Whittington v. Polk

1 H. & J. 236
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1802
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1 H. & J. 236 (Whittington v. Polk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittington v. Polk, 1 H. & J. 236 (Va. Super. Ct. 1802).

Opinions

Chase, Ch. J. —

In the discussion of this case the following points were raised and contended for by the counsel of the plaintiff.

1st. That an act of assembly repugnant to the constitution is void.

2d. That the court have a right to determine an act of assembly void, which is repugnant to the constitution.

[242]*2423d» That the act of assembly passed in 1801, clu 74, entitled, «An act relative to the administratiou of justice in this state, and to repeal the act3 of assembly therein mentioned,” so far as respects the plaintiff, is unconstitutional and void.

4th. That the Assiae of Novel Disseisin is the proper remedy to recover the office of chief justice of the fourth district.

The two first points were conceded by the counsel for the defendant? indeed they have not been controverted in any of the cases which have been brought before this court.

Notwithstanding these concessions, the court deem it necessary to communicate the reasons and grounds of their opinion on those points.

The bill of rights and form of government compose the constitution of Maryland, and is a compact •made by the people of Maryland among themselves^ through the agency of a conrention selected and appointed for that important purpose.

This compact is founded on the principle that the people being the source of power, all government of right originates from them.

In this compact the people have distributed the powers of government in such manner as they thought would best conduce to the promotion of the general happiness; and for the attainment of that all important object have, among other provisions, judiciously deposited the legislative, judicial and executive, in separate and distinct hands, subjecting the functionaries of these powers to such limitations and restrictions as they thought fit to prescribe.

The legislature, being the creature of the constitution, and acting within a circumscribed sphere, is not omnipotent, and cannot rightfully exercise any power, but that which is derived from that instrument.

The constitution having set certain iimits or land marks to the power of the legislature, whenever they exceed them they act without authority, and such acts are mere nullities, not being done in pursuance of power delegated to them: Hence the necessity of [243]*243some power under the constitution to restrict the acts of the legislature within the limits defined by the constitution.

The power of determining finally on the validity of the acts of the legislature cannot reside with the legislature, because such power would defeat and render nugatory, all the limitations and restrictions on the authority of the legislature, contained in the bill of rights and form of government, and they would become judges of the validity of their own acts, which would establish a despotism, and subvert that great principle of the constitution, which declares that the powers of making, judging, and executing the law, shall be separate and distinct from each other.

This power cannot be exercised by the people at large, or in their collective capacity, because they cannot interfere according to their own compact, unless by elections, and in such manner as the constitution has prescribed, and because there is no other mode ascertained by which they can express their will.

It is true the people may assume the powers of government whenever the ends of it are perverted, when public liberty is manifestly endangered, and all other means of redress are ineffectual; but surely every act of the legislature repugnant to, or in violation of the constitution, cannot be held a sufficient cause for the interposition of the people in a way which subverts the government and reduces the people to a state of nature, and therefore cannot be the proper mode of redress to remedy the evils resulting from an act passed in violation of the constitution.

The interference of the people by elections cannot he considered as the proper and only check and a suitable remedy, because in the interval of time, between the elections of the members who compose the different legislatures, the law may have had its full operation, and the evil arising from it become irremediable; nor is it probable that the elections will be made with the view to afford redress in such partial [244]*244jar case, and if they were, and the law should be re« pealed, it would not be an adequate remedy.

The senate of Maryland, one of the component parts of the legislature, is elected for five years, and vacancies in that body, occasioned by death, resignation, or removal out of the state, are filled up by their own appointment. The present senate was elected in the month of September 1801, and the law under which the plaintiff claims the office of chief justice of the fourth district is a temporary law, and would have expired before the termination of the five years for which the present senate is elected, which shews in this instance that the interference of the people in their elections is not the proper mode of redress for an injury sustained by an act passed in violation of the constitution.

It is the office and province of the court to decide all questions of law which are judicially brought before them, according to the established mode of proceeding1, and to determine whether an act of the legislature, which assumes the appearance of a law, and is clothed with the garb of authority, is made pursuant to the power vested by the constitution in the legislature; for if it is not the result or emanation of authority derived from the constitution, it is not law, and cannot influence the judgment of the court in the decision of the question before them.

The oath of a judge is “that he will do equal right and justice according to the law of this state, in every case in which he shall act as judge.”

To do right and justice according to the law, the judge must determine what the law is, which necessarily involves in it (be right of examining the constitution, (which is the supreme or paramount law, and under which the legislature derive the only authority they are invested with, of making laws,) and considering whether the act passed is made pursuant to the constitution, and that trust and authority which is delegated thereby to the legislative body.

The three great powers or departments of government are independent of each other, and the legisla[245]*245ture, as such, can claim no superiority or pre-emi-nence over the other two. The legislature are the trustees of the people, and, as such, can only move within those lines which the constitution has defined as the boundaries of their authority, and if they should incautiously, or unadvisedly transcend those limits, the constitution has placed the judiciary as the barrier or safeguard to resist the oppression, and redress the injuries which might accrue from such inadvertent, or unintentional infringements of the constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 H. & J. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittington-v-polk-vagensess-1802.