County government in New York has traditionally taken the form
of a single-branch legislature, exercising general governmental
powers, and such powers are also exercised by the county's
constituent cities, villages, and towns. The allocation of powers
among these subdivisions can be changed, and a new form of county
government adopted, pursuant to referendum procedures provided by
the New York Constitution and an implementing statute, under which
a proposed county charter submitted to the voters for approval is
adopted only if a majority of the voting city dwellers and a
majority of the voting noncity dwellers both approve. After a
proposed charter for Niagara County submitted to the voters
pursuant to these procedures was defeated (despite the fact that a
majority of those voting in the entire county favored it) when the
city voters approved it but the noncity voters disapproved it,
appellees, a group of Niagara County voters, brought suit in
Federal District Court challenging the constitutionality of the
procedures, and a three-judge court held that the concurrent
majority requirements violated the Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Held: The challenged provisions, which are entitled to
a presumption of constitutionality, do not violate the Equal
Protection Clause. The separate voter approval requirements are
based on the perception that the real and long-term impact of a
restructuring of local government is felt quite differently by the
different county constituent units that in a sense compete to
provide similar governmental services. Voters in these constituent
units are directly and differentially affected by the restructuring
of county government, which may make the provider of public
services more remote and less subject to the voters' individual
influence, and these differing interests of city and noncity voters
in the adoption of a new county charter are sufficient under the
Equal Protection Clause to justify the classifications made under
the law. Pp.
430 U. S.
268-273.
Reversed. See 386 F.
Supp. 1.
Page 430 U. S. 260
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS,
JJ., joined. BURGER, C J., concurred in the judgment.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
New York law provides that a new county charter will go into
effect only if it is approved in a referendum election by separate
majorities of the voters who live in the cities within the county,
and of those who live outside the cities. A three-judge Federal
District Court held that these requirements violate the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We noted probable
jurisdiction of this direct appeal from the District Court's
judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 1253. 426 U.S. 918.
I
County government in New York has traditionally taken the form
of a single-branch legislature, exercising general governmental
powers. General governmental powers are also exercised by the
county's constituent cities, villages, and towns. The allocation of
powers among these subdivisions can be changed, and a new form of
county government adopted, pursuant to referendum procedures
specified in Art. IX of the New York Constitution [
Footnote 1] and implemented by § 33
Page 430 U. S. 261
of the Municipal Home Rule Law. [
Footnote 2] Under those procedures, a county board of
supervisors may submit a proposed charter to the voters for
approval. If a majority of the voting city
Page 430 U. S. 262
dwellers and a majority of the voting noncity dwellers both
approve, the charter is adopted. [
Footnote 3]
In November, 1972, a proposed charter for the county of Niagara
was put to referendum. The charter created the new offices of
County Executive and County Comptroller, and continued the county's
existing power to establish tax rates, equalize assessments, issue
bonds, maintain roads, and administer health and public welfare
services. No explicit provision for redistribution of governmental
powers from the cities or towns to the county government was made.
The city voters approved the charter by a vote of 18,220 to 14,914.
The noncity voters disapproved the charter by a vote of 11,594 to
10,665. [
Footnote 4] A majority
of those voting in the entire county thus favored the charter.
[
Footnote 5]
Page 430 U. S. 263
The appellees, a group of Niagara County voters, filed suit
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States District
Court for the Western District of New York, seeking a declaration
that the New York constitutional and statutory provisions governing
adoption of the charter form of county government are
unconstitutional, and an order directing the appropriate New York
officials to file the Niagara County charter as a duly enacted
local law. A three-judge court was convened. Before its decision
was announced, however, another new charter was put to referendum
in Niagara County in November, 1974. Again a majority of the city
dwellers who voted approved the charter, a majority of the noncity
voters disapproved it, and an aggregate majority of all those in
the county who voted approved it. [
Footnote 6] The District Court subsequently found the
concurrent majority requirements of the New York Constitution and
the New York Municipal Home Rule Law violative of the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and ordered
implementation of the 1972 Charter.
386 F. Supp.
1. [
Footnote 7] On appeal,
this Court vacated that judgment and remanded the cause "for
reconsideration in light of the provisions of [the] new charter
adopted by Niagara County in 1974." 423 U.S. 808. In subsequent
proceedings on remand, the District Court found that there was "no
substantial difference between the
Page 430 U. S. 264
two Charters," and that the 1974 County Charter had superseded
the 1972 Charter. [
Footnote 8]
Pursuant to its previous constitutional adjudication, the court
decreed that the 1974 Charter "is in full force and effect as the
instrument defining the form of local government for Niagara
County." [
Footnote 9]
II
The impact of the Equal Protection Clause on the exercise of the
electoral franchise under state law is hardly a novel concern of
the federal judiciary. It was made clear more than 15 years ago in
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
that the subject is a justiciable one, and ever since the seminal
case of
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533, it has been established that the Equal
Protection Clause cannot tolerate the disparity in individual
voting strength that result when elected officials represent
districts of unequal population, since
"the fundamental
Page 430 U. S. 265
principle of representative government in this country is one of
equal representation for equal numbers of people, without regard to
race, sex, economic status, or place of residence within a
State."
Id. at
377 U. S.
560-561. [
Footnote
10]
In the case before us, the District Court, though recognizing
that "the precise issue here presented appears to be one of first
impression," concluded that the rule of
Reynolds v. Sims
controlled its resolution. "Reasoning by analogy," the court held,
in short, that the dual majority requirement of New York law "is
unconstitutional because it violates the one man, one vote
principle." 386 F. Supp. at 7. In assessing the correctness of the
District Court's judgment, it is thus appropriate to begin by
recalling the basic rationale of the decisions of this Court in
which that principle was first developed and applied.
The rationale is, at bottom, so simple as to be almost
self-evident. Beginning with
Reynolds v. Sims, supra,
cases in which the principle emerged involved challenges to state
legislative apportionment systems that gave "the same number of
representatives to unequal numbers of constituents." 377 U.S. at
377 U. S. 563. The
Court concluded that, in voting for their legislators, all citizens
have an equal interest in representative democracy, and that the
concept of equal protection therefore requires that their votes be
given equal weight. [
Footnote
11]
See, e.g., Lucas v. Colorado Gen. Assembly,
377 U. S. 713;
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U. S. 433;
Burns v.
Richardson, 384
Page 430 U. S. 266
U.S. 73,
Swann v. Adams, 385 U.
S. 440;
Kilgarlin v. Hill, 386 U.
S. 120;
Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.
S. 124;
Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U.
S. 735.
The equal protection principles applicable in gauging the
fairness of an election involving the choice of legislative
representatives are of limited relevance, however, in analyzing the
propriety of recognizing distinctive voter interests in a
"single-shot" referendum. In a referendum, the expression of voter
will is direct, and there is no need to assure that the voters'
views will be adequately represented through their representatives
in the legislature. The policy impact of a referendum is also
different in kind from the impact of choosing representatives --
instead of sending legislators off to the state capitol to vote on
a multitude of issues, the referendum puts one discrete issue to
the voters. That issue is capable, at least, of being analyzed to
determine whether its adoption or rejection will have a
disproportionate impact on an identifiable group of voters. If it
is found to have such a disproportionate impact, the question then
is whether a State can recognize that impact either by limiting the
franchise to those voters specially affected or by giving their
votes a special weight. This question has been confronted by the
Court in two types of cases: those dealing with elections involving
"special-interest" governmental bodies of limited jurisdiction, and
those dealing with bond referenda.
The Court has held that the electorate of a special purpose unit
of government, such as a water storage district, may be apportioned
to give greater influence to the constituent groups found to be
most affected by the governmental unit's functions.
Salyer Land
Co. v. Tulare Water Dist., 410 U. S. 719. But
the classification of voters into "interested" and "noninterested"
groups must still be reasonably precise, as
Kramer v. Union
School Dist., 395 U. S. 621,
demonstrates. The Court assumed in that case that the voting
constituency in school district elections could be limited to those
"primarily interested
Page 430 U. S. 267
in school affairs,"
id. at
395 U. S. 632,
but concluded that the State's classification of voters on the
asserted basis of that interest was so imprecise that the exclusion
of otherwise qualified voters was impermissible. [
Footnote 12]
In the bond referenda cases, the local government had either
limited the electoral franchise to property owners, or weighted
property owners' votes more heavily than those of nonproperty
owners by using a "dual box" separate majority approval system
quite similar to the one at issue in the present case.
Cipriano
v. City of Houma, 395 U. S. 701;
Phoenix v. Kolodziejski, 399 U. S. 204;
Hill v. Stone, 421 U. S. 289.
In the
Cipriano case, involving revenue bonds, it was
apparent that all voters had an identity of interest in passage of
the bond issue, and limitation of the electoral franchise to
"property taxpayers" was, plainly, invidiously discriminatory. The
other two cases, however, involved general obligation bonds. There,
as in
Salyer and
Kramer, the validity of the
classification depended upon whether the group interests were
sufficiently different to justify total or partial withholding of
the electoral franchise from one of them. In support of the
classifications, it was argued that property owners have a more
substantial stake in the adoption of obligation bonds than do
nonproperty owners, because the taxes of the former directly and
substantially fund the bond obligation. The Court rejected that
argument for limiting the electoral franchise, however, noting that
nonproperty owners also share in the tax burden when the tax on
rental property or commercial businesses is passed on in the form
of higher prices. Although the interests of the two groups are
concededly not
Page 430 U. S. 268
identical, the Court held that they are sufficiently similar to
prevent a state government from distinguishing between them by
artificially narrowing or weighting the electoral franchise in
favor of the property taxpayers. [
Footnote 13]
These decisions do not resolve the issues in the present case.
Taken together, however, they can be said to focus attention on two
inquiries: whether there is a genuine difference in the relevant
interests of the groups that the state electoral classification has
created; and, if so, whether any resulting enhancement of minority
voting strength nonetheless amounts to invidious discrimination in
violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
III
The argument that the provisions of New York law in question
here are unconstitutional rests primarily on the premise that all
voters in a New York county have identical interests in the
adoption or rejection of a new charter, and that any distinction,
therefore, between voters drawn on the basis of residence and
working to the detriment of an identifiable class is an invidious
discrimination. If the major premise were demonstrably correct --
if it were clear that all voters in Niagara County have
substantially identical interests in the adoption of a new county
charter, regardless of where they reside within the county -- the
District Court's judgment would have to be affirmed under our prior
cases.
Cipriano v. City of Houma, supra. That major
premise, however, simply cannot be accepted. To the contrary, it
appears that the challenged provisions of New York law rest on the
State's identification of the distinctive interests of the
residents of
Page 430 U. S. 269
the cities and towns within a county, rather than their
interests as residents of the county as a homogeneous unit. This
identification is based in the realities of the distribution of
governmental powers in New York, and is consistent with our cases
that recognize both the wide discretion the States have in forming
and allocating governmental tasks to local subdivisions and the
discrete interests that such local governmental units may have
qua units.
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 580;
Abate v.
Mundt, 403 U. S. 182;
Mahan v. Howell, 410 U. S. 315.
General purpose local government in New York is entrusted to
four different units: counties, cities, towns, and villages. The
State is divided into 62 counties; each of the 57 counties outside
of New York City is divided into towns, or towns and one or more
cities. Villages, once formed, are still part of the towns in which
they are located. The New York Legislature has conferred home rule
and general governmental powers on all of these subdivisions, and
their governmental activities may, on occasion, substantially
overlap. [
Footnote 14] The
cities often perform functions within their jurisdiction that the
county may perform for noncity residents; similarly, villages
perform some functions for their residents that the town provides
for the rest of the town's inhabitants. Historically, towns
provided their areas with major social services that more recently
have been transferred to counties; towns exercise more regulatory
power than counties; and both towns and counties can create special
taxing and improvement districts to administer services.
See 13 New York Temporary State Commission on the
Constitutional Convention, Local Government 20 (1967).
Page 430 U. S. 270
Acting within a fairly loose state apportionment of political
power, the relative energy and organization of these various
subdivisions will often determine which one of them in a given area
carries out the major tasks of local government. Since the cities
have the greatest autonomy within this scheme, changes serving to
strengthen the county structure may have the most immediate impact
on the functions of the towns as deliverers of government services.
Id. at 19. [
Footnote
15]
The provisions of New York law here in question clearly
contemplate that a new or amended county charter will frequently
operate to transfer "functions or duties" from the towns or cities
to the county, or even to "abolish one or more offices,
departments, agencies or units of government." [
Footnote 16] Although the 1974 Charter does
not explicitly transfer governmental functions or duties from the
towns to Niagara County, the executive legislative form of
government it provides would significantly enhance the county's
organizational and service delivery capacity, for the purpose of
"greater efficiency and responsibility in county government."
Niagara County Charter, 1972. The creation of the offices of County
Executive and Commissioner of Finance clearly reflects this
purpose. Such anticipated organizational changes, no less than
explicit transfers of functions, could effectively shift any
preexisting balance of power between town and county governments
toward county predominance. [
Footnote 17] In terms of efficient delivery
Page 430 U. S. 271
of government services, such a shift might be all to the good,
but it may still be viewed as carrying a cost quite different for
town voters and their existing town governments from that incurred
by city voters and their existing city governments.
The ultimate question, then, is whether, given the differing
interests of city and noncity voters in the adoption of a new
county charter in New York, those differences are sufficient under
the Equal Protection Clause to justify the classifications made by
New York law.
Phoenix v. Kolodzieski, 399 U.
S. 204;
Salyer Land Co. v. Tulare Water Dist.,
410 U. S. 719;
Hill v. Stone, 421 U. S. 289. If
that question were posed in the context of annexation proceedings,
the fact that the residents of the annexing city and the residents
of the area to be annexed formed sufficiently different
constituencies with sufficiently different interests could be
readily perceived. The fact of impending union alone would not so
merge them into one community of interest as constitutionally to
require that their votes be aggregated in any referendum to approve
annexation.
Cf. Hunter v. Pittsburgh, 207 U.
S. 161. Similarly a proposal that several school
districts join to form a consolidated unit could surely be subject
to voter approval in each constituent school district.
Yet in terms of recognizing constituencies with separate and
potentially opposing interests, the structural decision to annex or
consolidate is similar in impact to the decision to restructure
county government in New York. In each case, separate voter
approval requirements are based on
Page 430 U. S. 272
the perception that the real and long-term impact of a
restructuring of local government is felt quite differently by the
different county constituent units that, in a sense, compete to
provide similar governmental services. Voters in these constituent
units are directly and differentially affected by the restructuring
of county government, which may make the provider of public
services more remote and less subject to the voters' individual
influence.
The provisions of New York law here in question no more than
recognize the realities of these substantially differing electoral
interests. [
Footnote 18]
Granting to these provisions the presumption of constitutionality
to which every duly enacted state and federal law is entitled,
[
Footnote 19] we are unable
to
Page 430 U. S. 273
conclude that hey violate the Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
For the reasons stated in this opinion, the judgment is
reversed.
It is so ordered.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE concurs in the judgment.
[
Footnote 1]
Article IX, § 1(h)(1), of the New York Constitution
(McKinney 1969) provides in pertinent part:
"§ 1. Bill of rights for local governments"
"Effective local self-government and intergovernmental
cooperation are purposes of the people of the state. In furtherance
thereof, local governments shall have the following rights, powers,
privileges and immunities in addition to those granted by other
provisions of this constitution:"
"
* * * *"
"(h)(1) Counties, other than those wholly included within a
city, shall be empowered . . . to adopt, amend or repeal
alternative forms of county government. . . . Any such form of
government or any amendment thereof . . . may transfer one or more
functions or duties of the county or of the cities, towns,
villages, districts or other units of government wholly contained
in such county to each other . . . or may abolish one or more
offices, departments, agencies or units of government provided,
however, that no such form or amendment . . . shall become
effective unless approved on a referendum by a majority of the
votes cast thereon in the area of the county outside of cities, and
in the cities of the county, if any, considered as one unit. Where
an alternative form of county government or any amendment thereof .
. . provides for the transfer of any function or duty to or from
any village or the abolition of any office, department, agency or
unit of government of a village wholly contained in such county,
such form or amendment shall not become effective unless it shall
also be approved on the referendum by a majority of the votes case
thereon in all the villages so affected considered as one
unit."
[
Footnote 2]
Section 33(7) of the Municipal Home Rule Law of New York
(McKinney Supp. 1976-1977) provides:
"� 33. Power to adopt, amend and repeal county
charters"
"
* * * *"
"7. A charter law"
"(a) providing a county charter, or"
"(b) proposing an amendment or repeal of one or more provisions
thereof which would have the effect of transferring a function or
duty of the county, or of a city, town, village, district or other
unit of local government wholly contained in the county, shall
conform to and be subject to consideration by the board of
supervisors in accordance with the provisions of this chapter
generally applicable to the form of and action on proposed local
laws by the board of supervisors. If a county charter, or a charter
law as described in this subdivision, is adopted by the board of
supervisors, it shall not become operative unless and until it is
approved at a general election or at a special election, held in
the county by receiving a majority of the total votes cast thereon
(a) in the area of the county outside of cities and (b) in the area
of the cities of the county, if any, considered as one unit, and if
it provides for the transfer of any function or duty to or from any
village or for the abolition of any office, department, agency or
unit of government of a village wholly contained in the county, it
shall not take effect unless it shall also receive a majority of
all the votes cast thereon in all the villages so affected
considered as one unit. Such a county charter or charter law shall
provide for its submission to the electors of the county at the
next general election or at a special election, occurring not less
than sixty days after the adoption thereof by the board of
supervisors. Such a county charter or charter law may provide for
the separate submission to the electors at such election of one or
more variations of the provisions of such county charter. Any such
variation may include, but shall not be limited to, proposed
transfers of functions of local government to other units of local
government or a class or classes thereof."
[
Footnote 3]
When the proposed charter provides for the transfer of duties or
functions of villages within the county, the voters residing in the
villages must also approve it by a separate majority.
See
nn.
1 and |
1 and S. 259fn2|>2,
supra. That
requirement is not directly involved in the present litigation.
[
Footnote 4]
Village residents are also residents of the towns in which they
are located, are subject to their governments, and are included in
the noncity vote.
[
Footnote 5]
A total of 55,393 votes was cast; in the aggregate 28,885 voters
favored the charter and 26,508 opposed it. The population of
Niagara County was approximately 236,000.
[
Footnote 6]
A total of 36,808 votes was cast in the referendum election. The
city dwellers who voted favored the charter by a margin of 11,305
to 9,222; the noncity dwellers voted 8,222 to 8,059 against it. In
the county as a whole, 19,364 voted for the charter, and 17,444
against it.
[
Footnote 7]
Niagara County itself had earlier brought an action in the same
court to enforce the 1972 Charter as the law of Niagara County.
County of Niagara v. New York, Civ. No.1972-656 (WDNY,
Apr. 13, 1973). The District Court had dismissed the complaint on
the ground that it presented no substantial federal question, and
no appeal had been taken. The appellants interposed a
res
judicata defense based upon that judgment. The District Court
properly rejected that defense upon the ground that the plaintiffs
had not been parties to the earlier suit and were not in privity
with the county of Niagara, which had brought it. 386 F. Supp. at
5.
[
Footnote 8]
The District Court also enjoined pending state proceedings
brought by the appellants to challenge the certification and
enforcement of the 1974 Charter. The appellants now argue that the
District Court should have deferred to the jurisdiction of the
state court. Even assuming that
Younger v. Harris,
401 U. S. 37,
principles are fully applicable in the civil context, however, the
original action challenging the dual majority provisions of New
York law had been brought in the federal court well before the
appellants filed their state court suit, and principles of comity
and federalism do not require that a federal court abandon
jurisdiction it has properly acquired simply because a similar suit
is later filed in a state court.
[
Footnote 9]
The District Court's opinion on remand is unreported. The
appellants argue that the relief originally sought in this suit was
limited to the 1972 Charter, and that the case is now moot because
the 1974 Charter has superseded it. Pursuant to our mandate on
remand, however, the District Court gave full consideration to the
1974 Charter, concluded that it was substantially the same as the
1972 Charter, and amended its judgment to recognize the validity of
the 1974 Charter. Although the better practice might have been to
require amendment of the complaint so as formally to seek the
relief ultimately granted, the appellants were not prejudiced by
the procedure adopted by the District Court, and we consider the
validity of the 1974 Charter as the issue before us.
[
Footnote 10]
In the application of this settled rule, the Court has, of
course, frequently been divided with respect to what deviations
from numerical exactitude are constitutionally permissible.
See, e.g., Abate v. Mundt, 403 U.
S. 182;
Mahan v. Howell, 410 U.
S. 315;
Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U.
S. 735;
White v. Regester, 412 U.
S. 755.
[
Footnote 11]
The Court has applied the principle of "one person, one vote" to
representative elections at the local as well as state level.
See, e.g., Avery v. Midland County, 390 U.
S. 474;
Hadley v. Junior College Dist.,
397 U. S. 50.
[
Footnote 12]
See also Carrington v. Rash, 380 U. S.
89, holding that, although the requirement that a
citizen be a resident of Texas was clearly an acceptable means of
defining relevant constituencies, Texas could not exclude all
servicemen from voting on the conclusive presumption that their
necessarily transient status precluded them from being
bona
fide residents.
[
Footnote 13]
We have held, however, that a referendum voting scheme that can
be characterized in mathematical terms as giving disproportionate
power to a minority does not violate the Equal Protection Clause,
there being no discrimination against an identifiable class.
Gordon v. Lance, 403 U. S. 1.
Cf.
Hunter v. Erickson, 393 U. S. 385.
[
Footnote 14]
See generally N.Y.Mun.Home Rule Law (McKinney 1969 and
Supp. 1976-1977); 13 New York Temporary State Commission on the
Constitutional Convention, Local Government (1967); Moore, Early
History of Town Government in New York State, in N.Y.Town Law vii
(McKinney 1965).
[
Footnote 15]
The Court has previously had occasion to recognize the historic
functional interdependence of county and town subdivisions in New
York, and has allowed considerable deviation from the basic rule of
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533, on
that ground.
Abate v. Mundt, 403 U.
S. 182.
[
Footnote 16]
See nn.
1 and |
1 and S. 259fn2|>2,
supra.
[
Footnote 17]
Appellee Citizens for Community Action at the Local Level argue
that appellee Niagara County's failure to controvert, the
allegation in the original complaint that "no specific group of
voters, residents or other persons were primarily affected or
interested as compared to another group" establishes that the city
and town voters here had identical interests in the charter's
adoption. As a factual matter, this assertion appears contradicted
by the later intervention of the town of Lockport to protect its
voters' special interests in the issue. In any case, the question
of the constitutionality of Art. IX of the New York Constitution
and § 33 of the New York Municipal Home Rule Law turns not on
the perceptions of voters in a particular county, but on whether
the State might legitimately view their interests as sufficiently
different to justify a distinction between city and town
voters.
[
Footnote 18]
There is no indication that the classifications created by New
York law work to favor city voter over town voter, or town voter
over city voter. In some New York counties, city voters outnumber
town voters; in other counties, the reverse is true. We are advised
that, of charters proposed in 14 counties, one failed to obtain
majority approval of the city voters; two (including Niagara
County) failed to obtain majority approval of noncity voters; eight
failed to obtain a majority vote in either the towns or the cities;
and three were approved by both city and town voters.
The constitutional and statutory provisions in this case also do
not appear to be the sustained product of either an entrenched
minority or a willful majority. Instead, they have been subject
historically to fairly frequent revision. The constitutional
amendment requiring city and town voter approval for changes in
county government was first adopted by referendum in 1935.
N.Y.Const., Art. III, § 26 (1935). In 1938, the Constitution
was amended to provide for approval by the voters in the county as
a whole, unless the proposal provided for transfers of functions to
or from cities, towns, or villages in the county. N.Y.Const., Art.
IX (1938). In 1958, Art. IX was again amended to provide that any
change in county government had to be approved by a majority of the
noncity voters, voting as a group, and by a majority of the city
voters, voting as a group. The existing Art. IX, adopted in 1963,
contains the same general provision as the 1958 amendment.
[
Footnote 19]
See Thayer, The Origin and Scope of the American
Doctrine of Constitutional Law, 7 Harv.L.Rev. 129 (1893).