William Rawle, L.L.D.

A

VIEW

OF THE

CONSTITUTION

OF THE

United States of America.


BY WILLIAM RAWLE, LL.D.


SECOND EDITION.


PHILADELPHIA:

PHILIP H. NICKLIN, LAW BOOKSELLER,

NO. 175, CHESTNUT STREET.

1829.


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Eastern District of Pennsylvania, to wit.


BE IT REMEMBERED, That on the twenty-ninth day of January, in the forty-ninth year

of the Independence of the United States of America, A. D. 1825, WILLIAM RAWLE,

Esquire, of the said district, has deposited in this office the title of a book,

the right whereof he claims as author in the words following, to wit:


"A View of the Constitution of the United States of America By William Rawle"


In conformity to the Act of the Congress of the United States, entitled "An act

for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and

books to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the times therein

mentioned." — And also to the act entitled "An act supplementary to an act entitled

'An act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts,

and books to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the times therein

mentioned,' and extending the benefits thereof to the arts of designing, engraving,

and etching historical and other prints."


D. CALDWELL,


Clerk of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.



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PREFACE.

IF the following work shall prove useful, as an elementary treatise to the American

student, the author will be gratified.If foreigners be enabled, by the perusal of it,

to obtain a general idea of the merits of the Constitution, his satisfaction will be

increased.To the American public in general, its value may chiefly consist in the

exhibition of those judicial decisions, which have settled the construction of some

points that have been the subjects of controversy.In this edition, the principles

laid down in the first, remain unaltered. The author has seen no reason for any change

of them. A small variation in the arrangement, and the correction of some typographical

errors, will principally distinguish it from the first.


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TABLE OF CONTENTS.

INTRODUCTION. Of Political Constitutions in General: of the Nature of Colonial

Governments: and of the British Colonies in North America

CHAPTER I. The Constitution of the United States

CHAPTER II. Of the Legislative Power

CHAPTER III. Of the Senate

CHAPTER IV. Of the House of Representatives

CHAPTER V. Of the President's Participation in the Legislative Power

CHAPTER VI. Of the Manner of Exercising the Legislative Power

CHAPTER VII. Of the Treaty making Power

CHAPTER VIII. Of Laws enacted by Congress

CHAPTER IX. Of the Enumerated Powers of Congress

CHAPTER X. Of the Restrictions on the Powers of Congress — and on the Executive and

Judicial Authorities — Restrictions on the Powers of States, and Security to the Rights

of Individuals

CHAPTER XI. Of the Crime of Treason

CHAPTER XII. On the Executive Power

CHAPTER XIII. Of the Means provided for the Performance of the Executive Duties

CHAPTER XIV. Of the Appointment to Offices

CHAPTER XV. On the Liability of Executive Officers

CHAPTER XVI. On Communications to be made by the President to Congress

CHAPTER XVII. Of the Power to grant Pardons

CHAPTER XVIII. Of Compensations to Public Officers

CHAPTER XIX. Of Incompatible Offices

CHAPTER XX. Of some arduous Parts of the President's Duties

CHAPTER XXI. Of the Judicial Power

CHAPTER XXII. Of Impeachments

CHAPTER XXIII. Of another Special Jurisdiction

CHAPTER XXIV. Of General Tribunals, and first of the Supreme Court

CHAPTER XXV. Of Tribunals Inferior to the Supreme Court

CHAPTER XXVI. Removal from State Courts

CHAPTER XXVII. Of the Places in which the Jurisdiction is to be exercised

CHAPTER XXVIII. Of the Appellate Jurisdiction

CHAPTER XXIX. Of the Rules of Decision

CHAPTER XXX. Of Checks and Restraints on the Judicial Branch

CHAPTER XXXI. Of Checks and Controls on other Branches of the Government

CHAPTER XXXII. Of the Permanence of the Union

APPENDIX I. [Elections of President and Vice-President]

APPENDIX II. [Letter from Congress to the Several States, by Jay]

APPENDIX III. [Constitution for the United States] E1

INDEX


E1. Editor's note: We have substituted the current Constitution with all amendments to date.

The version published in the original only included the first twelve amendmends adopted as of 1829.

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Scanned into text by Bill Boyle. Rendered into HTML by Jon Roland. Edited by Bill Boyle and Jon Roland.

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Courtesy:

The Constitution Society

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