Crown of Spain by
making a declaration of their decision to do so, "in default of
which declaration they shall be held to have renounced it and to
have adopted the nationality of the territory in which they
reside."
The same article also contained this paragraph:
"The civil rights and political status of the native inhabitants
of the territories hereby ceded to the United States shall be
determined by Congress."
This was nothing more than a declaration of the accepted
principles of international law applicable to the status of the
Spanish subjects and of the native inhabitants. It did not assume
that Congress could deprive the inhabitants of ceded territory of
rights to which they might be entitled. The grant by Spain could
not enlarge the powers of Congress, nor did it
Page 182 U. S. 370
purport to secure from the United States a guaranty of civil or
political privileges.
Indeed, a treaty which undertook to take away what the
Constitution secured, or to enlarge the federal jurisdiction, would
be simply void.
"It need hardly be said that a treaty cannot change the
Constitution, or be held valid if it be in violation of that
instrument. This results from the nature and fundamental principles
of our government."
The Cherokee
Tobacco, 11 Wall. 616,
78 U. S.
620.
So Mr. Justice Field, in
De Geofroy v. Riggs,
133 U. S.
267:
"The treaty power, as expressed in the Constitution, is in terms
unlimited except by those restraints which are found in that
instrument against the action of the government or of its
departments and those arising from the nature of the government
itself and of that of the states. It would not be contended that it
extends so far as to authorize what the Constitution forbids, or a
change in the character of the government or in that of one of the
states, or a cession of any portion of the territory of the latter,
without its consent."
And it certainly cannot be admitted that the power of Congress
to lay and collect taxes and duties can be curtailed by an
arrangement made with a foreign nation by the President and
two-thirds of a quorum of the Senate.
See 2 Tucker on the
Constitution §§ 354-356.
In the language of Judge Cooley:
"The Constitution itself never yields to treaty or enactment; it
neither changes with time nor does it in theory bend to the force
of circumstances. It may be amended according to its own
permission, but while it stands, it is"
"a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and
covers with the shield of its protection all classes of men at all
times and under all circumstances."
"Its principles cannot therefore be set aside in order to meet
the supposed necessities of great crises."
"No doctrine involving more pernicious consequences was ever
invented by the wit of man than that any of its provisions can be
suspended during any of the great exigencies of government."
I am not intimating in the least degree that any reason exists
for regarding this article to be unconstitutional, but even if
it
Page 182 U. S. 371
were, the fact of the cession is a fact accomplished, and this
Court is concerned only with the question of the power of the
government in laying duties in respect of commerce with the
territory so ceded.
In the concurring opinion of MR. JUSTICE WHITE, we find certain
important propositions conceded, some of which are denied or not
admitted in the other. These are to the effect that
"when an act of any department is challenged because not
warranted by the Constitution, the existence of the authority is to
be ascertained by determining whether the power has been conferred
by the Constitution, either in express terms or by lawful
implication;"
that, as every function of the government is derived from the
Constitution, "that instrument is everywhere and at all times
potential insofar as its provisions are applicable;" that
"wherever a power is given by the Constitution, and there is a
limitation imposed on the authority, such restriction operates upon
and confines every action on the subject within its constitutional
limits;"
that where conditions are brought about to which any particular
provision of the Constitution applies, its controlling influence
cannot be frustrated by the action of any or all of the departments
of the government; that the Constitution has conferred on Congress
the right to create such municipal organizations as it may deem
best for all the territories of the United States, but every
applicable express limitation of the Constitution is in force, and
even where there is no express command which applies, there may
nevertheless be restrictions of so fundamental a nature that they
cannot be transgressed though not expressed in so many words; that
every provision of the Constitution which is applicable to the
territories is controlling therein, and all the limitations of the
Constitution applicable to Congress in governing the territories
necessarily limit its power; that in the case of the territories,
when a provision of the Constitution is invoked, the question is
whether the provision relied on is applicable, and that the power
to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, as well as
the qualification of uniformity, restrains Congress from imposing
an impost duty on goods coming into the United States from a
territory
Page 182 U. S. 372
which has been incorporated into and forms a part of the United
States.
And it is said that the determination of whether a particular
provision is applicable involves an inquiry into the situation of
the territory and its relations to the United States, although it
does not follow, when the Constitution has withheld all power over
a given subject, that such an inquiry is necessary.
The inquiry is stated to be: "Had Porto Rico, at the time of the
passage of the act in question, been incorporated into and become
an integral part of the United States?" And, the answer being given
that it had not, it is held that the rule of uniformity was not
applicable.
I submit that that is not the question in this case. The
question is whether, when Congress has created a civil government
for Porto Rico, has constituted its inhabitants a body politic, has
given it a governor and other officers, a legislative assembly, and
courts, with right of appeal to this Court, Congress can, in the
same act and in the exercise of the power conferred by the first
clause of section eight, impose duties on the commerce between
Porto Rico and the states and other territories in contravention of
the rule of uniformity qualifying the power. If this can be done,
it is because the power of Congress over commerce between the
states and any of the territories is not restricted by the
Constitution. This was the position taken by the Attorney General,
with a candor and ability that did him great credit.
But that position is rejected, and the contention seems to be
that, if an organized and settled province of another sovereignty
is acquired by the United States, Congress has the power to keep
it, like a disembodied shade, in an intermediate state of ambiguous
existence for an indefinite period, and, more than that, that after
it has been called from that limbo, commerce with it is absolutely
subject to the will of Congress, irrespective of constitutional
provisions.
The accuracy of this view is supposed to be sustained by the act
of 1856 in relation to the protection of citizens of the United
States removing guano from unoccupied islands, but I am unable to
see why the discharge by the United States of its undoubted
Page 182 U. S. 373
duty to protect its citizens on
terra nullius, whether
temporarily engaged in catching and curing fish, or working mines,
or taking away manure, furnishes support to the proposition that
the power of Congress over the territories of the United States is
unrestricted.
Great stress is thrown upon the word "incorporation," as if
possessed of some occult meaning, but I take it that the act under
consideration made Porto Rico, whatever its situation before, an
organized territory of the United States. Being such, and the act
undertaking to impose duties by virtue of clause 1 of section 8,
how is it that the rule which qualifies the power does not apply to
its exercise in respect of commerce with that territory? The power
can only be exercised as prescribed, and even if the rule of
uniformity could be treated as a mere regulation of the granted
power -- a suggestion to which I do not assent -- the validity of
these duties comes up directly, and it is idle to discuss the
distinction between a total want of power and a defective exercise
of it.
The concurring opinion recognizes the fact that Congress, in
dealing with the people of new territories or possessions, is bound
to respect the fundamental guaranties of life, liberty, and
property, but assumes that Congress is not bound, in those
territories or possessions, to follow the rules of taxation
prescribed by the Constitution. And yet the power to tax involves
the power to destroy, and the levy of duties touches all our people
in all places under the jurisdiction of the government.
The logical result is that Congress may prohibit commerce
altogether between the states and territories, and may prescribe
one rule of taxation in one territory, and a different rule in
another.
That theory assumes that the Constitution created a government
empowered to acquire countries throughout the world, to be governed
by different rules than those obtaining in the original states and
territories, and substitutes for the present system of republican
government a system of domination over distant provinces in the
exercise of unrestricted power.
In our judgment, so much of the Porto Rican act as
authorized
Page 182 U. S. 374
the imposition of these duties is invalid, and plaintiffs were
entitled to recover.
Some argument was made as to general consequences apprehended to
flow from this result, but the language of the Constitution is too
plain and unambiguous to permit its meaning to be thus influenced.
There is nothing
"in the literal construction so obviously absurd, or
mischievous, or repugnant to the general spirit of the instrument
as to justify those who expound the Constitution"
in giving it a construction not warranted by its words.
Briefs have been presented at this bar purporting to be on
behalf of certain industries and eloquently setting forth the
desirability that our government should possess the power to impose
a tariff on the products of newly acquired territories so as to
diminish or remove competition. That however, furnishes no basis
for judicial judgment, and if the producers of staples in the
existing states of this Union believe the Constitution should be
amended so as to reach that result, the instrument itself provides
how such amendment can be accomplished. The people of all the
states are entitled to a voice in the settlement of that
subject.
Again, it is objected on behalf of the government that the
possession of absolute power is essential to the acquisition of
vast and distant territories, and that we should regard the
situation as it is today, rather than as it was a century ago.
"We must look at the situation as comprehending a possibility --
I do not say a probability, but a possibility -- that the question
might be as to the powers of this government in the acquisition of
Egypt and the Soudan, or a section of Central Africa, or a spot in
the Antarctic Circle, or a section of the Chinese Empire."
But it must be remembered that, as Marshall and Story declared,
the Constitution was framed for ages to come, and that the
sagacious men who framed it were well aware that a mighty future
waited on their work. The rising sun to which Franklin referred at
the close of the convention, they well knew, was that star of
empire whose course Berkeley had sung sixty years before.
They may not, indeed, have deliberately considered a
triumphal
Page 182 U. S. 375
progress of the nation, as such, around the earth, but as
Marshall wrote:
"It is not enough to say that this particular case was not in
the mind of the convention when the article was framed, nor of the
American people when it was adopted. It is necessary to go further
and to say that, had this particular case been suggested, the
language would have been so varied as to exclude it, or it would
have been made a special exception."
This cannot be said, and, on the contrary, in order to the
successful extension of our institutions, the reasonable
presumption is that the limitations on the exertion of arbitrary
power would have been made more rigorous.
After all, these arguments are merely political, and "political
reasons have not the requisite certainty to afford rules of
judicial interpretation."
Congress has power to make all laws which shall be necessary and
proper for carrying into execution all the powers vested by the
Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any
department or officer thereof. If the end be legitimate and within
the scope of the Constitution, then, to accomplish it, Congress may
use
"all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to
that end, which are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and
spirit of the Constitution."
The grave duty of determining whether an act of Congress does or
does not comply with these requirements is only to be discharged by
apply in the well settled rules which govern the interpretation of
fundamental law, unaffected by the theoretical opinions of
individuals.
Tested by those rules our conviction is that the imposition of
these duties cannot be sustained.
*
"SEC. 2. That on and after the passage of this act, the same
tariffs, customs, and duties shall be levied, collected, and paid
upon all articles imported into Porto Rico from ports other than
those of the United States which are required by law to be
collected upon articles imported into the United States from
foreign countries:
Provided, That on all coffee in the
bean or ground imported into Porto Rico there shall be levied and
collected a duty of five cents per pound, any law or part of law to
the contrary notwithstanding:
And provided further, That
all Spanish scientific, literary, and artistic works, not
subversive of public order in Porto Rico, shall be admitted free of
duty into Porto Rico for a period of ten years, reckoning from the
eleventh day of April, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, as
provided in said treaty of peace between the United States and
Spain:
And provided further, That all books and pamphlets
printed in the English language shall be admitted into Porto Rico
free of duty when imported from the United States."
"SEC. 3. That on and after the passage of this act, all
merchandise coming into the United States from Porto Rico and
coming into Porto Rico from the United States shall be entered at
the several ports of entry upon payment of fifteen percentum of the
duties which are required to be levied, collected, and paid upon
like articles of merchandise imported from foreign countries, and
in addition thereto, upon articles of merchandise of Porto Rican
manufacture coming into the United States and withdrawn for
consumption or sale, upon payment of a tax equal to the internal
revenue tax imposed in the United States upon the like articles of
merchandise of domestic manufacture; such tax to be paid by
internal revenue stamp or stamps to be purchased and provided by
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and to be procured from the
collector of internal revenue at or most convenient to the port of
entry of said merchandise in the United States, and to be affixed
under such regulations as the Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, shall
prescribe, and on all articles of merchandise of United States
manufacture coming into Porto Rico, in addition to the duty above
provided, upon payment of a tax equal in rate and amount to the
internal revenue tax imposed in Porto Rico upon the like articles
of Porto Rican manufacture:
Provided, That on and after
the date when this act shall take effect, all merchandise and
articles, except coffee, not dutiable under the tariff laws of the
United States, and all merchandise and articles entered in Porto
Rico free of duty under orders heretofore made by the Secretary of
War, shall be admitted into the several ports thereof, when
imported from the United States, free of duty, all laws or parts of
laws to the contrary notwithstanding, and whenever the Legislative
Assembly of Porto Rico shall have enacted and put into operation a
system of local taxation to meet the necessities of the government
of Porto Rico, by this act established, and shall by resolution
duly passed so notify the President, he shall make proclamation
thereof, and thereupon all tariff duties on merchandise and
articles going into Porto Rico from the United States or coming
into the United States from Porto Rico shall cease, and from and
after such date all such merchandise and articles shall be entered
at the several ports of entry free of duty, and in no event shall
any duties be collected after the first day of March, nineteen
hundred and two, on merchandise and articles going into Porto Rico
from the United States or coming into the United States from Porto
Rico."
"SEC. 4. That the duties and taxes collected in Porto Rico in
pursuance of this act, less the cost of collecting the same, and
the gross amount of all collections of duties and taxes in the
United States upon articles of merchandise coming from Porto Rico,
shall not be covered into the general fund of the Treasury, but
shall be held as a separate fund, and shall be placed at the
disposal of the President to be used for the government and benefit
of Porto Rico until the government of Porto Rico herein provided
for shall have been organized, when all moneys theretofore
collected under the provisions hereof, then unexpended, shall be
transferred to the local treasury of Porto Rico, and the Secretary
of the Treasury shall designate the several ports and sub-ports of
entry into Porto Rico, and shall make such rules and regulations
and appoint such agents as may be necessary to collect the duties
and taxes authorized to be levied, collected, and paid in Porto
Rico by the provisions of this act, and he shall fix the
compensation and provide for the payment thereof of all such
officers, agents, and assistants as he may find it necessary to
employ to carry out the provisions hereof:
Provided,
however, That as soon as a civil government for Porto Rico
shall have been organized in accordance with the provisions of this
act, and notice thereof shall have been given to the President, he
shall make proclamation thereof, and thereafter all collections of
duties and taxes in Porto Rico under the provisions of this act
shall be paid into the treasury of Porto Rico, to be expended as
required by law for the government and benefit thereof, instead of
being paid into the Treasury of the United States."
"SEC. 5. That on and after the day when this act shall go into
effect all goods, wares, and merchandise previously imported from
Porto Rico, for which no entry has been made, and all goods, wares,
and merchandise previously entered without payment of duty and
under bond for warehousing, transportation, or any other purpose,
for which no permit of delivery to the importer or his agent has
been issued, shall be subjected to the duties imposed by this act,
and to no other duty, upon the entry or the withdrawal thereof:
Provided, That when duties are based upon the weight of
merchandise deposited in any public or private bonded warehouse
said duties shall be levied and collected upon the weight of such
merchandise at the time of its entry."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 38. That no export duties shall be levied or collected on
exports from Porto Rico, but taxes and assessments on property, and
license fees for franchises, privileges, and concessions may be
imposed for the purposes of the insular and municipal governments,
respectively, as may be provided and defined by act of the
legislative assembly, and where necessary to anticipate taxes and
revenues, bonds and other obligations may be issued by Porto Rico
or any municipal government therein as may be provided by law to
provide for expenditures authorized by law, and to protect the
public credit, and to reimburse the United States for any moneys
which have been or may be expended out of the emergency fund of the
War Department for the relief of the industrial conditions of Porto
Rico caused by the hurricane of August eighth, eighteen hundred and
ninety-nine:
Provided, however, That no public
indebtedness of Porto Rico or of any municipality thereof shall be
authorized or allowed in excess of seven percentum of the aggregate
tax valuation of its property."
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting:
I concur in the dissenting opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE. The
grounds upon which he and MR. JUSTICE BREWER and MR. JUSTICE
PECKHAM regard the Foraker Act as unconstitutional in the
particulars involved in this action meet my entire approval.
Page 182 U. S. 376
Those grounds need not be restated, nor is it necessary to
reexamine the authorities cited by THE CHIEF JUSTICE. I agree in
holding that Porto Rico -- at least after the ratification of the
treaty with Spain -- became a part of the United States within the
meaning of the section of the Constitution enumerating the powers
of Congress and providing that "
all duties, imposts, and
excises shall be uniform
throughout the United
States."
In view, however, of the importance of the questions in this
case, and of the consequences that will follow any conclusion
reached by the court, I deem it appropriate -- without rediscussing
the principal questions presented -- to add some observations
suggested by certain passages in opinions just delivered in support
of the judgment.
In one of those opinions, it is said that "the Constitution was
created by the people of the
United States, as a union of
states, to be governed solely by representatives of the
states;" also that
"we find the Constitution speaking
only to states,
except in the territorial clause, which is absolute in its terms,
and suggestive of no limitations upon the power of Congress in
dealing with them."
I am not sure that I correctly interpret these words. But if it
is meant, as I assume it is meant, that with the exception named,
the Constitution was ordained by the states, and is addressed to
and operates only on the states, I cannot accept that view.
In
Martin v.
Hunter, 1 Wheat. 304,
14 U. S.
324-326,
14 U. S. 331,
this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Story, said that
"the Constitution of the United States was ordained and
established not by the states in their sovereign capacities, but
emphatically, as the preamble of the Constitution declares, by the
People of the United States."
In
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S.
403-406, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for this
Court, said:
"The government proceeds directly from the people; is 'ordained
and established' in the name of the people, and is declared to be
ordained"
"in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice,
insure domestic tranquillity, and secure the blessings of liberty
to themselves and to their posterity."
"The assent of the states, in their sovereign capacity, is
implied in calling a convention,
Page 182 U. S. 377
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 Constitution, when thus
adopted, was of complete obligation, and bound the state
sovereignties. . . . The government of the union, then (whatever
may be the influence of this fact on the case) is emphatically and
truly a government of the people. In form and in substance, it
emanates from them. Its powers are granted by them, and are to be
exercised directly on them and for their benefit. This government
is acknowledged by all to be one of enumerated powers. . . . It is
the government of all; its powers are delegated by all; it
represents all, and acts for all."
Although the states are constituent parts of the United States,
the government rests upon the authority of the people of the United
States, and not on that of the states. Chief Justice Marshall,
delivering the unanimous judgment of this Court in
Cohen v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 413,
said:
"That the United States form, for many and for most important
purposes, a single nation has not yet been denied. In war, we are
one people. In making peace, we are one people. . . . In many other
respects, the American people are one, and the government which is
alone capable of controlling and managing their interests . . . is
the government of the Union. It is their government, and in that
character they have no other. America has chosen to be, in many
respects and to many purposes, a nation, and for all these purposes
her government is complete; to all these objects it is competent.
The people have declared that, in the exercise of all powers given
for those objects, it is supreme. It can, then, in effecting these
objects, legitimately control all individuals or governments within
the American territory."
In reference to the doctrine that the Constitution was
established by and for the states as distinct political
organizations, Mr. Webster said:
"The Constitution itself in its very front refutes that. It
declares that it is ordained and established by
Page 182 U. S. 378
the the United States. So far from saying that it is established
by the governments of the several states, it does not even say that
it is established by the people of the several states. But it
pronounces that it was established by the people of the United
States in the aggregate. Doubtless the people of the several
states, taken collectively, constitute the people of the United
States. But it is in this their collective capacity, it is as all
the people of the United States, that they established the
Constitution."
In view of the adjudications of this Court, I cannot assent to
the proposition, whether it be announced in express words or by
implication, that the national government is a government of or by
the states in union, and that the prohibitions and limitations of
the Constitution are addressed only to the states. That is but
another form of saying that, like the government created by the
Articles of Confederation, the present government is a mere league
of states, held together by compact between themselves, whereas, as
this Court has often declared, it is a government created by the
the United States, with enumerated powers, and supreme over states
and individuals with respect to certain objects throughout the
entire territory over which its jurisdiction extends. If the
national government is in any sense a compact, it is a compact
between the the United States among themselves as constituting in
the aggregate the political community by whom the national
government was established. The Constitution speaks not simply to
the states in their organized capacities, but to all peoples,
whether of states or territories, who are subject to the authority
of the United States.
Martin v.
Hunter, 1 Wheat. 327.
In the opinion to which I am referring, it is also said that
the
"practical interpretation put by Congress upon the Constitution
has been long continued and uniform to the effect that the
Constitution is applicable to territories acquired by purchase or
conquest only when and so far as Congress shall so direct;"
that, while all power of government may be abused, the same may
be said of the power of the government "under the Constitution as
well as outside of it;" that
"if it once be conceded that we are at liberty to acquire
foreign territory, a presumption arises that
Page 182 U. S. 379
our power with respect to such territories is the same power
which other nations have been accustomed to exercise with respect
to territories acquired by them;"
that
"the liberality of Congress in legislating the Constitution into
all our contiguous territories has undoubtedly fostered the
impression that it went there by its own force, but there is
nothing in the Constitution itself, and little in the
interpretation put upon it, to confirm that impression;"
that, as the states could only delegate to Congress such powers
as they themselves possessed, and as they had no power to acquire
new territory, and therefore none to delegate in that connection,
the logical inference is that "if Congress had power to acquire new
territory, which is conceded, that power was not hampered by the
constitutional provisions;" that if
"we assume that the territorial clause of the Constitution was
not intended to be restricted to such territory as the United
States then possessed, there is nothing in the Constitution to
indicate that the power of Congress in dealing with them was
intended to be restricted by any of the other provisions;"
and that
"the executive and legislative departments of the government
have for more than a century interpreted this silence as precluding
the idea that the Constitution attached to these territories as
soon as acquired."
These are words of weighty import. They involve consequences of
the most momentous character. I take leave to say that if the
principles thus announced should ever receive the sanction of a
majority of this Court, a radical and mischievous change in our
system of government will be the result. We will in that event pass
from the era of constitutional liberty guarded and protected by a
written constitution into an era of legislative absolutism.
Although from the foundation of the government this Court has
held steadily to the view that the government of the United States
was one of enumerated powers, and that no one of its branches, nor
all of its branches combined, could constitutionally exercise
powers not granted, or which were not necessarily implied from
those expressly granted,
Martin v.
Hunter, 1 Wheat. 326,
14 U. S. 331,
we are now informed that Congress possesses powers
outside of
the Constitution, and may deal with new territory,
Page 182 U. S. 380
acquired by treaty or conquest, in the same manner
as other
nations have been accustomed to act with respect to territories
acquired by them. In my opinion, Congress has no existence and
can exercise no authority outside of the Constitution. Still less
is it true that Congress can deal with new territories just as
other nations have done or may do with their new territories. This
nation is under the control of a written constitution, the supreme
law of the land and the only source of the powers which our
government, or any branch or officer of it, may exert at any time
or at any place. Monarchical and despotic governments, unrestrained
by written constitutions, may do with newly acquired territories
what this government may not do consistently with our fundamental
law. To say otherwise is to concede that Congress may, by action
taken outside of the Constitution, engraft upon our republican
institutions a colonial system such as exists under monarchical
governments. Surely such a result was never contemplated by the
fathers of the Constitution. If that instrument had contained a
word suggesting the possibility of a result of that character, it
would never have been adopted by the people of the United States.
The idea that this country may acquire territories anywhere upon
the earth, by conquest or treaty, and hold them as mere colonies or
provinces -- the people inhabiting them to enjoy only such rights
as Congress chooses to accord to them -- is wholly inconsistent
with the spirit and genius, as well as with the words, of the
Constitution.
The idea prevails with some -- indeed, it found expression in
arguments at the bar -- that we have in this country substantially
or practically two national governments -- one to be maintained
under the Constitution, with all its restrictions, the other to be
maintained by Congress outside and independently of that
instrument, by exercising such powers as other nations of the earth
are accustomed to exercise. It is one thing to give such a
latitudinarian construction to the Constitution as will bring the
exercise of power by Congress, upon a particular occasion or upon a
particular subject, within its provisions. It is quite a different
thing to say that Congress may, if it so elects, proceed outside of
the Constitution. The glory of our American system
Page 182 U. S. 381
of government is that it was created by a written constitution
which protects the people against the exercise of arbitrary,
unlimited power, and the limits of which instrument may not be
passed by the government it created, or by any branch of it, or
even by the people who ordained it, except by amendment or change
of its provisions. "To what purpose," Chief Justice Marshall said
in
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137,
5 U. S. 176,
"are powers limited, and to what purpose is that limitation
committed to writing, if these limits may at any time be passed by
those intended to be restrained? The distinction between a
government with limited and unlimited powers is abolished if those
limits do not confine the persons on whom they are imposed, and if
acts prohibited and acts allowed are of equal obligation."
The wise men who framed the Constitution and the patriotic
people who adopted it were unwilling to depend for their safety
upon what, in the opinion referred to, is described as
"certain principles of natural justice inherent in Anglo-Saxon
character which need no expression in constitutions or statutes to
give them effect or to secure dependencies against legislation
manifestly hostile to their real interests."
They proceeded upon the theory -- the wisdom of which experience
has vindicated -- that the only safe guaranty against governmental
oppression was to withhold or restrict the power to oppress. They
well remembered that Anglo-Saxons across the ocean had attempted,
in defiance of law and justice, to trample upon the rights of
Anglo-Saxons on this continent, and had sought, by military force,
to establish a government that could at will destroy the privileges
that inhere in liberty. They believed that the establishment here
of a government that could administer public affairs according to
its will, unrestrained by any fundamental law and without regard to
the inherent rights of freemen, would be ruinous to the liberties
of the people by exposing them to the oppressions of arbitrary
power. Hence the Constitution enumerates the powers which Congress
and the other departments may exercise -- leaving unimpaired, to
the states or the People, the powers not delegated to the national
government nor prohibited to the states. That instrument so
expressly declares in
Page 182 U. S. 382
the Tenth Article of Amendment. It will be an evil day for
American liberty if the theory of a government outside of the
supreme law of the land finds lodgment in our constitutional
jurisprudence. No higher duty rests upon this Court than to exert
its full authority to prevent all violation of the principles of
the Constitution.
Again, it is said that Congress has assumed in its past history
that the Constitution goes into territories acquired by purchase or
conquest
only when and as it shall so direct, and we are
informed of the liberality of Congress in
legislating the
Constitution into all our contiguous territories. This is a view of
the Constitution that may well cause surprise, if not alarm.
Congress, as I have observed, has no existence except by virtue of
the Constitution. It is the creature of the Constitution. It has no
powers which that instrument has not granted, expressly or by
necessary implication. I confess that I cannot grasp the thought
that Congress, which lives and moves and has its being in the
Constitution, and is consequently the mere creature of that
instrument, can at its pleasure legislate or exclude its creator
from territories which were acquired only by authority of the
Constitution.
By the express words of the Constitution, every Senator and
Representative is bound, by oath or affirmation, to regard it as
the supreme law of the land. When the constitutional convention was
in session, there was much discussion as to the phraseology of the
clause defining the supremacy of the Constitution, laws, and
treaties of the United States. At one stage of the proceedings, the
convention adopted the following clause:
"This Constitution, and the laws of the United States made in
pursuance thereof, and all the treaties made under the authority of
the United States, shall be the supreme law of the several states
and of their citizens and inhabitants, and the judges of the
several states shall be bound thereby in their decisions, anything
in the constitutions or laws of the several states to the contrary
notwithstanding."
This clause was amended, on motion of Mr. Madison, by inserting
after the words "all treaties made" the words "or which shall be
made." If the clause, so amended had been inserted in the
Constitution as finally adopted, perhaps
Page 182 U. S. 383
there would have been some justification for saying that the
Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United States constituted
the supreme law only in the states, and that outside of the states,
the will of Congress was supreme. But the framers of the
Constitution saw the danger of such a provision, and put into that
instrument in place of the above clause the following:
"This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which
shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or which
shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be
the supreme law of the land, and the judges in every state
shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any
state to the contrary notwithstanding."
Meigs' Growth of the Constitution, 284, 287. That the convention
struck out the words "the supreme law of the several states" and
inserted "the supreme law of the land" is a fact of no little
significance. The "land" referred to manifestly embraced all the
peoples and all the territory, whether within or without the
states, over which the United States could exercise jurisdiction or
authority.
Further, it is admitted that
some of the provisions of
the Constitution do apply to Porto Rico, and may be invoked as
limiting or restricting the authority of Congress, or for the
protection of the people of that island. And it is said that there
is a clear distinction between such prohibitions
"as go to the very root of the power of Congress to act at all,
irrespective of time or place, and such as are operative only
'throughout the United States' or among the several states."
In the enforcement of this suggestion, it is said in one of the
opinions just delivered:
"Thus, when the Constitution declares that 'no bill of attainder
or
ex post facto law shall be passed,' and that 'no title
of nobility shall be granted by the United States,' it goes to the
competency of Congress to pass a bill of
that
description."
I cannot accept this reasoning as consistent with the
Constitution or with sound rules of interpretation. The express
prohibition upon the passage by Congress of bills of attainder, or
of
ex post facto laws, or the granting of titles of
nobility goes no more directly to the root of the power of Congress
than does the express prohibition against the imposition by
Congress of any
Page 182 U. S. 384
duty, impost, or excise that is not uniform throughout the
United States. The opposite theory, I take leave to say, is quite
as extraordinary as that which assumes that Congress may exercise
powers outside of the Constitution and may, in its discretion,
legislate that instrument into or out of a domestic territory of
the United States.
In the opinion to which I have referred, it is suggested that
conditions may arise when the annexation of distant possessions may
be desirable. "If," says that opinion,
"those possessions are inhabited by alien races, differing from
us in religion, customs, laws, methods of taxation, and modes of
thought, the administration of government and justice, according to
Anglo-Saxon principles, may for a time be impossible, and the
question at once arises whether large
concessions ought
not to be made for a time, that ultimately our own theories may be
carried out, and the blessings of a free government under the
Constitution extended to them. We decline to hold that there is
anything in the Constitution to forbid such action."
In my judgment, the Constitution does not sustain any such
theory of our governmental system. Whether a particular race will
or will not assimilate with our people, and whether they can or
cannot with safety to our institutions be brought within the
operation of the Constitution, is a matter to be thought of when it
is proposed to acquire their territory by treaty. A mistake in the
acquisition of territory, although such acquisition seemed at the
time to be necessary, cannot be made the ground for violating the
Constitution or refusing to give full effect to its provisions. The
Constitution is not to be obeyed or disobeyed as the circumstances
of a particular crisis in our history may suggest the one or the
other course to be pursued. The People have decreed that it shall
be the supreme law of the land at all times. When the acquisition
of territory becomes complete by cession, the Constitution
necessarily becomes the supreme law of such new territory, and no
power exists in any department of the government to make
"concessions" that are inconsistent with its provisions. The
authority to make such concessions implies the existence in
Congress of power to declare that constitutional provisions may be
ignored under special or
Page 182 U. S. 385
embarrassing circumstances. No such dispensing power exists in
any branch of our government. The Constitution is supreme over
every foot of territory, wherever situated, under the jurisdiction
of the United States, and its full operation cannot be stayed by
any branch of the government in order to meet what some may suppose
to be extraordinary emergencies. If the Constitution is in force in
any territory, it is in force there for every purpose embraced by
the objects for which the government was ordained. Its authority
cannot be displaced by concessions, even if it be true, as asserted
in argument in some of these cases, that if the tariff act took
effect in the Philippines of its own force, the inhabitants of
Mandanao, who live on imported rice, would starve because the
import duty is manyfold more than the ordinary cost of the grain to
them. The meaning of the Constitution cannot depend upon accidental
circumstances arising out of the products of other countries or of
this country. We cannot violate the Constitution in order to serve
particular interests in our own or in foreign lands. Even this
Court, with its tremendous power, must heed the mandate of the
Constitution. No one in official station, to whatever department of
the government he belongs, can disobey its commands without
violating the obligation of the oath he has taken. By whomsoever
and wherever power is exercised in the name and under the authority
of the United States, or of any branch of its government, the
validity or invalidity of that which is done must be determined by
the Constitution.
In
De Lima v. Bidwell, just decided, we have held that,
upon the ratification of the treaty with Spain, Porto Rico ceased
to be a foreign country and became a domestic territory of the
United States. We have said in that case that from 1803 to the
present time, there was not a shred of authority, except a
dictum in one case, "for holding that a district ceded to
and in possession of the United States remains for any purpose a
foreign territory," that territory so acquired cannot be "domestic
for one purpose and foreign for another," and that any judgment to
the contrary would be "pure judicial legislation," for which there
was no warrant in the Constitution or in the powers conferred upon
this Court. Although, as we have just decided,
Page 182 U. S. 386
Porto Rico ceased, after the ratification of the treaty with
Spain, to be a foreign country within the meaning of the tariff
act, and became a domestic country -- "a territory of the United
States" -- it is said that if Congress so wills, it may be
controlled and governed outside of the Constitution and by the
exertion of the powers which other nations have been accustomed to
exercise with respect to territories acquired by them; in other
words, we may solve the question of the power of Congress under the
Constitution by referring to the powers that may be exercised by
other nations. I cannot assent to this view. I reject altogether
the theory that Congress, in its discretion, can exclude the
Constitution from a domestic territory of the United States,
acquired, and which could only have been acquired, in virtue of the
Constitution. I cannot agree that it is a domestic territory of the
United States for the purpose of preventing the application of the
tariff act imposing duties upon imports from foreign countries, but
not a part of the United States for the purpose of enforcing the
constitutional requirement that
all duties, imposts, and
excises imposed by Congress "shall be uniform throughout the United
States." How Porto Rico can be a domestic territory of the United
States, as distinctly held in
De Lima v. Bidwell, and yet,
as is now held, not embraced by the words "throughout the United
States," is more than I can understand.
We heard much in argument about the "expanding future of our
country." It was said that the United States is to become what is
called a "world power," and that, if this government intends to
keep abreast of the times and be equal to the great destiny that
awaits the American people, it
must be allowed to exert
all the power that other nations are accustomed to exercise. My
answer is that the fathers never intended that the authority and
influence of this nation should be exerted otherwise than in
accordance with the Constitution. If our government needs more
power than is conferred upon it by the Constitution, that
instrument provides the mode in which it may be amended and
additional power thereby obtained. The People of the United States
who ordained the Constitution never supposed that a change could be
made in our system of government
Page 182 U. S. 387
by mere judicial interpretation. They never contemplated any
such juggling with the words of the Constitution as would authorize
the courts to hold that the words "throughout the United States,"
in the taxing clause of the Constitution, do not embrace a domestic
"territory of the United States" having a civil government
established by the authority of the United States. This is a
distinction which I am unable to make, and which I do not think
ought to be made when we are endeavoring to ascertain the meaning
of a great instrument of government.
There are other matters to which I desire to refer. In one of
the opinions just delivered, the case of
Neely v. Henkel,
180 U. S. 119,
is cited in support of the proposition that the provision of the
Foraker Act here involved was consistent with the Constitution. If
the contrary had not been asserted, I should have said that the
judgment in that case did not have the slightest bearing on the
question before us. The only inquiry there was whether Cuba was a
foreign country or territory within the meaning not of the tariff
act, but of the Act of June 6, 1900, 31 Stat. 656, c. 793. We held
that it was a foreign country. We could not have held otherwise,
because the United States, when recognizing the existence of war
between this country and Spain, disclaimed "any disposition or
intention to exercise sovereignty, jurisdiction, or control over
said island except for the pacification thereof," and asserted "its
determination, when that is accomplished, to leave the government
and control of the island to its people." We said:
"While by the Act of April 25, 1898, declaring war between this
country and Spain, the President was directed and empowered to use
our entire land and naval forces, as well as the militia of the
several states, to such extent as was necessary to carry such act
into effect, that authorization was not for the purpose of making
Cuba an integral part of the United States, but only for the
purpose of compelling the relinquishment by Spain of its authority
and government in that island and the withdrawal of its forces from
Cuba and Cuban waters. The legislative and executive branches of
the government, by the joint resolution of April 20, 1898,
expressly disclaimed any purpose to exercise sovereignty,
jurisdiction,
Page 182 U. S. 388
or control over Cuba 'except for the pacification thereof,' and
asserted the determination of the United States, that object being
accomplished, to leave the government and control of Cuba to its
own people. All that has been done in relation to Cuba has had that
end in view, and, so far as the court is informed by the public
history of the relations of this country with that island, nothing
has been done inconsistent with the declared object of the war with
Spain. Cuba is nonetheless foreign territory within the meaning of
the act of Congress because it is under a military governor
appointed by and representing the President in the work of
assisting the inhabitants of that island to establish a government
of their own, under which, as a free and independent people, they
may control their own affairs without interference by other
nations. The occupancy of the island by troops of the United States
was the necessary result of the war. That result could not have
been avoided by the United States consistently with the principles
of international law or with its obligations to the people of Cuba.
It is true that, as between Spain and the United States -- indeed,
as between the United States and all foreign nations -- Cuba, upon
the cessation of hostilities with Spain and after the Treaty of
Paris, was to be treated as if it were conquered territory. But, as
between the United States and Cuba, that island is territory held
in trust for the inhabitants of Cuba to whom it rightfully belongs,
and to whose exclusive control it will be surrendered when a stable
government shall have been established by their voluntary
action."
In answer to the suggestion that, under the modes of trial there
adopted, Neely, if taken to Cuba, would be denied the rights,
privileges, and immunities accorded by our Constitution to persons
charged with crime against the United States, we said that the
constitutional provisions referred to "have no relation to crimes
committed without the jurisdiction of the United States against the
laws of a foreign country." What use can be made of that case in
order to prove that the Constitution is not in force in a territory
of the United States acquired by treaty, except as Congress may
provide, is more than I can perceive.
There is still another view taken of this case. Conceding
Page 182 U. S. 389
that the national government is one of enumerated powers, to be
exerted only for the limited objects defined in the Constitution,
and that Congress has no power, except as given by that instrument
either expressly or by necessary implication, it is yet said that a
new territory, acquired by treaty or conquest, cannot become
incorporated into the United States without the consent of
Congress. What is meant by such incorporation we are not fully
informed, nor are we instructed as to the precise mode in which it
is to be accomplished. Of course, no territory can become a state
in virtue of a treaty or without the consent of the legislative
branch of the government, for only Congress is given power by the
Constitution to admit new states. But it is an entirely different
question whether a domestic "territory of the United States,"
having an organized civil government established by Congress, is
not, for all purposes of government by the nation, under the
complete jurisdiction of the United States, and therefore a part
of, and incorporated into, the United States, subject to all the
authority which the national government may exert over any
territory or people. If Porto Rico, although a territory of the
United States, may be treated as if it were not a part of the
United States, then New Mexico and Arizona may be treated as not
parts of the United States, and subject to such legislation as
Congress may choose to enact without any reference to the
restrictions imposed by the Constitution. The admission that no
power can be exercised under and by authority of the United States
except in accordance with the Constitution is of no practical value
whatever to constitutional liberty if, as soon as the admission is
made -- as quickly as the words expressing the thought can be
uttered -- the Constitution is so liberally interpreted as to
produce the same results as those which flow from the theory that
Congress may go outside of the Constitution in dealing with newly
acquired territories, and give them the benefit of that instrument
only when and as it shall direct.
Can it for a moment be doubted that the addition of Porto Rico
to the territory of the United States in virtue of the treaty with
Spain has been recognized by direct action upon the part of
Congress? Has it not legislated in recognition of that treaty,
Page 182 U. S. 390
and appropriated the money which it required this country to
pay?
If, by virtue of the ratification of the treaty with Spain and
the appropriation of the amount which that treaty required this
country to pay, Porto Rico could not become a part of the United
States so as to be embraced by the words "throughout the United
States," did it not become "incorporated" into the United States
when Congress passed the Foraker Act? 31 Stat. 77, c. 191. What did
that act do? It provided a civil government for Porto Rico, with
legislative, executive, and judicial departments; also, for the
appointment by the President, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate of the United States, of a "governor, secretary,
attorney general, treasurer, auditor, commissioner of the interior,
and a commissioner of education." §§ 17-25. It provided
for an executive council, the members of which should be appointed
by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
§ 18. The governor was required to report all transactions of
the government in Porto Rico to the President of the United States.
§ 17. Provision was made for the coins of the United States to
take the place of Porto Rican coins. § 11. All laws enacted by
the Porto Rican Legislative Assembly were required to be reported
to the Congress of the United States, which reserved the power and
authority to amend the same. § 31. But that was not all.
Except as otherwise provided, and except also the internal revenue
laws, the statutory laws of the United States, not locally
inapplicable, are to have the same force and effect in Porto Rico
as in the United States. § 14. A judicial department was
established in Porto Rico, with a judge to be appointed by the
President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. §
33. The court so established was to be known as the District Court
of the United States for Porto Rico, from which writs of error and
appeals were to be allowed to this Court. § 34. All judicial
process, it was provided, "shall run in the name of the United
States of America and the President of the United States." §
16. And yet it is said that Porto Rico was not "incorporated" by
the Foraker Act into the United States so as to be part of the
United States within the
Page 182 U. S. 391
meaning of the constitutional requirement that all duties,
imposts, and excises imposed by Congress shall be uniform
"throughout the United States."
It would seem according to the theories of some that, even if
Porto Rico is in and of the United States for many important
purposes, it is yet not a part of this country with the privilege
of protesting against a rule of taxation which Congress is
expressly forbidden by the Constitution from adopting as to any
part of the "United States." And this result comes from the failure
of Congress to use the word "incorporate" in the Foraker Act,
although, by the same act, all power exercised by the civil
government in Porto Rico is by authority of the United States, and
although this Court has been given jurisdiction by writ of error or
appeal to reexamine the final judgments of the district court of
the United States established by Congress for that territory.
Suppose Congress had passed this act:
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in
Congress assembled, That Porto Rico be and is hereby
incorporated into the United States as a territory,"
would such a statute have enlarged the scope or effect of the
Foraker Act? Would such a statute have accomplished more than the
Foraker Act has done? Indeed, would not such legislation have been
regarded as most extraordinary, as well as unnecessary?
I am constrained to say that this idea of "incorporation" has
some occult meaning which my mind does not apprehend. It is
enveloped in some mystery which I am unable to unravel.
In my opinion, Porto Rico became, at least after the
ratification of the treaty with Spain, a part of and subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States in respect of all its territory
and people, and that Congress could not thereafter impose any duty,
impost, or excise with respect to that island and its inhabitants
which departed from the rule of uniformity established by the
Constitution.