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"The Privilege Of The Writ Of Habeas Corpus Shall Not Be Suspended
Unless When, In Case Of Rebellion Or Invasion, The Public Safety May
Require It." It Is The Second Clause Of That Section Which States
What Congress Shall Not Do.
Mr. Binney argues as follows:
"The conclusion of the whole matter is
this - that the Constitution itself is the law of the privilege and
of the exception to it; that the exception is expressed in the
Constitution, and that the Constitution gives effect to the act of
suspension when the conditions occur; that the conditions consist of
two matters of fact - one a naked matter of fact; and the other a
matter-of-fact conclusion from facts: that is to say, rebellion and
the public danger, or the requirement of public safety." By these
words Mr. Binney intends to imply that the Constitution itself gave
the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, and itself prescribes
the taking away of that privilege under certain circumstances. But
this is not so. The Constitution does not prescribe the suspension
of the privilege of the writ under any circumstances. It says that
it shall not be suspended except under certain circumstances. Mr.
Binney's argument, if I understand it, then goes on as follows: As
the Constitution prescribes the circumstances under which the
privilege of the writ shall be suspended - the one circumstance being
the naked matter of fact rebellion, and the other circumstance the
public safety supposed to have been endangered by such rebellion,
which Mr. Binney calls a matter-of-fact conclusion from facts - the
Constitution must be presumed itself to suspend the privilege of the
writ. Whether the President or Congress be the agent of the
Constitution in this suspension, is not matter of moment. Either
can only be an agent; and as Congress cannot act executively,
whereas the President must ultimately be charged with the executive
administration of the order for that suspension, which has in fact
been issued by the Constitution itself, therefore the power of
exercising the suspension of the writ may properly be presumed to be
in the hands of the President and not to be in the hands of
Congress.
If I follow Mr. Binney's argument, it amounts to so much. But it
seems to me that Mr. Binney is wrong in his premises and wrong in
his conclusion. The article of the Constitution in question does
not define the conditions under which the privilege of the writ
shall be suspended. It simply states that this privilege shall
never be suspended except under certain conditions. It shall not be
suspended unless when the public safety may require such suspension
on account of rebellion or invasion. Rebellion or invasion is not
necessarily to produce such suspension. There is, indeed, no naked
matter of fact to guide either President or Congress in the matter;
and therefore I say that Mr. Binney is wrong in his premises.
Rebellion or invasion might occur twenty times over, and might even
endanger the public safety, without justifying the suspension of the
privilege of the writ under the Constitution. I say also that Mr.
Binney is wrong in his conclusion. The public safety must require
the suspension before the suspension can be justified; and such
requirement must be a matter for judgment and for the exercise of
discretion. Whether or no there shall be any suspension is a matter
for deliberation - not one simply for executive action, as though it
were already ordered. There is no matter-of-fact conclusion from
facts. Should invasion or rebellion occur, and should the public
safety, in consequence of such rebellion or invasion, require the
suspension of the privilege of the writ, then, and only then, may
the privilege be suspended. But to whom is the power, or rather the
duty, of exercising this discretion delegated? Mr. Binney says that
"there is no express delegation of the power in the Constitution?"
I maintain that Mr. Binney is again wrong, and that the Constitution
does expressly delegate the power, not to the President, but to
Congress. This is done so clearly, to my mind, that I cannot
understand the misunderstanding which has existed in the States upon
the subject. The first article of the Constitution treats "of the
legislature." The second article treats "of the executive?" The
third treats "of the judiciary." After that there are certain
"miscellaneous articles" so called. The eighth section of the first
article gives, as I have said before, a list of things which the
legislature or Congress shall do. The ninth section gives a list of
things which the legislature or Congress shall not do. The second
item in this list is the prohibition of any suspension of the
privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, except under certain
circumstances. This prohibition is therefore expressly placed upon
Congress, and this prohibition contains the only authority under
which the privilege can be constitutionally suspended. Then comes
the article on the executive, which defines the powers that the
President shall exercise. In that article there is no word
referring to the suspension of the privilege of the writ. He that
runs may read.
I say, therefore, that Mr. Lincoln's government has committed a
breach of the Constitution in taking upon itself to suspend the
privilege; a breach against the letter of the Constitution. It has
assumed a power which the Constitution has not given it - which,
indeed, the Constitution, by placing it in the hands of another
body, has manifestly declined to put into the hands of the
Executive; and it has also committed a breach against the spirit of
the Constitution. The chief purport of the Constitution is to guard
the liberties of the people, and to confide to a deliberative body
the consideration of all circumstances by which those liberties may
be affected. The President shall command the army; but Congress
shall raise and support the army. Congress shall declare war.
Congress shall coin money. Congress, by one of its bodies, shall
sanction treaties.
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