J F 124 . B961 Copy 1 •• [Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S(K, by Ellen Burling, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District o? New York. J Is the Government of the State of New York a Republic or a Despotism? To the Members of the Constitutional Convention : This is a republican government — a democracy. So says the Declaration of Independence and the Constitu- tion of the United States, and so say all the State Con- stitutions. A republican government is a government of the people. All power is in the people. The will of the people expressed in the law is the supreme power. Each member of the community is the equal of each and every other member of the community. The right of each member of the community is the right of each and every other member of the community. The lia- bility of each member of the community is the liability of etn-h a ,nd < very other member of the community, not a jot or tittle in or r. or less. I cite the following from the 1st vol., Kent : " We, the People of the United States, to secure 1 he blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America." fi This Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof, shall be the supreme law of the land." Permit the incongruity of pardoning power, &c, to ex- ist, and vou have a despotism, and the declarations of Liberty, equality, Arc, are mere shams. The consequence of the conviction of A for man- slaughter in the first degree, in this state, is that the law demands his confinement for seven years, and gives to the judge before whom he is tried the right to further imprison him for the balance of his life. Mere the judge has an interest which he can quit-claim. In case the conviction be in the fourth degree, in addition to an interest to quit-claim, the judge can impose or not at his discretion a royalty to the state of $1000 ; and for the exercise of his discretion he is accoun- table to no one ; as complete master of the position as an owner in fee of a 'piece of real estate. And this prin- ciple of discretionary terms of imprisonment and fines, or rather royalties, runs through the entire criminal code, each magistrate, in greater or less degree, having this power ; and at the head of all, the governor, who can unconditionally release whom he will, and consequently "The right of the people to be secure in their per- sons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no war- rants shall issue but on probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the person or things to be seized. "The absolute rights of individuals may be resolved into the right of personal security, the right of personal liberty, and the right to acquire and enjoy property. These riovhts have been justly considered and fre- quently declared by the people of this country to be natural, inherent, and inalienable." detain whom he will; and all the prisons of the State are at his command ; he stands with powt r of freedom or slavery, as absolute as a slavt proprietor over his barra- coon on th< . \frican coast. If your wife, sister, or mother be raped, the State gets ten years, the judge the balance of the convict's life to quit-claim ; and if sentenced, the governor may imme- diately pardon. If your sister or daughter be seduced, the State gets one day, the judge four years and three hundred and sixty-four days to quit-claim, and if imprisoned, the governor may immediately pardon. If your sister or daughter be led astray for prostitu- tion, the State insists on one day, and the judge can quit-claim for one year and three hundred and sixty- four days: and if imprisoned the governor can pardon. If your sister or daughter under sixteen years be taken for prostitution, the State insists on one day, the judge gets an estate of two years and three hundred and sixty-four days to quit-claim, and the right to quit- claim the estate of the State to $1000 royalty. "Our ancestors insisted that they brought with them into this country the privileges of English freemen, and they defined and declared those privileges to be — the rights of trial by jury and the necessity of due proof preceding conviction, were claimed as undeniable rights; ami it was further expressly ordained that ho person should suffer vrithout EXPRESS law, either in life, limb, liberty, good name or estaU ; nor without being first brought to answer by due course and process of law. '• It was declared by them that the imprisonmenl of subjects withoul due commitment, for legal cause, &c. 3 were illegal and arbitrary acts." So if your sister or daughter be seduced^ the judge can punish the seducer or let him go. These powers are all royal prerogatives, and were in- stituted in governments where the head was sole owner of the subject, his life, his limb, his honor, his estate, Notel - and these prerogatives were for the increasing of the royal revenue. Crime was a source of profit to the king ; and all his officers, his judges, &c, were but his tools to foster and increase his revenue. As we see, Blaekstone laments that the fines, etc., were swallowed by the direct receivers, and the king profited nothing. Note2 - We know, the fines, forfeited recognizances, &c, are swallowed by the direct recipients, and the State profits nothing. These powers can have no legitimate existence in our government. They are in direct contradiction to our form of government, and can properly exist only in a despotism. The king is the head of the govern- ment and all power comes from him. His will is the supreme law ; from his decision there is no appeal ; he can do no wrong ; all suits, processes, &c, run in his name. " It was regarded and claimed in all the colonies as a branch of their sacred and indefeasible rights, that the people were entitled to be secure in their persons, property and privileges, and that they could not lawful- ly be disturbed or affected in the enjoyment of either, without due process of law and the judgment of their peers." " In the declaration of the first Continental Congress of 1774, it was declared that the inhabitants of the Eng- lish Colonies in North America, by the immutable laws of nature, the principles of the English Constitution, and their several charters or compacts, were entitled to life, 5 In a republican government all power is in the peo- ple. Their expressed will, the law, is the supreme power, and all officers of government, from the President down, are but the servants of the people to execute their will, the law. Note3, All suits, processes, &c, run in the name of the people, and certainly if these preroga- tives are tolerated, then the servant of the people is the master of the people, and the law is not the supreme power, but is subject to the will of the servant. In a republic, each is the equal of the other, and all are subject to the law. By the admission of these prerogatives the people are the serfs of the riders, and their persons and property are at the discretion of the rulers. What liberty, what equality is there if the per- son and property of one is at the discretion of another? These formula, which we call laws, want the life, the essence of law — certainty, power. The powers of office can be used for emoluments, and the law thus gives to one member of the community the power to use the person of another member of the community for emolument. A slave is a person hound liberty and protection, and that they had never ceded to any sovereign power whatever a right to dispose of either without their consent; and that their ancestors who first s< ttled the colonies, were, at the time of their emigration from the mother country, entitled to all the rights, Liberties and immunities of free and natural born subjects; and by such emigration they by no means forfeited, surrendered or lost any of those rights." " The government in allits parts is the creature of the people, and < v< ry department of it is filled by tin ir agents chosen and appointed according to their will, dec." " When the spiril of liberty has fled, and truth and 1* for life to service — a coolie, one bound for a period less than life. Here, in this State, we see it is possible to have both the slave trade and the coolie trade. In barbarous nations, the captives are the property of the captors, for use or ransom. Influence ( ; . e. the power that payment of money or service or the ability to pay money or service begets) got the magistrate his office, ami on his influence he depends for its retention. To the lawyer, physician, mechanic, or trader, his clients, his patients, his customers are his capital, and his efforts are to increase it. To the magis- trate, his office is his business — his means of living, and his friends (i. e. the voters he can directly or indirectly injiuenCi ), are his capital. The possession of office works no metamorphosis : the same natural instinct that ruled the lawyer, physician, mechanic or trader, rules him as magistrate. To keep or increase his influence, the ma- gistrate must in greater or less degree use the powers of his office. The magistrate is a man ; he must support and provide for himself and family; his position for his protection necessarily calls for the use of his powers ; a justice are disregarded, private rights can easily be sa- crificed under the forms of law. It requires more than ordinary hardiness and audacity of character to trample down principles which our ancestors cultivated with reverence; which we imbibed in our early* education ; which recommend themselves to the judgment of the world by their truth and simplicity, and which are con- stantly placed before the eyes of the people, accompa- nied with the imposing force and solemnity of a consti- tutional sanction. Bills of right are parts of the muni- ments of freemen, showing their title to protection, and they become of increased value when placed under the judicious magistrate will commit no act that will attract to his discredit the public attention, no act of very great injustice to the individual, but we cannot reasonably ex- pect justict from a dependent magistrate at the expense of his ink rest. WE WEIGH WITH SCALES, WHOSE BALANCE WE DESTROY. LET THE MAGISTRATE BE INDEPENDENT, ABOLISH THESE KINGLY PREROGATIVES, AM) THERE WILL BE REASON TO expect justice. These are the thoughts of every ob- servant, reflective person — why,not speak them? -print them? They are facts, why not recognize them \ If the magistrate be a weak, a corrupt man, what words can describe his measure of oppression ? No ac- cused stands alone — with him is a family, and while he is captive, the effort at ransom never ceases. As the person and boxes of a traveller are at the discretion of the custom-house official for search, so now to the official is the family. Affections, ts, hopes, must all give way; secrets belaid bare, questions answered — arc the means of ransom within the grasp of the family, or must new crime be committed \ Is the person of a member protection of an independent judiciary instituted as the appropriate guardian of private rights." '• I quote from Blackstone — '• J l is in! titution or laws of this country with- out an acquaintance with the feudal law, the law of nations in Europe. I5y this law, 'the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all lands in Ids kingdom, and no man doth < any pari of it but what has been mediately or immediately devised as a gift from him to be held for feudal ser- vice.-.' All subjects were vassals, and each took to the king openly and humbly, kneeling, being ungirt, un< i bands both to ether be- tween those of his lord wb ore bim, the oath and profession that iik X>I I > BECOME IMS MAN. FROM THAT DAY FOJRTH, OF LIFE AND LIMB A N I > i:.\ K I III.Y HONOK." "By the word prerogative we usually understand thai preemi- nence which tin all other pi of the ordi- nary course of the common law in right ofhis regal dignity. to those rights a istinction to others, and if once any one \ of the family coveted, or is it money ? Does some ob- server of the prostration of the family work the release for gratification or gain, or is it some hitherto baulked one who can now command success? The occupation, routine, and harmony of the family is broken up. Home, that one sacred, hallowed spot, the hope, the refuge of all, is invaded, profaned, laid waste, and the self-respect, the spirit, the manhood of the family trod- den out, and its members made spiritless and reckless. The family is impoverished. The support of the state is the family, and it is of vital interest to the state that the family should be protected and home held sacred. The young, the weak minded, the ignorant, the poor, should be protected, and they should not be tempted. " Lead us not into temptation," was the precept of the greatest of lawgivers. The accused may he the sole sup- port, the sole protection, of a family. To what may not affection induct the family to submit? The bare reflec- tion thai a son or daughter, brother or sister, may yet be tested, maJces the blood curdle — we are looking at the POSSIBILITIES, AND POSSIBILITIES AND OPPORTUNITIES MAKE it would cease to be prerogative any longer, and, therefore, Fuich lays it down as a maxim, that the prerog \tiye is that law in-case of tiie king which is law IN NO CASE OF TIIE SUBJECT." And again — "It is necessary to distinguish the prince from his subjects, not only by the outward pomp and decorations of majesty, but also by ascribing to him certain qualities as inherent in his royal capacity, distinct from and superior to those of any other individual in the nation. For, though a philosophical mind will consider the royal person merely as one man appointed by mutual consent to preside over many others, and will pay him that reverence and duty which the principles of society demand, yet the mass of mankind will be apt to grow INSOLENT AND REFRACTOR'S IF TAUGHT TO CONSIDER THEIR PRINCE AS A MAN OF NO GREATER PERFECTION THAN THEMSELVES. THE LAW, THEKEFORE, ASCRIBES TO THE KING IN HIS HIGH POLITICAL CHARACTER NOT ONLY LARGE POWERS AND EMOLU- MENTS, WHIOH FORM HIS PREROGATIVE AND REVENUE, BUT LIKEWISE CER- TAIN ATTRIBUTES OF A GREAT AND TRANSCENDENT NATURE, BY WHICH THE PEOPLE ARE LED TO CONSIDER HIM IN THE LIGHT OF A SUPERIOR BEING, AND TO PAY HIM THAT AWFUL RESPECT WHICH MAY ENABLE HIM WITH GREATER EASE TO CARRY ON THE BUSINESS OF GOVERNMENT— this is what I under- stand by the royal dignity." CRIMINALS NO REASON, NO ARGUMENT CAN BE GIVEN IN FAVOR OF THE RETENTION OF THESE POWERS BY MAGIS- TRATES. The people see that the power is the magistrate, and they imdertah. to protect themselves and redress their rr, r him ; for jurisdiction implies superiority of power, <&c. The person of the king is sacred, even though the measures pursued by him be completely tyrannical and arbitrary. The king can do no wrong, and ix uis POLITICAL CAPACITY HE IS ABSOLUTE PERFECTION." And again — '•In the exercise ok his prerogative, the king is and oroiiT to re abso- lute— THAT IS. so FAR THAT NO LEGAL AUTHORITY CAN DE- LAV OR RESIST HIM— he may reject what bills, &c, &c, may pardon wliat offt net s In pleases." And again under head of Kim.'- REVENUE. "The profits arising from the king's ordinary courts of justice make a ninth branch of his revenue, and these consisl not only in fines imposed on offend- ers, FORFEITURES OF RECOGNIZANCES, AXU AMERCEMENTS LEVIED ON DEFAULTERS, hut also in certain fees due to the crown in a variety of legal matters." Note2. "These, in process of time, have been almost all granted out to private persons, or else appropriated to certain particular uses, so that though our law 10 History is a record of the prostitution of power by rulers, emperors, kings, queens, &c, to the gratification of individual appetites. The law is, that a person committing a certain act, shall be confined in prison for a certain period. This is an arbitrary, and to a certain extent, a tyrannical act, and it can only be justified by its necessity for the pub- lic security, and by its exact ami even imposition on all. To imprison one for one period and another for another, for the same crime; or to imprison a poor man and let a rich man escape imprisonment by paying a fine; to imprison the friendless one, and let the one having influence es- cape ; is intolerable wrong and oppression, and is a des- potic act, and is entirely at variance with the spirit of a Republican or Democratic government, the principle of which is the supremacy of the law and the exact equali- ty of all in < a in the eye of the lair. The reason of the law is the soul of the law. The reason of the govern- ment is the soul of the government, and must be final in deciding all questions under it. This power of judges and governors to vary at will punishment for crime is to punish the convict not for the crime, but for being poor, uninfluential, or stupid. The writ of habeas corpus is to inquire as to wrongful de- tention, etc. ; but a convict under sentence is excepted proceedings are still loaded with their payment, very little of them is now re- turned into the king's exchequer." "In democracies this point of pardon can never subsist, for there nothing higher is acknowledged than the magistrate who administers the law/' etc- — Blaokstone. Mr. Blaokstone is not corkeot in this, "that nothing higher is acknow- ledged than the magistrate, " ■ peopl must accept. Reputable, capa- ble, and therefore deserving professional, mechanical, or business men do not, as a rule, meddle in politics; they have a substance, a reality, an occupation. It is the adven- turer, the man without the substance, the reality, the occupation, that is the politician, and to the politician polit is his substance, his reality, his occupation, and hi., stock in The matter on page 6 commencing with line 6, and on pa line 7. is to he, considered : of. The word criminal court, and Governor. 14 trade is the votes, the influences he can control, and each is in the market to sell or trade as best he may. A motley col- lection — adventurers from all trades, dealers, venders, gamblers and pugilists, all hungry, and all engaged pell mell in the grand scramble for the spoils. To these men must the appli- cant for office address himself, and to succeed he must enlist these warriors in his service, /s it reasonable to suppose that a man of tie requisite qualifications as described will thus scramble for offia ? Would it not be a surrender of his man- hood, his self-respect, his position, his grade? and a descent? Can inducements be offered commensurate with the sacrifice ? Did hr consent to descend, would he be acceptable? Would not the introduction of .such a judge in the political ring be to its interests as was to the Trojan* the introduction of the wooden horse — defeat? When politician* appoint judges, politicians mill be judges. The statutes recognize two classes of offenders, those who commit crime against the individuals, i.e., thieves, robbers, etc., and those who commit crimes against the community, i.e., office holders ; and to protect the people against these two classes, the natural enemies of the people, are laws made, and laws without judges are mere shapes of ink on paper. To mafa politicians judges is to set th( wolves to guard the sheep. The man who would let this motley collection of incompetents (incompetent i-n any profession or trade) select his lawyer or doctor, his architect to plan, his builder to build his house, or would leave to their selection his stock of goods would be deemed a tit subject tor the writ "De lunatico inquirendo." To lengthen the tlaee of right. All that we hare that we most value, re- latives, liberty, property, (til we hold by the low, our families remain to us or are separated, r the oilier of the horns of this dilemma will such failure place them. 17 The officials have sought the offices they hold for profit, and they use all means to increase the profit. They are the power in the state, and hold in their hands the public property, rev- enues, etc., and make contracts in reference thereto. Their interest is radically antagonistic to the interest of the people, and their interest naturally prompts them to protect and cover one the other. The sole guardians 'jot' the interests of the people are the judges. The officials, for misconduct in office, corruption, bribery, extortion, misperformanoe or nonperform- ance, etc., are arraigned before and tried by the judges. A judge is either independent or dependent ; dependence is as destructive to the essential requisite of a judge as is to the supremacy of the law the existence of a royal prerogative, (pardon, for instance.) In a monarchy the monarch is the head, and the people have but one master. In a republic with dependent judges, the officials are the heads, and the people have as many masters as officials. The government that places judges in the power of officials is a sickening sham. The judges are by the very nature of our government the highest officers of state, and their dependence is an insult and degradation to the people. In every government the judges are appointed by the highest power in the state, and men of the highest standing for ability and integrity are selected, and they, next to the supreme ruler, are the highest officers of the state. In monarchies, the judiciary feel the power of the monarch ; under the present constitution the judiciary feel the power of the politicians. In a republic the judiciary should feel the power of the law alone. The question of liberty or bondage (i. e., innocence or guilt) is of the most grave importance, and the magistrate who is to pass on it should at least be in all respects the equal of the civil judge. The present constitution, by making the judges dependent, did in fact grant to the politicia?is, by lease, as it were, the state, its people, revenues, etc., without consideration for rack rent for twenty years — Was ever estate more thoroughly gleaned by the middleman f We have now had twenty years' 18 EXPERIENCE OF SUSPENSION OF THE LAW, AND SUBSTITUTION THEREFOR OF THE WILL OF THE OFFICIALS, I. E., DESPOTISM — We have now readied the climax; the people are arrested, beaten, and imprisoned at will ; the fundamental principles of the government for the protection of the people have no force ; USAGE HAS ADDED A PRECEPT TO THE COMMON LAW THAT THE HELPLESSNESS OF YOUTH, AGE, LONELINESS, OR POVERTY WORKS FORFEITURE OF THE PERSONAL RIGHTS OF LIBERTY, SECURITY, and property. The officials paid to protect the people are the oppressors of the people, and the power of office is prosti- tuted to the purposes of the officials; personal liberty and security are jests. In the police courts the people are not treated with attention or respect; they are used like cattle, and are browbeaten and abused ; they are made the butts of official merriment ; their w r ants and woes, wounds and wretch- edness, probed to the quick. One of the staples of the daily papers is the holding; up to public gaze these helpless unfor- tunates, with such comment as the ability of the writer can afford. Crime in this city is a marketable commodity, and yields large profits to the dealers ; as hunters use hounds and falcons to bring in game, so do the dealers use the thieves of different grades ; and the possession of the game to the thief is as tran- sient as to the hound or falcon. Well housed, dressed, fed, crime is profitable, and is tolerated. The public moneys are at the discretion of the officials ; they help themselves. Peculation and extortion rule undis- puted ; the taxes increase by millions, and as they increase, rents increase ; each tenant, if he be a laborer of any descrip- tion, lawyer, doctor, mechanic, etc., must demand increased wages ; if he be store keeper, increased profit on his goods to meet the increased rent ; and the action of each is felt by each and all in the increased cost of all the necessaries of life. So the tenant pays the taxes directly in the rent, and the tenant and landlord pay the taxes in the increased cost of all the necessaries of life. Owing to this increased cost of living the 19 body of the people are crowded into tenement houses, and are scantily clothed and fed ; the poor are driven to attics and cellars, and helplessly starved. The public thoroughfares are seized and used as private property and the people crowded in cars like cattle in pens, and extortion practised on them in violation of the plain letter of the law. The people who by misfortune become inmates of the public charities are still the people. The public charities are paid for and supported by the people for the use of themselves, the people (i. e., the poor.) A father pays for and supports his house for his family ; andjdie poor have the same rights in the charities that the family have in the house. As the father employs servants of different grades to supervise and attend to the family, the people employ ser- vants (i. e., officials) to supervise and attend to the charities ; and the poor, as matter of right and not of favor, are en- titled to care, attention, and respect. The public charities are by these public servants worked for their profit and gratifi- cation. They feast on the choicest luxuries, and the poor, like the beggar at the rich man's gate, are thrown the crusts. The treatment the poor helpless infants receive, words fail to des- cribe. We point to infanticide in India as an evidence of the barbarism of its inhabitants. Let us look at home at the treatment of helpless infants in the public charities, and the daily record of abortions in the] papers. Abortion is a recognized, tolerated trade, and its professors offer their ser- vices to the public publicly in a half column of a daily paper. The people called the Convention and'incurred its expense that the oppressions which they suffered and which they clear- ly recognized and distinguished (some of which are above set forth,) might be abated ; other oppressions, banks, canals, etc., did not so directly and distinctly touch their persons and pockets. They thoroughly understood and appreciated the evil of a dependent judiciary, and they traced to this evil their many oppressions. They thoroughly understood 4 and appre- ciated the abuses of the pardoning power. The people are not slaves, boors or serfs ; they are intelligent, educated and 20 cultivated, and perfectly capable to understand, appreciate and judge these two evils, their causes and effects. They ob- served since the establishment of the elective judiciary, the power of the officials steadily increasing, and the power of the judges as surely waning, until as at present, the officials are the master. The people have long since given judgment on these questions, and the wisdom, the judgment of a people should be respected in preference to the wisdom, the judg- ment of individuals or small bodies of individuals. In a re- public the judgment of a people should be final. Is it reason- able to suppose that such a people will continue to suffer out- rages to their persons in violation of the law of the land ; that they will contiuue to suffer privation that their earnings may be tossed by thousands by officials one to the other, and that officials may revel in luxury ? The remedy and the only re- medy is an independent judiciary. The question is not only as to our personal rights for proba- bly the balance of our lives, but the rights of our children. ANTI-DESPOTISM. Time has not been allowed the writer for exact correct expression, nor for condensation or arrangement, nor for a full expression of this matter, and he asks that this be taken in consideration by the reader. It is the judgment of the writer that the vital interests of the people demand that the Constitu- tion be amended as urged, and in default of action by others, to such effect he acts as he deems his duty to the helpless and to his family demand, and as in him lies, and if any part bear constructive reflections on either the members of the Conventionor the judiciary, it is unintentional. The writer has simply endeavored to show that the evil is in the system and not in the men ; that the system does destroy, and will surely destroy the usefulness of any men as judges, and surely induce corruption in officials. He detects repetitious matter which might be omitted, and expressions which he would alter, but circumstances prevent. / V '-, \ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 107 518 4 4