0 subordinate the judiciary of the one State to that of another. Thus, a citizen of New York goes to Georgia ; he is sued there, a judgment rendered against him for a given sum of money. It may be groundless, although according t<» the laws of proceeding and the rules of evidence of the latter Slate. We put a strong case. The defendant returns to New York. The plain- till' commences a -nit in the Supreme Court of that State. The case eoines on for trial. The record of the judgmenl rendered by the court of Georgia is "proved" according to the act of Congress, and the court of New York musl give judgmenl thereon. We do not question the expediency of such a pro- vision, but we aver that it is "tie clearly inconsistent 19 with tlie idea that each State possesses sovereign powers in its domestic affairs, or even so far as to control its judicial action. Section 2 : " The citizens of each State shall be enti- tled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States." The Congress of the United States has the exclusive power of naturalization ; that is, to give the privileges and immunities of citizens to such persons as it pleases, and upon such terms as it may choose; and such naturalized citizens are, perforce of this sovereign power, made citizens of all the States. This presents a peculiar case. The State Governments are said emphatically to have the control of " the every- day institutions, oj)erations, and social arrangements of their community," and yet they have no power to decide what persons shall be members of their communities ! It is absurd to attribute to a State sovereign powers, and at the same time to declare that she has no right to say what kind or description of persons shall or shall not participate in the "privileges and immunities" given to her citizens by her laws. Section 3, article 4, declares that " new States may be admitted by Congress into the Union." The States- rights party insist that ours is a confederacy of sover- eign and independent States ; and yet no one of these sovereigns, nor all of them combined, has the power to decide what people, State, or country shall or shall not be one of their associates, and thus participate with them in the government of their country, in its glory or advantages. It is believed when the people conferred these sover- eign attributes upon the General Government, they rel- egated all essential sovereign rights and powers from their State systems. 20 Section 4 : " The United States shall guarantee to every State in the Union a republican form of govern ment." When the people of the respective States thus empowered the Government of the United States to give them a j^articular form of government, which is the true meaning of the clause of guarantee, they certainly ad- mitted that the United States possessed the supreme ultimate authority in the country, and that the States did not, in respect to the people of the States, possess such authority. The people of the States, as such, gave up, in regard of their State Governments, that fundamental right recog- nized by the maxim that " every nation has a right, in its own discretion, to change its own form of govern- ment, to abolish it and substitute another." In this case, the people of the States gave up the right to alter their government from a republican to a pure democracy, to a monarchy, or to a despotism. They admitted that they could not, so long as the Government existed, be subjected to any other than a republican form of government ; and thus far the peo- ple of each State yielded their sovereignty and inde- pendence to the people of the United States. We close this examination of the scheme of govern- ment which was j)repared by the Convention of 1787, to be submitted to the people of the United States for their adoption, under the conviction that it has been made with candor, and that it has resulted in proving there is no solid foundation for the belief that the actual government of our country is a confederacy of sovereign and independent States, in any sense of the terms ; but with a clear conviction that the State Governments, instead of being "free, sovereign and independent States," as they certainly were when they ratified the 21 Articles of Confederation, became by the present Con- stitution component and essential parts of the General Government; the object of State Governments being merely civil and domestic, " to support the legislative department of the United States, and to provide for the administration of the laws." Our next duty is to show how the Constitution pro- posed by the Convention was disposed of and adopted, and how the State Constitutions were adapted to their new condition in relation to the new government. The Convention agreed upon the form of the Con. stitution, which was signed by the delegates on the 17th September, 1787, and, with the letter of the same date from Washington, addressed to the President of the Congress, was sent to that body then assembled in Phil- adelphia, pursuant to a resolution of the Convention, directing it "to be laid before the United States in Congress assembled," and expressing the opinion that it should afterward be submitted to a convention of dele- gates, chosen in each State by the people thereof, for their assent and ratification. It was submitted to Congress on 28th September. That body sent copies of it to the State Legislatures ; and the people of the several States were called upon to elect delegates to conventions to be held on designated days and places in each State ; which they did ; and be- tween the 7th December, 1787, and 21st November, 1788, the people of all the States, except Rhode Island, assent- ed to and ratified the Constitution of the United States of America, as it was prepared by the Convention and submitted to the respective State Conventions, without alteration. And thus did the people of the United States of America ordain and establish this Constitution of the United States of America. And thus does " the fabric 22 of the American Empire rest on the solid basis of the consent of the people of America, the pure and original foundation of all legitimate authority." — (Federalist^) We have asserted, and we believe we have proved, that the respective States ceased by that act to be sovereign and independent ; that they became, " in spirit and in form, component parts of the Government of the United States ;" that their constitutions were materially altered, in order that they might conform to their changed and subordinated condition. These State constitutions were originally formed by the people of the States, in their independent and sover- eign capacity, through conventions of delegates elected by the people, and assembled for that purpose; and they were altered by the same people through the same agency. When the people of a State elected their delegates to a convention, with full power to reject or adopt the constitution of government presented for their deliber- ation, which directly by its very terms, and inferen- tially and necessarily by its spirit and import, essen- tially changed their respective State constitutions, their delegates were thus authorized by the people of the States, if upon full- deliberation they should adopt the Constitution of the United States, so far to change their State constitutions as would be required to conform them to the altered condition of their respective States. They did so ; and thus we find that such changes, radi- cal as they were, were made by the authority of the sovereign loill. We cite two strong cases to show the changes thus made, and we aver that the subsequent action of both Governments shows that they received the full approval of the Government and people. 23 By clause 2d, article 6th, it is declared : " This Con- stitution, 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, any thing in the constitution or laws of any of the States to the contrary notivithstanding? It must be admitted that before the Constitution was adopted by the people of the United States, the State constitutions and laws were the supreme law of the land within their respective jurisdictions, and that the judges in every State were controlled thereby. It must also be admitted that as soon as the Constitution of the United States was established, its Constitution, laws, and treaties were superior to the constitutions and laws of the States, and that thus a change was made by the people of the several States of their re- spective constitutions, in order that they might be in conformity with this new and sovereign power. Again, by the 3d clause of the same article, it is declared that the members of the several State Legis- latures, and all executive and judicial officers of the several States " shall be bound by oath or affirmation to support this Constitution." This was so essential a change of the constitutions of the several States as to forbid those who were the recognized organs of these Governments to act, until they had taken that oath ; and that thus not only the soul of each State Govern- ment was, but that the organs through which that soul acted were, made obedient to the Federal Constitution, and that such organs could exist only in obedience to its commands. We hold, in conclusion, that as the Constitution of the United States was the work of the people of the 24 United States of America, they, and they alone, have power to alter or to abolish that constitution of govern- ment. When we say the People, we mean the people of the United States, not the people of a State or many States, constituting less than a majority of the whole people. EEBELLION AGAINST THE UNITED STATES BY THE PEOPLE OF A STATE IS ITS POLITICAL SUICIDE. The necessary consequences of this condition of the people and governments of the States in relation to the General Government is, that when the people of a State, not a mere faction, rise up in rebellion against the Gov- ernment, and use the organs of their State to destroy the Government of the United States, they destroy the organism of their State Government, and thus accom- plish the political suicide of their State Government. The soul of the State remains, but its organs are de- stroyed. The latter cannot act as organs, because they cannot take the required oath, and cannot perform their duty to the supreme power in obedience to the com- mands of the Constitution of the United States. It must be admitted that the question whether the State Governments in rebellion are abolished or not, is a very difficult one. We approach it with diffidence. The question in the outset is, What is a State ? The aggregation of a people as a community is not a State until they have " established & public authority, to order and direct what is to be done by each in relation to the end of the association. This political authority is the sovereignty, and he or they who are invested with it are the sovereign? When this is done, there is a " body politic, or State. 11 — ■( Vattel.) We have high authority for asserting that when the 25 Constitution of the State of New York was formed, " the sovereignty of the people, by our Constitution, was vested in their representatives in senate and assembly, with the intervention of the Council of Revision." This was the " public authority" of the State of New York. The like may be properly said of the other State Gov- ernments before the existing Government of the United States was adopted by the whole people. By that act, as we have seen, the State Governments, and the people thereof, were made component parts of the Government of the United States, and the essential attributes of their sovereignty were vested in the latter Government. It is the " undisputed organ of the public tvilV This is the state of facts upon which this important question arises. It is a maxim of universal acceptance, that " the people, in their discretion, have a right to alter or abol- ish one government and to establish another." And it is therefore true that the people of the United States, who established the Government of the United States, have the right to alter or abolish that Government ; and equally so that the ])eople of one or several States have not that right. It is also true that the people of the several States have the right to alter their several State Governments, with these limitations : 1st. That such alterations do not change their relations to the Government of the United States, or in any respect impair the rights or powers of that Government in relation to the people or governments of the States ; and 2d. That they shall es- tablish a republican government. Thus far, the people of each State have, by uniting with the people of all the other States, and thus forming that " body politic!'' which is, and is known as, the People and Government 26 of the United States, divested themselves of plenary power over their State Governments. Under and by virtue of the powers vested by the Constitution of the United States in its Government, that Government has the absolute possession of all the domain within its borders ; and it has full sovereign power over all the people of the United States, in all those respects, and to those ends and purposes for which it was formed and established. From these positions, it is clear that the Government or the people of a State have no right or power to with- draw from the Government of the United States ; and that when the people of a State rise in rebellion against the Government of the United States, and make use of their State Governments as their instruments to destroy, by force, the Government of the United States, they are guilty of " high treason. 11 The people of such State, or all those who unite in such a purpose are Teaitoks, and as such they forfeit life and property, and all rights of every kind. Blackstone says : " The natural justice of forfeiture or confiscation of property for treason is founded in this consideration : that he who has thus violated the fundamental principles of government, and broken his part of the original contract between king and people, hath abandoned his connection with society, and hath no longer any right to those advantages which before belonged to him purely as a member of the com- munity." If this be a correct view of the position of traitors, can it be with propriety said that men so circumstanced can be considered as the " public authority " of a " body politic" \ Is it possible that they can individually or collectively possess the attributes of any power to " or- der and direct what is to be done by each in relation 21 to the end of the association," which is " to promote their mutual benefit and advantage" ? How can a State Government be said to exist when the people of the community, including those who were invested with the functions of government, have " abandoned all their connections with society " ? It is a strange paradox to insist that the governments of the people who have attacked, with great power, the national life, and who, in every form, by word and deed, declare their purpose to do so, still form a part of that nation. As State Governments they no longer exist ; as a people, they form a part of the whole people of the United States, owino; obedience and allegiance to its Government, and must be reduced by force " into subor- dination to the laws." That provision of the Constitution of the United States which guarantees to every State a republican government, necessarily admits or assumes, as a matter of fact, that the people of a State may abolish their existing republican State Governments. To establish another form of government, — a monarchy, an autocracy, or despotism, — necessarily implies that they have abol- ished their existing republican government." This suggestion is presented in answer to the opin- ions entertained by very respectable authority, that the State Governments cannot be destroyed or abolished by any act of the people of the State ; and in support of that opinion, it is averred that as long as there is any number, however small, of those who are favorable to the existing State Government, that Government neces- sarily exists. This view certainly ignores the great principle of popular government, that the majority of the people must rule, — that the will of the majority gives the law to the whole. The Administration, by several acts, seem to admit 28 that the States in rebellion have abolished their gov- ernments. A military government has been appointed for Ten- nessee. Andrew Johnson, in his appeal to the people, says : " The State Government has disappeared, the Executive has abdicated, the Legislature has dissolved, the judiciary is in abeyance." " In such a lamentable crisis" (the people of the State without a government) " the Government of the United States could not be un- mindful of its high constitutional obligation to guaran- tee to every state in this Union a republican form of government." "This obligation the National Govern- ment is now attempting to discharge. I have been ap- pointed, in the absence of the regular and established State authorities, a military governor for the time be- ing." We infer from the language of this appeal, — which we must believe correctly represents the views of the President and his Cabinet, because we cannot suppose Governor Johnson would have been sent to Tennessee without having precise instruction, — indeed, it may well be presumed, as a matter of wise precaution, — that this appeal had received the approval of the Government. It speaks of the " performance by the Government of its constitutional duty to the State," under the guaran- tee clause. It declares "the State Government has dis- appeared," and consequently that the Government of the United States was to perform its constitutional obligations by giving to the people a government of a republican form. If the former State Government was not abolished by the rebellion of the people, then that Government still exists ; and then there was no constitutional obli- gation to give the loyal people another government. As the Governor had abdicated and the Legislature 29 was dissolved, all that was necessary was, that a Gov- ernor and Legislature should be elected under the pro- tection of the power of the United States, by the loyal people of the State. Such abdication and dissolution do not invoke the exercise of the power of the United States under the guarantee clause. We entertain no doubt whatever, that it is the duty of the Government to establish provisional governments in all the rebellious States. Under the conviction that by the energy of the Executive, the skill of our gen- erals, and the bravery of our soldiers, this cruel war, so far as it respects the action of large armies, will be shortly terminated by our glorious victories, we believe the Government will be driven to the conclusion that the people in rebellion have destroyed their govern- ments, and the only means of restoring to the Union- men of those States the protection of regular govern- ments, and to the citizens of other States their rights and privileges in those States, will be by establishing territorial governments for the peoj)le of all States in the rebellion. It is not improbable that the traitors, when their armies are vanquished and their assumed governments are dispersed, will perversely refuse to return to a due subordination to the laws of the United States. It is always to be remembered in regard to the States in rebellion, that they form a part of the domain or territory of the United States ; that " the United States is the sovereign in possession, and that the peo- ple of the State (in rebellion), once one of the United States, are not." The people of Western Virginia, holding the opin- ion that their State Government was abolished by the treason of the people in other parts of the State, with the organs of that Government have formed another 30 government, which has been recognized by the United States as the existing government of that State. EMANCIPATION. The President, in his most admirable proclamation, recommended to the people of the United States to im- plore spiritual consolation in behalf of all who have been brought into afflictions by the casualties and ca- lamities of sedition and civil war. The Secretary of War, in his general order, dated April 9, 1862, ordered thanks to be given to the Lord of Hosts in delivering this nation, by the arms of pat- riot soldiers, from the horrors of treason, rebellion, and civil war. We have thus the highest authority for saying that we are engaged in a civil war, which Vattel (Book 3, chap. 13, § 295) and other authoritative publicists declare is a public war. " The war between the two parties stands on the same ground, in every respect, as a public war between two different nations." " They decide their quarrel by arms, as two different nations would do. The obligation to observe the common laws of war toward each other is, therefore, absolute." When the blockade of the rebel ports was declared, France and Great Britain decided that both parties, being public enemies, were entitled to the rights of belligerents. We refer to the fact that our Government, by ex- changing prisoners, has treated this as a public war. This is assuredly the common sense view of this sub- ject, and we rejoice that it is thus authoritatively set- tled, because decisive consequences must follow in regard to slavery, under the laws of war. It is well settled (see Vattel, Book 3, chap. 9, § 165, Booty) that when an army advances into the country of its enemy, "the established laws of war give to an ol enemy the use and enjoyment of real property of which he obtains possession," and the absolute ownership of all personal property which falls into his hands. The latter is called booty, and, except ships, becomes vested in the captors the moment they acquire a firm posses- sion." With regard to ships, by the general rules of maritime law, condemnation is necessary to the complete investment of the property in the captors. Wheaton's Elements,