The enforcement of the provision in § 4 of Art. IV of the
Constitution that the United States shall guarantee to every State
a republican form of government is of a political character, and
exclusively committed to Congress, and as such is beyond the
jurisdiction of the courts.
The provisions of § 4 of Art. IV of the Constitution do not
authorize the judiciary to substitute its judgment as to a matter
purely political for the judgment of Congress on a subject
committed to Congress.
Under § 4 of Art. IV of the Constitution, it rests with
Congress to decide what government is the established one in a
State, and its decision is binding on every other department of the
Government, and cannot be questioned by the judiciary.
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1.
A statute otherwise constitutional cannot be attacked in the
courts on the ground that it was adopted in pursuance of provisions
in the constitution of the State which render the form of
government of the State unrepublican in form within the meaning of
§ 4 of Art. IV of the Constitution. The courts have no
jurisdiction of the question; it is for Congress to determine.
Where the claim that one taxed under a state statute is deprived
of property without due process of law is not based on any inherent
defect in the law, or infirmity of power of State to levy it, but
on the ground that the government of the State is not republican in
form, the question is not within the jurisdiction of the
courts.
The judicial power of the United States will not be extended so
as to interfere with the authority of Congress or of the Executive
so as to make the guarantee contained in § 4 of Art. IV of the
Constitution one of anarchy, instead of order.
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1.
Whether the adoption of provisions for the initiative and
referendum in the constitution of a State, such as those adopted in
Oregon in 1902, so alter the form of government of the State as to
make it no longer republican within the meaning of § 4 of Art.
IV of the Constitution,
Page 223 U. S. 119
is a purely political question over which this court has no
jurisdiction. Writ of error to review 53 Oregon 162, dismissed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality under § 4 of
Art. IV of the Federal Constitution of the initiative and
referendum provisions of the constitution of the State of Oregon,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 223 U. S. 133
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the court.
We premise by saying that, while the controversy which this
record presents is of much importance, it is not novel. It is
important, since it calls upon us to decide whether it is the duty
of the courts or the province of Congress to determine when a State
has ceased to be republican in form and to enforce the guarantee of
the Constitution on that subject. It is not novel, as that question
has long since been determined by this court conformably to the
practise of the Government from the beginning to be political in
character, and therefore not cognizable by the judicial power, but
solely committed by the Constitution to the judgment of
Congress.
The case is this: in 1902, Oregon amended its constitution (Art.
IV, § 1). This amendment, while retaining an existing clause
vesting the exclusive legislative power in a General Assembly
consisting of a senate and house of representatives, added to that
provision the following:
"But the people reserve to themselves power to propose laws and
amendments to the constitution and to enact or
Page 223 U. S. 134
reject the same at the polls, independent of the legislative
assembly, and also reserve power at their own option to approve or
reject at the polls any act of the legislative assembly."
Specific means for the exercise of the power thus reserved was
contained in further clauses authorizing both the amendment of the
constitution and the enactment of laws to be accomplished by the
method known as the initiative and that commonly referred to as the
referendum. As to the first, the initiative, it suffices to say
that a stated number of voters were given the right at any time to
secure a submission to popular vote for approval of any matter
which it was desired to have enacted into law, and providing that
the proposition thus submitted, when approved by popular vote,
should become the law of the State. The second, the referendum,
provided for a reference to a popular vote, for approval or
disapproval, of any law passed by the legislature, such reference
to take place either as the result of the action of the legislature
itself or of a petition filed for that purpose by a specified
number of voters. The full text of the amendment is in the margin.
[
Footnote 1]
Page 223 U. S. 135
In 1903 (Feby. 24, 1903, Gen.Laws 1903, p. 244) detailed
provisions for the carrying into effect of this amendment were
enacted by the legislature.
By resort to the initiative in 1906 a law taxing certain classes
of corporations was submitted, voted on and promulgated by the
Governor in 1906 (June 25, 1906, Gen.Laws 1907, p. 7) as having
been duly adopted. By this law, telephone and telegraph companies
were taxed, by what was qualified as an annual license, two
percentum upon their gross revenue derived from business done
within the State. Penalties were provided for nonpayment, and
methods were created for enforcing payment in case of
delinquency.
The Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Company, an Oregon
corporation engaged in business in that State, made a return of its
gross receipts as required by the
Page 223 U. S. 136
statute and was accordingly assessed two percent. upon the
amount of such return. The suit which is now before us was
commenced by the State to enforce payment of this assessment and
the statutory penalties for delinquency. The petition alleged the
passage of the taxing law by resort to the initiative, the return
made by the corporation, the assessment, the duty to pay, and the
failure to make such payment.
The answer of the corporation contained twenty-nine paragraphs.
Four of these challenged the validity of the tax because of defects
inhering in the nature or operation of the tax. The defenses stated
in these four paragraphs, however, may be put out of view, as the
defendant corporation, on its own motion, was allowed by the court
to strike these propositions from its answer. We may also put out
of view the defenses raised by the remaining paragraphs based upon
the operation and effect of the state constitution as they are
concluded by the judgment of the state court. Coming to consider
these paragraphs of the answer thus disembarrassed, it is true to
say that they all, insofar as they relied upon the Constitution of
the United States, rested exclusively upon an alleged infirmity of
the powers of government of the State begotten by the incorporation
into the state constitution of the amendment concerning the
initiative and the referendum.
The answer was demurred to as stating no defense. The demurrer
was sustained, and, the defendant electing not to plead further,
judgment went against it and that judgment was affirmed by the
Supreme Court of Oregon. (53 Oregon, 162.) The court sustained the
conclusion by it reached, not only for the reasons expressed in its
opinion, but by reference to the opinion in a prior case
(
Kadderly v. Portland, 44 Oregon, 118, 146), where a like
controversy had been determined.
The assignments of error filed on the allowance of the writ of
error are numerous. The entire matters covered
Page 223 U. S. 137
by each and all of them in the argument, however, are reduced to
six propositions, which really amount to but one, since they are
all based upon the single contention that the creation by a State
of the power to legislate by the initiative and referendum causes
the prior lawful state government to be bereft of its lawful
character as the result of the provisions of § 4 of Art. IV of
the Constitution, that
"The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union
a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them
against Invasion, and on Application of the Legislature, or of the
Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened), against
domestic Violence."
This being the basis of all the contentions, the case comes to
the single issue whether the enforcement of that provision, because
of its political character, is exclusively committed to Congress,
or is judicial in its character. Because of their absolute unity,
we consider all the propositions together, and therefore at once
copy them. We observe, however, that, in the argument the second,
fourth and fifth paragraphs, for the purposes of discussion, were
subordinately classified, and these subordinate classifications we
omit from our text, reproducing them, however, by a marginal
reference.
"
I
"
"The initiative and the tax measure in question are repugnant to
the provisions of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States which forbids a State to deny to
any person within it jurisdiction the equal protection of the
law."
II
"The initiative amendment and the tax in question, levied
pursuant to a measure, passed by authority of the initiative
amendment, violate the right to a republican
Page 223 U. S. 138
form of government which is guaranteed by section 4, article IV,
of the Federal Constitution. [
Footnote 2]"
"
III
"
"Taxation by the initiative method violates fundamental rights,
and is not in accordance with 'the law of the land.' (U.S.Const.,
Art. VI)."
"
IV
"
"The initiative is in contravention of a republican form of
government. Government by the people directly is the attribute of a
pure democracy, and is subversive of the principles upon which the
republic is founded. Direct legislation is, therefore, repugnant to
that form of government with which alone Congress could admit a
State to the Union and which the State is bound to maintain.
[
Footnote 3] "
Page 223 U. S. 139
"
V
"
"The Federal Constitution presupposes in each State the
maintenance of a republican form of government and the existence of
state legislatures, to-wit: representative assemblies having the
power to make the laws, and that, in each State, the powers of
government will be divided into three departments: a legislature,
an executive and a judiciary. One of these, the legislature, is
destroyed by the initiative. [
Footnote 4]"
"
VI
"
"The provision in the Oregon constitution for direct legislation
violates the provisions of the act of Congress admitting Oregon to
the Union."
On the surface, the impression might be produced that the first
and third propositions -- the one in words relating
Page 223 U. S. 140
to the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and
the other in terms asserting "taxation by the initiative method
violates fundamental rights, and is not in accordance with the law
of the land," are addressed to some inherent defect in the tax or
infirmity of power to levy it without regard to the guarantee of a
republican form of Government. But this is merely superficial, and
is at once dispelled by observing that every reason urged to
support the two propositions is solely based on § 4 of Art. IV
and the consequent inability of the State to impose any tax of any
kind which would not violate the Fourteenth Amendment or be
repugnant to the law of the land if, in such State, the initiative
or referendum method is permitted. Thus, dispelling any mere
confusion resulting from forms of expression and considering the
substance of things, it is apparent that the second proposition,
which rests upon the affirmative assertion that, by the adoption of
the initiative and referendum, the State "violates the right to a
republican form of government which is guaranteed by section 4 of
Article IV of the Federal Constitution," and the two subdivisions
made of that proposition, the first that "the guarantee in question
is to the people of the States and to each citizen, as well as to
the States as political entities," and the second asserting
"section 4 of Article IV therefore prohibits the majority in any
State from adopting an unrepublican constitution," are the basic
propositions upon which all the others rest. That is to say, all
the others and their subdivisions are but inducements tending to
show the correctness of the second and fundamental one. This
conclusion is certain, as they all but point out the various modes
by which the adoption of the initiative and referendum
incapacitated the State from performing the duties incumbent upon
it as a member of the Union or its obligations towards its
citizens, thus causing the State to cease to be a government
republican in form within the intendment of the
Page 223 U. S. 141
constitutional provision relied upon. In other words, the
propositions each and all proceed alone upon the theory that the
adoption of the initiative and referendum destroyed all government
republican in form in Oregon. This being so, the contention, if
held to be sound, would necessarily affect the validity not only of
the particular statute which is before us, but of every other
statute passed in Oregon since the adoption of the initiative and
referendum. And indeed the propositions go further than this,
since, in their essence, they assert that there is no governmental
function, legislative or judicial, in Oregon, because it cannot be
assumed, if the proposition be well founded, that there is at one
and the same time one and the same government which is republican
in form and not of that character.
Before immediately considering the text of § 4 of Art. IV,
in order to uncover and give emphasis to the anomalous and
destructive effects upon both the state and national governments
which the adoption of the proposition implies, as illustrated by
what we have just said, let us briefly fix the inconceivable
expansion of the judicial power and the ruinous destruction of
legislative authority in matters purely political which would
necessarily be occasioned by giving sanction to the doctrine which
underlies and would be necessarily involved in sustaining the
propositions contended for. First. That however perfect and
absolute may be the establishment and dominion, in fact, of a state
government, however complete may be its participation in and
enjoyment of all its powers and rights as a member of the national
Government, and however all the departments of that Government may
recognize such state government, nevertheless every citizen of such
State or person subject to taxation therein, or owing any duty to
the established government, may be heard, for the purpose of
defeating the payment of such taxes or avoiding the discharge of
such duty, to assail in a court of justice the rightful
existence
Page 223 U. S. 142
of the State. Second. As a result, it becomes the duty of the
courts of the United States, where such a claim is made, to examine
as a justiciable issue the contention as to the illegal existence
of a State, and, if such contention be thought well founded, to
disregard the existence in fact of the State, of its recognition by
all of the departments of the Federal Government, and practically
award a decree absolving from all obligation to contribute to the
support of or obey the laws of such established state government.
And as a consequence of the existence of such judicial authority, a
power in the judiciary must be implied, unless it be that anarchy
is to ensue, to build by judicial action upon the ruins of the
previously established government a new one, a right which, by its
very terms, also implies the power to control the legislative
department of the Government of the United States in the
recognition of such new government and the admission of
representatives therefrom, as well as to strip the executive
department of that government of its otherwise lawful and
discretionary authority.
Do the provisions of § 4, Art. IV bring about these
strange, far-reaching and injurious results? That is to say, do the
provisions of that Article obliterate the division between judicial
authority and legislative power upon which the Constitution rests?
In other words, do they authorize the judiciary to substitute its
judgment as to a matter purely political for the judgment of
Congress on a subject committed to it, and thus overthrow the
Constitution upon the ground that thereby the guarantee to the
States of a government republican in form may be secured, a
conception which, after all, rests upon the assumption that the
States are to be guaranteed a government republican in form by
destroying the very existence of a government republican in form in
the Nation.
We shall not stop to consider the text to point out how
absolutely barren it is of support for the contentions sought to be
based upon it, since the repugnancy of those contentions
Page 223 U. S. 143
to the letter and spirit of that text is so conclusively
established by prior decisions of this court as to cause the matter
to be absolutely foreclosed.
In view of the importance of the subject, the apparent
misapprehension on one side and seeming misconception on the other
suggested by the argument as to the full significance of the
previous doctrine, we do not content ourselves with a mere citation
of the cases, but state more at length than we otherwise would the
issues and the doctrine expounded in the leading and absolutely
controlling case --
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1.
The case came from a Circuit Court of the United States. It was
an action of damages for trespass. The case grew out of what is
commonly known as the Dorr Rebellion in Rhode Island, and the
conflict which was brought about by the effort of the adherents of
that alleged government -- sometimes described as "the government
established by a voluntary convention" -- to overthrow the
established charter government. The defendants justified on the
ground that the acts done by them charged as a trespass were done
under the authority of the charter government during the prevalence
of martial law, and for the purpose of aiding in the suppression of
an armed revolt by the supporters of the insurrectionary
government. The plaintiffs, on the contrary, asserted the validity
of the voluntary government, and denied the legality of the charter
government. In the course of the trial, the plaintiffs, to support
the contention of the illegality of the charter government and the
legality of the voluntary government "although that government
never was able to exercise any authority in the State nor to
command obedience to its laws or to its officers," offered certain
evidence tending to show that, nevertheless, it was "the lawful and
established government" upon the ground that its powers to govern
have been ratified by a large majority of the male people of the
State of the age of 21 years and upwards, and also by a large
Page 223 U. S. 144
majority of those who were entitled to vote for general officers
cast in favor of a constitution which was submitted as the result
of a voluntarily assembled convention of what was alleged to be the
people of the State of Rhode Island. The Circuit Court rejected
this evidence and instructed the jury that, as the charter
government was the established state government at the time the
trespass occurred, the defendants were justified in acting under
the authority of that government. This court, coming to review this
ruling, at the outset pointed out "the novelty and serious nature"
of the question which it was called upon to decide. Attention also
was at the inception directed to the far-reaching effect and
gravity of the consequences which would be produced by sustaining
the right of the plaintiff to assail and set aside the established
government by recovering damages from the defendants for acts done
by them under the authority of, and for the purpose of sustaining,
such established government. On this subject, it was said (p.
48 U. S. 38):
"For, if this court is authorized to enter upon this inquiry as
proposed by the plaintiff, and it should be decided that the
charter government had no legal existence during the period of time
above mentioned, if it had been annulled by the adoption of the
opposing government, then the laws passed by its legislature during
that time, were nullities; its taxes wrongfully collected; its
salaries and compensation to its officers illegally paid; its
public accounts improperly settled, and the judgments and sentences
of its courts in civil and criminal cases null and void, and the
officers who carried their decisions into operation answerable as
trespassers, if not, in some cases, as criminals."
Coming to review the question, attention was directed to the
fact that the courts of Rhode Island had recognized the complete
dominancy, in fact, of the charter government, and had refused to
investigate the legality of the
Page 223 U. S. 145
voluntary government for the purpose of decreeing the
established government to be illegal, on the ground (p.
48 U. S. 39)
"that the inquiry proposed to be made belonged to the political
power, and not to the judicial; that it rested with the political
power to decide whether the charter government had been displaced
or not, and, when that decision was made, the judicial department
would be bound to take notice of it as the paramount law of the
State, without the aid of oral evidence or the examination of
witnesses, etc."
It was further remarked:
"This doctrine is clearly and forcibly stated in the opinion of
the supreme court of the State in the trial of Thomas W. Dorr, who
was the governor elected under the opposing constitution, and
headed the armed force which endeavored to maintain its
authority."
Reviewing the grounds upon which these doctrines proceeded,
their cogency was pointed out and the disastrous effect of any
other view was emphasized, and, from a point of view of the state
law, the conclusive effect of the judgments of the courts of Rhode
Island was referred to. The court then came to consider the
correctness of the principle applied by the Rhode Island courts, in
the light of § 4 of Art. IV, of the Constitution of the United
States. The contention of the plaintiff in error concerning that
Article was, in substantial effect, thus pressed in argument: the
ultimate power of sovereignty is in the people, and they, in the
nature of things, if the government is a free one, must have a
right to change their constitution. Where, in the ordinary course,
no other means exists of doing so, that right of necessity embraces
the power to resort to revolution. As, however, no such right, it
was urged, could exist under the Constitution, because of the
provision of § 4 of Art. IV, protecting each State on
application of the legislature or of the executive, when the
legislature cannot be convened, against domestic violence, it
followed that the guarantee of a government republican in form
Page 223 U. S. 146
was the means provided by the Constitution to secure the people
in their right to change their government, and made the question
whether such change was rightfully accomplished a judicial question
determinable by the courts of the United States. To make the
physical power of the United States available, at the demand of an
existing state government, to suppress all resistance to its
authority, and yet to afford no method of testing the rightful
character of the state government, would be to render people of a
particular State hopeless in case of a wrongful government. It was
pointed out in the argument that the decision of the courts of
Rhode Island in favor of the charter government illustrated the
force of these contentions, since they proceeded solely on the
established character of that government, and not upon whether the
people had rightfully overthrown it by voluntarily drawing and
submitting for approval a new constitution. It is thus seen that
the propositions relied upon in this case were presented for
decision in the most complete and most direct way. The court, in
disposing of them, while virtually recognizing the cogency of the
argument insofar as it emphasized the restraint upon armed
resistance to an existing state government, arising from the
provision of § 4 of Art. IV, and the resultant necessity for
the existence somewhere in the Constitution of a tribunal upon
which the people of a State could rely to protect them from the
wrongful continuance against their will of a government not
republican in form, proceeded to inquire whether a tribunal
existed, and its character. In doing this, it pointed out that,
owing to the inherent political character of such a question, its
decision was not by the Constitution vested in the judicial
department of the Government, but was, on the contrary, exclusively
committed to the legislative department, by whose action on such
subject the judiciary were absolutely controlled. The court said
(p.
74 U. S. 42):
Page 223 U. S. 147
"Moreover, the constitution of the United States, as far as it
has provided for an emergency of this kind and authorized the
general government to interfere in the domestic concerns of a
State, has treated the subject as political in its nature, and
placed the power in the hands of that department."
"The fourth section of the fourth article of the constitution of
the United States provides that the United States shall guarantee
to every State in the Union a republican form of government, and
shall protect each of them against invasion, and on the application
of the legislature or of the executive (when the legislature cannot
be convened) against domestic violence."
"Under this article of the constitution, it rests with congress
to decide what government is the established one in a State. For,
as the United States guarantee to each State a republican
government, congress must necessarily decide what government is
established in the State before it can determine whether it is
republican or not. And when the senators and representatives of a
State are admitted into the councils of the Union, the authority of
the government under which they are appointed, as well as its
republican character, is recognized by the proper constitutional
authority. And its decision is binding on every other department of
the government, and could not be questioned in a judicial tribunal.
It is true that the contest in this case did not last long enough
to bring the matter to this issue, and as no senators or
representatives were elected under the authority of the government
of which Mr. Dorr was the head, Congress was not called upon to
decide the controversy. Yet the right to decide is placed there,
and not in the courts."
Pointing out that Congress, by the act of February 28, 1795 (1
Stat. 424, c. 36), had recognized the obligation resting upon it to
protect from domestic violence by conferring authority upon the
President of the United States,
Page 223 U. S. 148
on the application of the legislature of a State or of the
Governor, to call out the militia of any other State or States to
suppress such insurrection, it was suggested that, if the question
of what was the rightful government within the intendment of §
4 of Art. IV was a judicial one, the duty to afford protection from
invasion and to suppress domestic violence would be also judicial,
since those duties were inseparably related to the determination of
whether there was a rightful government. If this view were correct,
it was intimated, it would follow that the delegation of authority
made to the President by the act of 1795 would be void as a
usurpation of judicial authority, and hence it would be the duty of
the courts, if they differed with the judgment of the President as
to the manner of discharging this great responsibility, to
interfere and set at naught his action, and the pertinent statement
was made (p.
74 U. S. 43):
"If the judicial power extends so far, the guarantee contained
in the constitution of the United States is a guarantee of anarchy,
and not of order."
The fundamental doctrines thus so lucidly and cogently announced
by the court, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Taney in the case
which we have thus reviewed, have never been doubted or questioned
since, and have afforded the light guiding the orderly development
of our constitutional system from the day of the deliverance of
that decision up to the present time. We do not stop to cite other
cases which indirectly or incidentally refer to the subject, but
conclude by directing attention to the statement by the court,
speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, in
Taylor v.
Beckham, No. 1, 178 U. S. 548,
where, after disposing of a contention made concerning the
Fourteenth Amendment and coming to consider a proposition which was
necessary to be decided concerning the nature and effect of the
guarantee of § 4 of Art. IV, it was said (p.
178 U. S.
578):
"But it is said that the Fourteenth Amendment must be
Page 223 U. S. 149
read with section 4 of article IV of the Constitution, providing
that:"
"The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union
a republican form of government, and shall protect each of them
against invasion, and on application of the legislature, or of the
executive (when the legislature cannot be convened), against
domestic violence."
It is argued that, when the State of Kentucky entered the Union,
the people "surrendered their right of forcible revolution in state
affairs," and received in lieu thereof a distinct pledge to the
people of the State of the guarantee of a republican form of
government, and of protection against invasion, and against
domestic violence; that the distinguishing feature of that form of
government is the right of the people to choose their own officers
for governmental administration; that this was denied by the action
of the General Assembly in this instance; and, in effect, that this
court has jurisdiction to enforce that guarantee, albeit the
judiciary of Kentucky was unable to do so because of the division
of the powers of government. And yet the writ before us was granted
under § 70 of the Revised Statutes to revise the judgment of
the state court on the ground that a constitutional right was
decided against by that court.
"It was long ago settled that the enforcement of this guarantee
belonged to the political department.
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1. In that case, it was held that
the question which of the two opposing governments of Rhode Island,
namely, the charter government or the government established by a
voluntary convention, was the legitimate one, was a question for
the determination of the political department, and, when that
department had decided, the courts were bound to take notice of the
decision and follow it. . . ."
It is indeed a singular misconception of the nature and
character of our constitutional system of government to suggest
that the settled distinction which the doctrine just
Page 223 U. S. 150
stated points out between judicial authority over justiciable
controversies and legislative power as to purely political
questions tends to destroy the duty of the judiciary in proper
cases to enforce the Constitution. The suggestion but results from
failing to distinguish between things which are widely different,
that is, the legislative duty to determine the political questions
involved in deciding whether a state government republican in form
exists, and the judicial power and ever-present duty whenever it
becomes necessary in a controversy properly submitted to enforce
and uphold the applicable provisions of the Constitution as to each
and every exercise of governmental power.
How better can the broad lines which distinguish these two
subjects be pointed out than by considering the character of the
defense in this very case? The defendant company does not contend
here that it could not have been required to pay a license tax. It
does not assert that it was denied an opportunity to be heard as to
the amount for which it was taxed, or that there was anything
inhering in the tax or involved intrinsically in the law which
violated any of its constitutional rights. If such questions had
been raised, they would have been justiciable, and therefore would
have required the calling into operation of judicial power.
Instead, however, of doing any of these things, the attack on the
statute here made is of a wholly different character. Its
essentially political nature is at once made manifest by
understanding that the assault which the contention here advanced
makes it not on the tax as a tax, but on the State as a State. It
is addressed to the framework and political character of the
government by which the statute levying the tax was passed. It is
the government, the political entity, which (reducing the case to
its essence) is called to the bar of this court not for the purpose
of testing judicially some exercise of power assailed on the ground
that its exertion has injuriously
Page 223 U. S. 151
affected the rights of an individual because of repugnancy to
some constitutional limitation, but to demand of the State that it
establish its right to exist as a State, republican in form.
As the issues presented, in their very essence, are, and have
long since by this court been, definitely determined to be
political and governmental, and embraced within the scope of the
powers conferred upon Congress, and not therefore within the reach
of judicial power, it follows that the case presented is not within
our jurisdiction, and the writ of error or must therefore be, and
it is, dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 1 of Article IV of the constitution of the State of
Oregon shall be and hereby is amended to read as follows:
"SECTION 1. The legislative authority of the state shall be
vested in a legislative assembly, consisting of a senate and house
of representatives, but the people reserve to themselves power to
propose laws and amendments to the constitution and to enact or
reject the same at the polls, independent of the legislative
assembly, and also reserve power at their own option to approve or
reject at the polls any act of the legislative assembly. The first
power reserved by the people is the initiative, and not more than
eight percent of the legal voters shall be required to propose any
measure by such petition, and every such petition shall include the
full text of the measure so proposed. Initiative petitions shall be
filed with the secretary of state not less than four months before
the election at which they are to be voted upon. The second power
is the referendum, and it may be ordered (except as to laws
necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace,
health, or safety) either by the petition signed by five percent of
the legal voters, or by the legislative assembly, as other bills
are enacted. Referendum petitions shall be filed with the secretary
of state not more than ninety days after the final adjournment of
the session of the legislative assembly which passed the bill on
which the referendum is demanded. The veto power of the governor
shall not extend to measures referred to the people. All elections
on measures referred to the people of the state shall be had at the
biennial regular general elections, except when the legislative
assembly shall order a special election. Any measure referred to
the people shall take effect and become the law when it is approved
by a majority of the votes cast thereon, and not otherwise. The
style of all bills shall be: 'Be it enacted by the people of the
state of Oregon.' This section shall not be construed to deprive
any member of the legislative assembly of the right to introduce
any measure. The whole number of votes cast for justice of the
supreme court at the regular election last preceding the filing of
any petition for the initiative or for the referendum shall be the
basis on which the number of legal voters necessary to sign such
petition shall be counted. Petitions and orders for the initiative
and for the referendum shall be filed with the secretary of state,
and in submitting the same to the people he, and all other
officers, shall be guided by the general laws and the act
submitting this amendment, until legislation shall be especially
provided therefor."
(1 Lord's Oregon Laws, p. 89.)
[
Footnote 2]
1. The guaranty of article IV, section 4, of the Federal
Constitution is to the people of the States, and to each citizen,
as well as to the States as political entities.
2. Section 4 of article IV therefore prohibits the majority in
any State from adopting an unrepublican constitution.
[
Footnote 3]
1. Difference between a republic and democracy.
2. In ascertaining the meaning of the phrase "republican form of
government," the debates of the constitutional conventions and the
federalist papers are of great importance, if not conclusive.
3. The framers of the Constitution recognized the distinction
between the republican and democratic form of government, and
carefully avoided the latter.
4. The extent of territory of the States alone sufficed, in the
judgment of the framers of the Constitution, to condemn the
establishment of a democratic form of government.
5. The form of state government perpetuated by the Constitution
was the republican form, with the three departments of government,
in force in all the States at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution.
6. The history of other nations does not furnish the definition
of the phrase "republican form of government," as those words were
used by the framers of the Constitution. They distinguish the
American from all other republics by the introduction of the
principle of representation.
7. Initiative legislation is invalid because government by the
people directly is inconsistent with our form of government.
8. The well known practices of (a) adopting state constitutions
by popular vote, and of (b) local legislation in "town meetings,"
furnish no precedent for the lodgment of legislative power in the
ballot box.
[
Footnote 4]
1. State legislatures are a vital feature of our Government; the
Federal Constitution presupposes their existence and imposes on
each State the obligation to maintain them.
2. The division of powers of the three departments in each of
the States is a prerequisite to the national Government.
3. It is evident under the Constitution the State Legislatures
are the agency to carry on the relations between the Nation and the
States.
4. The word "legislature" in the Constitution means a
representative assembly consisting of two houses, empowered to make
the law. Such was its meaning at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution.
5. Contemporaneous legislation by Congress sheds some light on
the meaning of the term "legislature" as used in the
constitution.
6. The initiative destroys the legislative assemblies or
legislatures which it is the implied obligation of each State to
maintain, for a legislature must be the lawmaking power.
7. The initiative overthrows one of the greatest safeguards
against the abuse of the power of legislation, to-wit: the system
of a dual legislative assembly.