Supreme
Judicial Court of Maine: Opinion of the Justices,
118 Me. 544, 107 Atl. 673 (1919)
(Ratification
of a Federal Amendment by State Referendum does not come within the
provisions of the State's initiative and referendum amendment, and
cannot be referred to the people for adoption or rejection by them.) |
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MAINE REPORTS
118
CASES ARGUED AND DETERMINED
IN THE
SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT
OF
MAINE
JANUARY 7, 1919—MARCH 1, 1920
TERENCE B. TOWLE
FREEMAN D. DEARTH*
REPORTERS
PORTLAND, MAINE
WILLIAM W. ROBERTS
*Freeman D. Dearth appointed December 20.
1910
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Questions and Answers. |
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Questions Submitted
by the Governor
of Maine to
the
Justices of the
Supreme
Judicial Court
of Maine,
July 9, 1919,
with the Answers
of the
Justices Thereon.
To the Honorable
Carl E. Milliken,
Governor of Maine:
The undersigned, Justices of the Supreme
Judicial Court, having considered the questions propounded
by you under date of July 9, 1919, relating to the
ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States and the necessity of submitting by
referendum the ratifying resolve of the Legislature to the
qualified voters of the State, respectfully submit the
following answer.
The request for our opinion is accompanied by
a statement of facts, from which it appears that the
Sixty-fifth. Congress of the United States on December 3rd,
1917, adopted a joint resolution proposing an amendment to
the Constitution of the United States which amendment
provides that after one year from the ratification thereof
the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxicating
liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the
exportation thereof from the United States and all territory
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, for beverage purposes
is thereby prohibited.
This amendment, thus adopted by joint
resolution of Congress, was proposed to the Legislature of
Maine of 1919 for ratification and was ratified by a joint
resolve of the Senate and House of Representatives, the
concluding paragraph, after reciting all the preliminary
steps, being of the following tenor:
"Therefore Resolved that the Legislature of
the State of Maine hereby ratifies and adopts this proposed
amendment to the Constitution of the United States. And that
the Secretary of State of the State of Maine notify the
Secretary of State of the United States of this action of
the Legislature by forwarding to him an authenticated copy
of this resolve."
Petitions apparently bearing the requisite
number of signatures having been seasonably filed with the
Secretary of State, requesting that this resolve be referred
to the people under Amendment XXXI of Article 4 of the
Constitution of Maine, known as the initiative and |
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referendum amendment, the question is now
asked of the Justices whether this joint resolve of the
Legislature of Maine, ratifying an amendment to the Federal
Constitution proposed by and duly submitted for ratification
by the Congress of the United States is subject to the
provisions of amendment XXXI, and therefore must be referred
to the people under the facts existing in this case.
Answer.
This
question we answer in the negative. In our opinion this
resolve does not come within the provisions of the
initiative and referendum amendment, and cannot be referred
to the people for adoption or rejection by them. The
ratification of the proposed amendment to the Constitution
of the United 'States was complete, final and conclusive so
far as the State of Maine was concerned, when the
Legislature passed this resolve.
Our reasons are as follows: The subject
matter of the action of the Legislature under consideration,
is a proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United
States, the proposal and ratification of which are wholly
governed by the provisions of that Constitution. Those
provisions are clear and explicit. They are as follows:
"Art. V. The Congress, whenever two-thirds of
both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose
amendments to this Constitution, or, on the application of
the Legislatures of two-thirds of the several States, shall
call a Convention for proposing amendments, which, in either
case, shall be valid to all intents and purposes, as part of
this Constitution, when ratified by the Legislatures of
three- fourths of the several States, or by Convention in
three-fourths thereof, as the one or the other mode may be
proposed by the Congress. . . ."
This article was a part of the original
Constitution of 1789, and has remained unchanged to the
present day.
It will be observed that there are two
distinct stages in the process, the proposal and the
ratification. The proposal may originate in either of two
ways;
First, from Congress by joint resolution
whenever two-thirds of both Houses deem it necessary;
Second, from the States whenever two-thirds
of the 'Legislatures of the several States may request that
a national constitutional convention
VOL. CXVIII 37 |
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be called for that purpose, in which case
Congress must call such a convention.
All the Federal amendments which have thus
far been adopted have been proposed in compliance with the
first method, that is by a joint resolution of the two
Houses of Congress. No National Constitutional Convention
has ever been called or held. Such proposed amendment is a
matter within the sole control of the two Houses, and is
independent of all executive action. The signature of the
President is not necessary and it need not be presented to
him for approval or veto. Hollingsworth v. Virginia, 3
pall., 378; Stale v. Dahl, (N. D.) 34 L. R. A. 97. Nor is
Congress, in proposing constitutional amendments, strictly
speaking, acting in the exercise of ordinary legislative
power. It is acting in behalf of and as the representative
of the people of the United States under the power expressly
conferred by Article V, before quoted. The people through
their Constitution, might have designated some other body
than the two Houses or a National Constitutional Convention,
as the source of proposals. They might have given such power
to the President or to the Cabinet or reserved it in
themselves, but they expressly delegated it to Congress or
to a Constitutional Convention.
As there are two methods of proposal, so
there are two methods of ratification. Whether an amendment
is proposed by joint resolution or by a National
Constitutional Convention it must be ratified in one of two
ways:
First, by the Legislature of three-fourths of
the several States, or
Second, by Constitutional Conventions held in
three-fourths thereof, and Congress is given the power to
prescribe which mode of ratification shall be followed.
Hitherto, Congress has prescribed only the
former method, and all amendments heretofore adopted have
been ratified solely by the approving action of the
Legislature in three-fourths of the States. That is the mode
of ratification prescribed by Congress in case of the
amendment now under consideration, and it was in pursuance
of that prescribed mode that this ratifying resolve was
passed by the Legislature of Maine.
Here again, the State Legislature in
ratifying the amendment, as Congress in proposing it, is
not, strictly speaking, acting in the discharge of
legislative duties and functions as a law making body, but
is acting in behalf of and as representative of the people
as a ratifying |
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body under the power expressly conferred upon
it by Article V. The people through their Constitution might
have clothed the Senate alone, or the House alone, or the
Governor's Council, or the Governor, with the power of
ratification, or might have reserved that power to
themselves to be exercised by popular vote. But they did
not. They retained no power of ratification in themselves
but conferred it completely upon the two Houses of the
Legislature, that is the Legislative Assembly.
It is a familiar but none the less
fundamental principle of Constitutional Law that the
Constitution of the United States is a compact made by the
people of the United States to govern themselves as to
general objects in a certain manner and this organic law was
ordained and established not by the States in their
sovereign capacity but by the people of the United States.
The preamble, "We the people" so states and such is the
fact. Chisholm v. State, 2 Dall., 419. It is
equally well settled that it was competent for the people to
invest the Federal Government, through the Constitution,
with all the powers which they might deem necessary or
proper and to make those powers, so far as conferred,
supreme; to prohibit the States from exercising any powers
incompatible with the objects of the general compact, and to
reserve in themselves those sovereign authorities which they
did not choose to delegate either to Federal or State
government. Martin V. Hunter's Lessee, 1 Wheat., 304.
Whether a certain power has been conferred either expressly
or by reasonable implication upon the National Government,
or has been reserved to the States or to the people
themselves must depend upon the construction of the language
of the Constitution governing that particular subject
matter.
It admits of no doubt that in the matter of
amendment which is governed by Article V, the people
divested themselves of all authority and conferred the power
of proposal upon Congress or upon a National Constitutional
Convention, and the power of ratification upon the State
Legislatures or upon State Constitutional Conventions.
This view has the sanction not only of reason
but of authority. Mr. Iredell, in the North Carolina
Convention which ratified the Federal Constitution, in
discussing this ratifying clause, said: "By referring this
business to the Legislatures, expense would be saved and in
general it may be presumed they would speak the general it
may be presumed, they would speak to the general sense of
the people. It may however on some occasions be better to |
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consult an immediate delegation for that
purpose. This is therefore left discretionary." 4 Elliot
Deb., 176, 177. This discretion under the terms of Article V
is to be exercised by Congress.
In Dodge v. Woolsey, 18 How., 331,
348, the Supreme Court of the United States, in emphasizing
the supremacy of the constitution said: "It is supreme over
the people of the United States, aggregately and in their
separate sovereignities, because they have excluded
themselves from any direct or immediate agency in making
amendments to it, and have directed that amendments should
be made representatively for them by the Congress of the
United States when two-thirds of both Houses shall propose
them, or when the Legislatures of two-thirds of the several
States shall call a convention for proposing amendments;
which in either case become valid to all intents and
purposes, as a part of the Constitution when ratified by the
Legislatures of three-fourths of the several States, or by
Convention in three-fourths of them, as one or the other
mode of ratification may be proposed by Congress. . . . .
Now whether such a supremacy of the Constitution with its
limitations in the particulars just mentioned and with the
further restriction laid by the people upon themselves and
for themselves as to the modes of amendment, be right or
wrong politically, no one can deny that the Constitution is
supreme as has been stated and that the statement is in
exact conformity with it."
A well known writer on Constitutional Law
after tracing the history and the scope of Article V
concludes as follows:
"Whether an amendment is proposed by Congress
or by a Convention, it is ratified or rejected by the
representatives of the people either in Legislature or in
convention, and not by the people voting on it directly. The
people have no direct power either to propose an amendment
or to ratify it after it is proposed and submitted." Watson
Const., Vol. 2, page 1310.
It is interesting to note in this connection,
as an historical fact demonstrating the attitude of the
Federal Government, that according to their admitted and
accepted practice if a State Legislature has once ratified a
Federal amendment a subsequent Legislature has no power to
rescind such ratification. Such rescission was attempted by
Ohio and New Jersey with reference to the fourteenth
amendment and by New York with reference to the fifteenth,
but the proclamation of the Secretary of State for the
United States was issued announcing |
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the final adoption of the amendments as a
part of the Federal Constitution, notwithstanding the
attempted rescission by subsequent Legislatures. The
attempted rescission was ignored. Watson Const., Vol. 2,
page 1315.
If a subsequent Legislature cannot rescind
the ratification by a former Legislature, it would seem that
much less could such ratification he rescinded by the
subsequent vote of the people, especially in view of the
fact that the people have unreservedly surrendered all
authority over that subject matter.
It follows from what has been said, that even
if the people of Maine by adopting in 1908 the initiative
and referendum amendment to our State Constitution had
attempted to assume or regain the power of ratification of
proposed amendments to the Federal Constitution, by
exercising a supervisory authority over the State
Legislature in that respect, such attempt would have been
futile. Their power over amendments had been completely and
unreservedly lodged with the bodies designated by Article-V,
and so long as that article remains unmodified they have no
power left in themselves either to propose or to ratify
Federal amendments. The authority is elsewhere.
But the people by the adoption of the
initiative and referendum amendment did not intend to assume
or regain such power.
The purpose and scope of that amendment were
fully considered and discussed in the case of Moulton v.
Scully, 111 Maine, 428, 446, and it was there held that
the design of the initiative and referendum was to make the
lawmaking power of the Legislature not final but subject to
the will of the people and to confer that power in the last
analysis upon the people themselves. And the court adds:
"This, too, marks the limitation of the
amendment. It applies only to legislation, to the making of
laws, whether it be a public act, a private act or a resolve
having the force of law. This is shown clearly and
conclusively by the language of section 2 of part third of
Article IV under the general head of 'legislative power.'
'Every bill or resolution having the force of law to
which the concurrence of both houses may be necessary . . .
. which shall have passed both houses, shall be presented to
the Governor, and if he approve he shall sign it' etc. The
referendum applies and was intended to apply only to acts or
resolves of this class, to every bill or resolution having
the force of law, that is to what are commonly known as
legislative |
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acts and resolves, which are passed by both
branches, are usually signed by the Governor and are
embodied in the Legislative Acts and Resolves as printed and
published. And the words 'No act or joint resolution of the
Legislature' etc. before quoted, in the referendum amendment
must be construed in the light of the context, considering
all the sect ions, and parts and articles together as
meaning 'no act or joint resolution of the Legislature
having the force of law.' This is the simple and plain
interpretation of simple and plain language." In the
application of that rule of construction this court held in
that case that a joint address to the Governor on the part
of both branches of the Legislature calling for the removal
of a public officer was beyond the scope of and unaffected
by the referendum. The same rule applies here with equal
force. This resolution, ratifying the proposed
Constitutional amendment was neither a public act, a private
act nor a resolve having the force of law. It was in no
sense legislation. It was not signed by the Governor, nor
could it have been vetoed by him. It was simply the
ratifying act of the particular body designated by Article V
of the Federal Constitution to perform that particular act.
The principles laid down in Moulton v. Scully are
decisive of this point.
The Supereme Court of Oregon in a case
decided on April 29, 1919, passed upon this branch of the
question where this same Federal amendment was involved, and
held that the term "any act of the legislative assembly,"
made the subject of referendum by the amended Constitution
of Oregon, did not include a joint resolution, but only
proposed laws. Herbring v.
Brown, 180 Pac. Rep., 328.
In conclusion it may be said that not only
have all previous amendments to the Federal Constitution
been ratified by two-thirds of the Legislatures of the
several States, but this particular Eighteenth Amendment,
commonly spoken of as the prohibitory amendment, has already
been promulgated by Federal authorities as having become a
part of the Constitution through this same avenue.
The State Department of the United States,
under date of January 29, 1919, issued its proclamation
announcing that this Eighteenth amendment had been duly
ratified by the Legislatures of three- fourths of the States
including by name the State of Maine, and therefore
certifying, in pursuance of U. S. Rev. St. Section 205,
"that the amendment aforesaid has become valid to all
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purposes as a part of the Constitution of the
United States." See appendix to Part 2 of U. S. Stat. 3d
Session, Sixty-fifth Congress, 1918, 1919.
The construction which we adopt is evidently
the same which the Federal authorities have placed upon the
Federal Constitution. With them the chapter is regarded as
closed.
For the reasons hereinbefore set forth we
answer the propounded question in the negative.
We have the honor to remain,
Very
respectfully,
(Signed )
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Leslie
C. Cornish,
Albert
M. Spear,
George
M. Hanson,
Warren
C. Philbrook,
Charles
J. Dunn,
John
A. Morrill,
Scott
Wilson,
Luere
B. Deasy. |
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Note: This is an OCR-based version of
Maine Reports 118 for the reader's
convenience. An original of this text is available from the Maine
Supreme Judicial Court, 205 Newbury St, P.O. Box 368, Portland, ME
04112 or from the Cleaves Law
Library, Cumberland County Courthouse, 142 Federal Street,
Portland, ME 04101—email
info@cleaves.org. |
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