United States v. Petersburg Judges of Election

27 F. Cas. 506, 1 Hughes 493

This text of 27 F. Cas. 506 (United States v. Petersburg Judges of Election) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Petersburg Judges of Election, 27 F. Cas. 506, 1 Hughes 493 (circtedva 1874).

Opinion

BOND, Circuit Judge.

It is conceded in the argument tha: had this been at an election for members of congress or for presidential electors the demurrer would have been bad; or that if the pleader had charged that the unlawful obstruction was on account of the race, coloV, or previous condition of servitude of the electors, no fault could have been found with the indictment. But this was not at a federal election, nor does the indictment charge that the obstruction was made on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The question then is whether or not there is constitutional power in congress to protect a citizen of the United States, qua citizen, in the exercise of the elective franchise, either by force of the fourteenth or fifteenth amendment of the constitution. Citizenship of the United States prior to the passage of these amendments was, to say the least, but an ill-defined relation. It was by many thought to be derivative, and not direct. A person became a citizen of the United States by force of his citizenship of some one of the states. It was as a citizen of a state that he had a right to sue in federal courts, and hence a large number of our fellow-citizens during the late civil war were led to think that as they first became citizens of the state, and indirectly through that relation citizens of the United States, their allegiance was first due to the state, and secondarily to the United States. It seems to me that the object of the first clause of the first section of the fourteenth amendment was to settle this question of allegiance forever, and to make the United States a nation by declaring “that all persons boro in the United States are citizens thereof,” owing allegiance upon birth, and that consequently the power to protect such persons as owed this allegiance belonged to the United States as fully as the power to protect its citizens for the purposes of its organization inheres in any other nation. Whether a person’s duty to the state or to the United States is paramount, was the question fundamental in the war; and after the expenditure of so. much blood and treasure, the people through their legislatures thought [508]*508it not right to leave the matter doubtful, and so declared in this amendment that not only are all persons born or naturalized in the United States citizens thereof, but are also citizens of the states wherein they reside, thus establishing not only what constituted citizenship of the United States, but, so far as this description of persons is concerned, what constituted citizenship of a state.

Congress is empowered to enforce these two relations created by this amendment by appropriate legislation. It has seen fit since the adoption of it to legislate upon the right to vote only. It is objected to this legislation, which, so far as these cases are concerned, is contained in the 4th section of the act of May 30, 1870, which provides “that if any person by force, bribery, threats, intimidation, or other unlawful means, shall hinder, delay, or prevent, or obstruct any citizen from doing any act required to be done to qualify him to vote, or from voting at an election,” etc., that the right to vote is not a privilege or immunity of a citizen of the United States as such, and that, therefore, it does not come within the power of congress to legislate concerning it. But the constitution of the state of Virginia declares in its third article that “every male citizen of the United States, twenty-one years of .age,” who shall have the requisite qualifications, shall have the right to vote; and now the question is, as the right to vote at an election in Virginia is not a right absolute, dependent solely upon citizenship, but a right which the state may modify and control, has congress the power, where and while the right is given, to protect a citizen in the exercise of it?

It may be fairly concluded that what is meant by citizenship of the state is the same, so far as the power to protect that relation goes, though it may not be coextensive in the privileges given, as is meant by citizenship of the United States. A state has the undoubted right to control, protect, tax, and summon to arms its citizens to promote the objects for which it exists. And when the fourteenth amendment declares that all persons bom within the jurisdiction of the United States are citizens of the state in which they reside, every such person Decomes liable to these burdens and is entitled to this protection. This will be admitted. When the same amendment declares that such persons are also citizens of the United States, it must mean that they shall occupy the same relation to the general government so far as its purposes are concerned. These purposes we are not left in doubt about, for the constitution of the United States declares in its preamble that the object of the government is to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, and to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity. Whatever, therefore, if a state had these objects for its organization, it might require its citizens to do or to refrain from doing to promote them, it seems to me the United States may require. The citizenship which owes its allegiance to each is now created by the same paragraph of the fourteenth amendment, and each may summon its citizens to enforce them, or defend them in so doing. In a republican form of government the duty of voting is as responsible a burden as that of bearing arms. The government cannot exist without the power to require both; and if it may protect the citizen in the one obligation, I see no reason, if it be desired to preserve its existence, why it may not do so in the other. If, therefore, a state, by virtue of a person’s relation to it as citizen, claims, and has always claimed, the right to protect him in the exercise of a right granted by the United States, surely the United States is not claiming unlawful authority when it undertakes to protect one of its own citizens in a right granted by a state to him as a citizen of the United States. Now the right to vote at a federal election is bestowed by the constitution of the United States upon such citizens of the states as have the requisite qualifications for electors of the most numerous branch of the state legislature. The state prescribes the qualifications for such electors; but being designated by the state through qualifications prescribed, the United States grants them the right to vote at a federal election. Every state by its laws protects its citizens in the exercise of this right, with which, not the state, but the United States clothes them. If this be within the power of the state by virtue of the citizenship of its citizens, why may not the United States protect its citizens to the fullest extent in a right with which a state clothes them? But this fourteenth amendment goes much farther than this. It declares that all persons born or naturalized in the United States are citizens of the state wherein they reside, and that congress shall enforce this by appropriate legislation.

That which constitutes citizenship, if it be not the mere privilege, of calling oneself citizen, must be the prerogatives, franchises, rights and privileges which the state governments grant to those occupying that relation, in return for the performance of the duties which spring from allegiance and citizenship; and unless this amendment was inane, fruitless and ineffectual, it must mean that congress by appropriate legislation can protect the citizen of a state in the exercise of all the rights conferred upon him as such, and which distinguish him from those who are aliens or merely residents in the state.

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27 F. Cas. 506, 1 Hughes 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-petersburg-judges-of-election-circtedva-1874.