THE ELECTORAL VOTES OF 1876
BY
DAVID DUDLEY FIELD
Who should count them,
what should be counted, and
the remedy for A wrong count.
The electoral votes of 1876 have been
cast. The certificates are now in Washington,
or on their way thither, to be kept by the President
of the Senate until their seals are broken in February.
The certificates and the votes of thirty-four of the
States are undisputed. The remaining four are
debatable, and questions respecting them have arisen,
upon the decision of which depends the election of
the incoming President. These questions are:
Who are to count the votes; what votes are to be counted;
and what is the remedy for a wrong count? I hope
not to be charged with presumption if, in fulfilling
my duty as a citizen, I do what I can toward the answering
of these questions aright; and, though I happen to
contribute nothing toward satisfactory answers, I
shall be excused for making the effort.
The questions themselves have no relation
to the relative merits of the two candidates.
Like other voters, I expressed my own preference on
the morning of the election. That duty is discharged;
another duty supervenes, which is, to take care that
my vote is counted and allowed its due place in the
summary of the votes. Otherwise the voting performance
becomes ridiculous, and the voter deserves to be laughed
at for his pains. His duty to cast
his vote according to his conscience was
clear; it is no less his duty to make the vote felt,
along with other like votes, according to the laws.
The whole duty of a citizen is not
ended when his vote is delivered; there remains the
obligation to watch it until it is duly weighed, in
adjusting the preponderance of the general choice.
Whatever may be the ultimate result of the count,
whether his candidate will have lost or won, is of
no importance compared with the maintenance of justice
and the supremacy of law over the preferences and
passions of men.
It concerns the honor of the nation
that fraud shall not prevail or have a chance of prevailing.
If a fraudulent count is possible, it is of little
consequence how my vote or the votes of others be cast;
for the supreme will is not that of the honest voter,
but of the dishonest counter; and, when fraud succeeds,
or is commonly thought to have succeeded, the public
conscience, shocked at first, becomes weakened by
acquiescence; and vice, found to be profitable, soon
comes to be triumphant. It is of immeasurable
importance, therefore, that we should not only compose
the differences that, unfortunately, have arisen,
but compose them upon a basis right in itself and appearing
to be right also.
WHO SHOULD COUNT THE VOTES?
This is the first question. What
is meant by counting? In one sense, it is only
enumeration, an arithmetical operation, which in the
present instance consists of addition and subtraction.
In another sense it involves segregation, separation
of the false from the true. If a hundred coins
are thrown upon a banker’s counter, and his clerk
is told to count the good ones, he has both to select
and to enumerate. He takes such as he finds sufficient
in metal and weight, and rejects the light and counterfeit.
So when the Constitution ordains that “the votes
shall then be counted,” it means that the true
ones shall be counted, which involves the separation
of the true from the false, if there be present both
false and true. In regard to the agency by which
this double process is to be performed, the words of
the Constitution are few: “The President
of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate
and House of Representatives, open all the certificates,
and the votes shall then be counted.” What
would one take to be the meaning of these words, reading
them for the first time? It is, that somebody
besides the President of the Senate is to count, because,
if he was to be the counting officer, the language
would naturally have been that the President of
the Senate shall open all the certificates and count
the votes. There must have been a reason
for this change of phraseology. It should seem
to follow, from these words alone, that, whoever is
to count, it is not the President of the Senate.
It should seem also to follow, that the counting is
to be done, not in the presence of Senators and Representatives
as individuals, but in the presence of the two Houses
as organized bodies. If their attendance as spectators
merely was intended, the expression would naturally
have been, in the presence of the Senators and Representatives
or so many of them as may choose to attend. The
presence of the Senate and House means their presence
as the two Houses of Congress, with a quorum of each,
in the plenitude of their power, as the coordinate
branches of the legislative department of the Government.
And inasmuch as no authorities are required to be present
other than the President of the Senate and the two
Houses, if the former is not to count the votes, the
two Houses must.
The meaning which is thus supposed
to be the natural one has been sanctioned by the legislative
and executive departments of the Government, and established
by a usage, virtually unbroken, from the foundation
of the Government to the present year.
The exhaustive publication on the
Presidential Counts, just made by the Messrs. Appleton,
leaves little to be said on this head.
The sole exception suggested, in respect
to the usage, is the resolution of 1789, but that
is not really an exception. We have not the text
of the resolution. We know, however, that there
was nothing to be done but adding a few figures.
There was no dispute about a single vote, as all the
world knew. But taking the resolution to have
been what the references to it in the proceedings of
the two Houses would imply, it meant only that a President
should be chosen for that occasion only. The
purpose was not to define the functions of any officer
or body, but to go through the ceremony of announcing
what was already known, and to set the government
going. No decisions between existing parties
were to be made; no selection of true votes from false
votes, but only an addition of numbers. Individual
members of Congress have undoubtedly in a few instances
expressed different views, but these members have
been few, and they have always been in a hopeless
minority. If any one can read the debates, the
bills passed at different times through one House
or the other, the joint resolutions adopted, and the
accounts of the votes from time to time received or
rejected, and doubt that the two Houses of Congress
have asserted and maintained, from 1793 until now,
their right to accept or reject the votes of States,
and of individual electors of States, all that I can
say is, that he must have a marvelous capacity of doubting.
He must ignore uniform practice as an exponent of constitutions,
and set up his individual misreading of words, reasonably
plain in themselves, against the opinions of almost
all who have gone before him.
The joint resolution of 1865 is of
itself decisive, if a solemn determination of the
two Houses of Congress, approved by the President,
can decide anything. That resolution was in these
words:
“Whereas, The inhabitants and local authorities of the
States of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida,
Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and Tennessee, rebelled
against the Government of the United States, and were in such condition on
the 8th day of November, 1864, that no valid election of electors for
President and Vice-President of the United States, according to the
Constitution and laws thereof, was held therein on said day: therefore
“Be it resolved, by the
Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America, in Congress assembled, That the
States mentioned in the preamble to this joint
resolution are not entitled to representation
in the electoral college for the choice of President
and Vice-President of the United States for the
term commencing on the 4th day of March, 1864, and
no electoral votes shall be received or counted
from said States, concerning the choice of President
and Vice-President for said term of office.”
In approving this resolution President
Lincoln accompanied it with the following message,
parts of which I will italicize:
“To the Honorable
the Senate and House of Representatives:
“The joint resolution entitled
’joint resolution declaring certain States
not entitled to representation in the electoral college,’
has been signed by the Executive, in deference to the
view of Congress implied in its passage and presentation
to him. In his own view, however, the
two Houses of Congress, convened under the twelfth
article of the Constitution, have complete power
to exclude from counting all electoral votes deemed
by them to be illegal, and it is not competent
for the Executive to defeat or obstruct that
power by a veto, as would be the case if his
action were at all essential in the matter. He
disclaims all right of the Executive to interfere
in any way in the canvassing or counting electoral
votes, and also disclaims that by signing said
resolution he has expressed any opinion on the recitals
of the preamble, or any judgment of his own upon
the subject of the resolution.”
If this resolution of the two Houses
was authorized by the Constitution, there is no ground
for maintaining the power of the President of the
Senate to decide the question of receiving or rejecting
votes. For, if he has the power under the Constitution,
he cannot waive it, nor can any action of Congress
take it away. The resolution of 1865 had the
sanction of each House, was signed by the President
of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, and was
approved by the President. It should set the
question of the power of the two Houses forever at
rest.
The joint rule, first adopted in 1865,
and continued in force for ten years, asserted the
same control. It should not have been adopted
if the pretensions now set up for the President of
the Senate were of force; and he might at any time
have disregarded it as worthless. But he did
not disregard it; he did not question it; he obeyed
it.
The action of the present Houses,
moreover, is an affirmance of their right to eliminate
the false votes from the true. Else why these
committees of each House, investigating at Washington
and in the North and South? Are all the labor
and expense of these examinations undertaken solely
in order that the results may be laid before the President
of the Senate for his supreme judgment in the
premises? It is safe to say that there is not
a single member of either House who would not laugh
you in the face for asking seriously the question.
Assuming, then, that the power to
decide what votes shall be counted belongs to the
two Houses, how must they exercise it? Here, again,
let me take the illustration with which I began, of
the coins upon a banker’s counter. Let
us suppose that, instead of one clerk, two were told
to count them together. When they came to a particular
coin upon which they disagreed, one insisting that
it was genuine and the other that it was counterfeit,
what would then happen, if they did their duty?
They would count the rest and lay that aside, reporting
the disagreement to their superior. The two Houses
of Congress have, however, no superior, except the
States and the people. To these there can be
no reference on the instant; and the action of the
two Houses must be final for the occasion.
There can be no decision of the Houses
if they disagree, and, as no other authority can decide,
there can be no decision at all. The counting,
including the selection, is an affirmative act; and
as two are to perform it, if performed at all, no
count or selection can be made when the two do not
concur. Two judges on the bench cannot render
a judgment when there is a disagreement between them.
No more can the two Houses of Congress. There
is here no pretense of alternative power, playing
back and forth between the President of the Senate
and the two Houses. If the former has not power
complete and exclusive, he has none. The result
must be that, what the two Houses do not agree to
count, cannot be counted.
WHAT VOTES SHOULD BE COUNTED
This is the second question.
The votes to be counted are the votes of the electors.
But who are the electors? The persons appointed
by the States, in the manner directed by their Legislatures
respectively. How is the fact of appointment
to be proved? These are the subordinate questions,
the answers to which go to make up the answer to the
main question.
What are the means of separating the
genuine from the counterfeit? Where are the tests
by which to distinguish the true votes from the false?
The words of the Constitution are
not many: “Each State shall appoint, in
such manner as the Legislature thereof may direct,
a number of electors,” who shall meet and vote,
“make distinct lists of all persons voted for
as President” ... “and of the number of
votes for each, which list, they shall sign and certify
and transmit sealed to the seat of the Government
of the United States, directed to the President of
the Senate.”
The State must appoint, and
the appointment must be made in such manner
as the Legislature thereof may direct.
Here are the two elements of a valid appointment,
and they must concur. An appointment not made
by the State, or not made in the manner directed by
its Legislature, is no appointment at all.
There must be State action
in the manner directed. If, for example,
an appointment were made by a State authority, such
as the Governor, without the sanction of the Legislature,
it would be void. If it were made by the people
in mass-convention, but not in a manner directed by
the Legislature, it would be void also. And if,
on the other hand, it were made in such manner as
the Legislature had directed, but not made by the
State, it would be equally invalid. Indeed, the
Legislature may itself have given a direction in contravention
of the State constitution, and thus the direction prove
a nullity. So, too, the Legislature may have acted
in contravention of the Federal Constitution, and
for that reason its direction may have been void.
The appointing power is the State, the manner of its
action is prescribed by the Legislature; the valid
authority and the valid manner of its exercise must
concur, to make a valid appointment.
If, therefore, the persons assuming
the office are not appointed by the State,
and in the manner directed by the Legislature,
they are not electors; that is to say, they are not
electors de jure; electors de facto
they can hardly become, since their functions exist
but for a moment, and with one act they perish.
What is an appointment by the State? How can
a State appoint? I answer, by the people,
the corporators of the body politic and corporate,
or by one of the departments of its government, as
established by its constitution. The power to
appoint cannot be renounced or divested. It must
ever remain in the State, a living power, to be called
into action at each recurring election. It cannot
be delegated, except as the different powers of the
State are by its constitution delegated to its great
departments of government. If it were otherwise,
it might be delegated to a foreign prince, and delegated
in perpetuity. It is no answer to say that such
a delegation would not be made, the question
is, whether it could be made, without violating
the Constitution of the country? I insist that
it could not; and that if the Legislature of New York
were to authorize our friend the Emperor Alexander,
or our excellent neighbor the Governor-General of
Canada, to appoint the thirty-five presidential electors
to which New York is entitled in the sum total of
the electoral colleges, and the electors thus appointed
were to receive the certificate of the Governor of
New York, and to meet, vote, and transmit their certificates
to Washington, the votes might be lawfully rejected.
Such an occurrence is in the highest degree improbable;
but stranger things than that have happened. The
Empress Catharine intervened in the election of the
kings of Poland, and the interference led to the downfall
of the government and the blotting of the country
from the map of Europe. Indeed, I venture to
express my belief, that such an intervention of foreign
influence in our elections would have been hardly
more startling to the imaginations of our fathers
than the spectacle which our own eyes have seen; federal
soldiers removing representatives from the Capitol
of one State, and stationed at the doors of another,
to inspect the certificates of members elected to
its Legislature.
Not to go abroad, however, for illustrations,
let us suppose that the General Court convened in
the State-House at Boston were to depute the State
of New York or the State of Virginia to appoint electors
for the State of Massachusetts, no man would be wild
enough to pronounce such a deputation valid.
It should seem to be certain, for a reason hardly
less satisfactory, that the Legislature of Massachusetts
could not authorize the Mayor of Boston or the town
council of Worcester to appoint her electors; and,
if that be so, and the rule is to prevail that, in
law, what cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly,
it should follow that the State could not delegate
to any other agency the power of appointment.
If a body called a returning board be so constituted
as that, in certain contingencies, it may depart from
the inquiry what votes have been cast, and cast the
votes itself, or by any sort of contrivance
do the same thing under a different name, or by a
roundabout process, it is, to that extent, an unlawful
body under the Federal Constitution. Assuming,
then, that a returning board has among its functions
that of rejecting the votes in particular districts,
for the reason either that they were affected by undue
influence, or that other voters were led by like influence
to refrain from voting, can such a function be valid
under the Constitution of the United States?
There is no question were of throwing out particular
votes for vices inherent in themselves, such as that
they were illegible, or were cast by disqualified
persons, and the like; but the question is of rejecting
the votes of a certain number say a thousand
voters either because they were unduly influenced,
or because another thousand, who might have voted,
were, by undue influences, prevented from voting at
all.
Whatever may be the law of a State
in respect to the choice of its own officers, it seems
most reasonable to hold that, under that common Constitution
which governs and provides for all the States alike,
when the only legitimate inquiry is whom has a particular
State appointed, in the manner directed by
its Legislature, and the Legislature has directed
the appointment to be made by a general election,
that is, by the votes of all qualified persons, the
only valid office of a returning board must be to
ascertain and declare how the State has actually voted,
not how it might or would have voted under other circumstances,
or, in other words, what is the number of legal votes
actually cast; not how many have been unduly influenced,
or how many other votes would have been cast in a different
state of affairs. I use the expression undue
influence, as more comprehensive than riot, bribery,
or intimidation, and including other forms of improper
influence, such as that of capital over labor.
The question should be put in a general form to be
correctly answered, because there is nothing in intimidation
by violence which would make it a good cause for exclusion,
more than that other kind of intimidation, which is
social or financial. If, in ascertaining the state
of the vote, it be lawful to inquire whether certain
voters were frightened by a rifle-club to stay away
from the polls, or to vote as the club dictated, it
must also be lawful to inquire whether the same number
of voters were induced to vote or not to vote by fear
that their discounts might be lessened at the village
bank, or their employment discontinued at the neighboring
factory. I state the proposition, therefore,
as one covering all kinds of undue influence.
I refrain, however, from going into the question whether
this influence was or was not exerted, for I am inquiring
into the law as applicable to certain alleged facts,
leaving the truth of the allegations to be dealt with
by others.
The sole object of all the machinery
of elections, the ballots, the ballot-boxes, the canvassers
and supervisors of elections, the returns and the
returning boards, is, to ascertain the will of the
people. Nobody supposes that that will is ascertained
to a certainty. An approximation only is possible
under our present system. To say nothing of the
exclusion of women from an expression of their will,
a portion only though it may be a large
portion of the men express theirs.
The sick, the infirm, the absent, say nothing.
The registration is always in excess of the vote,
and the number of voters falls short of the registration.
The reason is patent: many voters are absent
at the time of registration, or are otherwise unable
or unmindful to register; and when the time of voting
arrives many of those who are registered are absent
or prevented from attendance. The registration
may generally be had on any one of several days, while
the voting is to be done on one day. The machinery
is imperfect and clumsy at best; but that is not a
reason for making it worse, or depriving ourselves
of the advantages which it yields, notwithstanding
its imperfections. The nearest approach to absolute
justice that we can now hope to make is to take
the votes of all the voters who offer themselves,
and count the votes that are taken. Every
scheme of counting out legal votes cast, or counting
in votes not cast, must result in confusion, uncertainty,
and fraud. No matter how specious the argument
may be, it will always mislead, for the reason that
it must in its nature substitute conjecture for fact.
The vote must, of course, be legal, it must be intelligible;
but such a vote when offered must be taken, and when
taken counted.
The throwing out of all the votes
of certain districts is but another mode of accomplishing
the same result as would be effected by the rejection
and addition of votes in the cases supposed: for,
if there be 10,000 voters in the district, and 5,000
only vote, it can make no difference whether the 5,000
be rejected, or be allowed to remain and the same
number be added to the other side.
If the Legislature of a State were
to resolve beforehand that no votes should be taken
in certain counties or parishes, should we not say
that the vote of the remaining counties or parishes
would not express the vote of the State? If,
in a particular parish, with twenty polling-precincts,
ten of the precincts are so disturbed by violence
that no votes can be taken, and in the other ten there
is no violence, should the votes of the latter be
taken as the net result, or should no result be declared
because half of the voters are prevented from voting?
The practice of a State must be consistent with itself.
When the votes of three-fourths of a State are proffered
as the vote of the State, the votes of three-fourths
of a parish must be received as the vote of the parish.
If there was not a “fair and free election”
in one-fourth of the parishes, there was not a “fair
and free election” in the State; and the just
result should be, that, instead of rejecting the votes
of those parishes because a portion of the voters
were intimidated, the votes of the State should
be rejected altogether.
But why, let me ask, should lawful
votes in any case be rejected, because other lawful
votes might have been given? If they, whose votes
were cast, had prevented other votes from being also
cast, that might be a reason for punishing the former.
But if the former were blameless, where is the justice
of punishing them for the faults of others? Suppose
a parish with 10,000 persons entitled to vote, and
divided into ten precincts. Ordinarily only 8,000
will register and 6,000 vote; the vote of the 6,000
being assumed to be an expression of the will of the
10,000. At a particular election 3,000 persons
vote in five of the precincts. In the other five
only 1,000 vote, there being disturbances on or before
the day of election. It is alleged that the last
1,000 votes should not be counted. Why not?
Because, say the objectors, 2,000 persons did not
vote, and it is to be presumed, first, that they were
kept from the polls by fear, and, next, that if they
had voted at all, they would have outvoted the 1,000.
Are not these the merest assumptions? You cannot
get the truth without knowing the motives which kept
voters away, and how they would have voted if they
had come. You cannot know either with certainty,
without examining all the voters. And the theory
which would lead you to call them for examination
should also lead you to call all who in other cases
have not voted, to ask why they kept away, and how
they would have voted if they had been present.
The argument which justifies the exclusion in case
of intimidation would include all cases of absence
and of inquiry into what would have been the result
if there had been no absence. Intimidation is
one kind of undue influence; expectation of benefit
is another; fear of social ostracism is another:
will you go into them? There seems no middle
course between excluding all inquiry into the causes
of absence and the probable votes of the absent, and
allowing it in every instance where persons entitled
to vote have not voted. To my thinking, a certificate
given after the elimination of votes, in the manner
indicated, certifying that the electors have been
chosen by the people of the State, is a palpable falsehood.
It should have certified that they had been chosen
by the people of so many parishes or counties, out
of the whole number.
It is impossible, without deranging
our system of election, either to reject votes actually
cast, out of consideration for the motives with which
they were cast, or to add to them the supposed votes
which might have been cast. The ballot itself
is a standing protest against inquiry into motives.
It enjoins and protects the secret of the hand; much
more should it enjoin and protect the secret of the
heart. And as for adding votes, on the supposition
that they might or would have been cast but for untoward
circumstances, no plausible reason can be given for
it which would not apply to any case of disappointment
in the fullness of the vote. A rainy day of election
costs one of the parties thousands of ballots.
If it happen to rain on that day, why not order a
new election in better weather; or, to save that formality,
make an estimate of the number who would have attended
under a cloudless sky, and add their ballots to one
side or the other? The rejection of the votes
of a parish can be justified, if justifiable at all,
only on the ground that the votes cast do not give
the voice of the parish, either because they did not
express the real wishes of the voters, or because
they would have been overborne by other votes if they
could have been cast.
Does not the foregoing reasoning lead
to this conclusion, that whether the charges of intimidation
in certain counties or parishes of a State be founded
in fact or in error, they do not warrant the rejection
of the votes actually cast in those counties or parishes;
and, furthermore, that they who insist upon such rejection
must accept, as a logical conclusion, the rejection,
for a like reason, of the votes of the whole State?
I submit that such are the inevitable conclusions.
It is insisted, however, that this
is an inquiry which cannot be gone into in the present
state of the canvass. Certificates have been sent
to Washington, purporting to give the result of the
election. The question will probably arise, at
the meeting of the two Houses, in this manner:
Two certificates are required, one signed by the electors,
pursuant to the Constitution, certifying their own
votes; and the other signed by or under the direction
of the Governor of the State, pursuant to act of Congress,
certifying the appointment of the electors. Both
certificates are sent to the President of the Senate,
in one envelope. It may indeed happen that two
envelopes come from the same State, each containing
two certificates of rival governors, and rival electors.
If there is but one envelope, one of the certificates
which should be there may be omitted, or may be imperfect.
In all these cases, it is manifestly incumbent upon
the two Houses to receive or reject, in the exercise
of their judgment. But if one envelope only is
presented, containing the two certificates, both in
due form, and objection is nevertheless made that
the certificate of the appointment of electors is
false, can the objection be entertained? There
are those who affirm that it cannot. They reason
in this wise: The States are to appoint the electors,
and may therefore certify such as they please.
But is not that a non sequitur? The States
may appoint whom they please, in such manner as their
Legislatures have directed, but an appointment and
a certificate are different things. The latter
is, at the very best, only evidence of the former.
The fact to be determined is the appointment; the
certificate is produced as evidence; it may be controvertible
or incontrovertible, as the law may have provided,
but there is nothing in the nature of a certificate
which forbids inquiry into its verity; it is not a
revelation from above; it is a paper made by men,
fallible always, and sometimes dishonest as well as
fallible; and, if honest, often deceived. It is
made generally in secret and ex parte, without
hearing both sides, without oral testimony, without
cross-examination. Of such evidence it may be
safely affirmed, that it is never made final and conclusive
without positive law to that express effect.
Now, it may be competent for the Legislature
of a State, under its own constitution, to determine
how far one of its own records shall be conclusive
between its own citizens. It may enact, that the
certificate of a judge of a court of record, of a sheriff,
a county commissioner, a board of tax assessors, or
aboard of State canvassers, shall or shall not be
open to investigation. There is, however, no act
of Congress on the subject of the present inquiry,
and we are left to the Constitution itself, with such
guides to its true interpretation as are furnished
by just analogy and by history. If it can be shown
that the certificate was corruptly made, by the perpetration
of gross frauds in tampering with the returns, must
it nevertheless flaunt its falsehood in the faces
of us all, without the possibility of contradiction?
A President is to be declared elected for thirty-eight
States and forty-two millions of people; the declaration
depends upon the voice, we will suppose, of a single
State; that voice is uttered by her votes; to learn
what those votes are, we are referred to a certificate,
and told that we cannot go behind it. In such
case, to assert that the remaining thirty-seven States
are powerless to inquire into the getting up of this
certificate, on the demand of those who offer to prove
the fraud of the whole process, is to assert that we
are the slaves of fraud, and cannot take our necks
from the yoke. I do not believe that such is
the law of this land, and I give these reasons for
my belief.
In the absence of express enactments
to the contrary, any judge may inquire into any fact
necessary to his judgment. The point to be adjudged
and declared in the present case is, who has received
a majority of the electoral votes, that is, of valid
electoral votes, not who has received a majority of
certificates. A President is to be elected, not
by a preponderance of certification, but by a preponderance
of voting. The certificate is not the fact to
be proved, but evidence of the fact, and one kind
of evidence may be overcome by other and stronger
evidence, unless some positive law declares that the
weaker shall prevail over the stronger, the false over
the true. There may, as I have said, be cases
where, for the quieting of titles, or the ending of
controversies, a record or a certificate is made unanswerable;
that is, though it might be truthfully answered, the
law will not allow it to be answered. Such cases
are exceptional, and the burden of establishing them
rests upon him who propounds them. Let him, therefore,
who asserts that the certificate of a returning board
cannot be answered by any number of living witnesses
to the contrary, show that positive law which makes
it thus unanswerable. There is certainly nothing
in the Constitution of the United States which makes
it so, as there is no act of Congress to that effect.
A certificate of a board of returning
officers has nothing to liken it to a judicial record
of contentions between parties. The proceeding
is ex parte; or, if there be parties, the other
States of the Union are not represented, however much
their rights may be affected; the evidence is in part
at least by one-sided affidavits; the judges may be
interested and partial. What such a board has
about it to inspire confidence or command respect,
it is hard to perceive. If there be any presumption
in its favor, or in favor of the justice of its judgments,
the presumption is as far from indisputable as a disputable
presumption can ever be.
To recapitulate, we may formulate
the question in this manner: Whom has the
State appointed to vote in its behalf for President?
The manner of appointment is the vote of the people,
for the Legislature has so directed. Who, then,
are appointed by the people? To state the question
is nearly equivalent to stating what evidence is admissible;
for the question is not, who received the certificate,
but who received the votes; and any evidence showing
what votes were cast and for whom is pertinent and
must therefore be admissible, unless excluded by positive
law. The law by which this question is to be
decided is not State, but Federal. If it were
otherwise, the State officers might evade the Constitution
altogether, for this ordains that the appointment
shall be by the State, and in such manner as its Legislature
directs; but if the State certificate is conclusive
of the fact, the State authorities may altogether
refuse obedience to the constitution and laws, and
save themselves from the consequences by certifying
that they have obeyed them. And they may in like
manner defraud us of our rights, making resistance
impossible, by certifying that they have not defrauded.
Indeed, they might make shorter work of it, and omit
the election altogether, writing the certificate in
its stead.
If the Governor of Massachusetts were
to certify the election of the Tilden electors, and
their votes were to be sent to Washington, instead
of those which the Hayes electors have just given in
the face of the world, must the Tilden votes be counted?
Must this nation bow down before a falsehood?
To ask the question is to answer it. There is
no law to require it; there can be none until American
citizens become slaves. The nature of the question
to be determined, the absence of any positive law
to shut out pertinent evidence, the impolicy of such
an exclusion, its injustice, and the impossibility
of maintaining it, if by any fatality it were for
a time established all these considerations
go to make and fortify the position, that whatever
body has authority to decide how a State has voted,
has authority to draw information from all the sources
of knowledge. The superstitious veneration of
a certificate, which would implicitly believe it, and
shut the eye to other evidence, is as revolting as
that of the poor negro in the swamps of Congo, who
bows down before his fetich. The idolaters, mentioned
in Scripture, who took a tree out of the wood, burned
one part of it, hewed the other, and then worshiped
it, were only prototypes of the men of our day, who
bow down before a piece of paper, signed in secret
fourteen hundred miles away, asserting as true what
they know or believe to be false.
It were useless, therefore, to inquire
how far the laws of a State make the certificate of
a board of canvassers or of returns conclusive evidence
of the result of an election held in the State.
It maybe admitted that the Supreme Court of Louisiana,
for example, has denied its own competency to go behind
the certificate of the board; but even that decision
is entitled to no respect, being made in contravention
of an express provision of the State statute, as the
dissenting opinion of one of the judges clearly shows.
Every other State of the Union, save perhaps one,
has decided that the certificate is impeachable, even
in a case where the statute declares that the canvassers
shall “determine what persons have been elected.”
The opinion of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, an
extract from which is given in the Appendix, states
and decides the point with clearness and unanswerable
force.
If what has been said be founded in
sound reason, the two Houses of Congress, when inquiring
what votes are to be counted, have the right to go
behind the certificate of any officers of a State,
to ascertain who have and who have not been appointed
electors. The evidence which these Houses will
receive upon such inquiry it is for them and them
only to prescribe, in the performance of their highest
functions and the exercise of their sincerest judgment.
THE REMEDY FOR A WRONG COUNT
is the remaining question. Hitherto,
I have endeavored to state in a popular manner the
existing law, as I understand it. I will now ask
a consideration of the needs of future legislation.
If there be anything obscure in the present law, Congress
has the power to make it clear; if there be danger
in our present condition, Congress can remove the
danger. There are various ways of doing it.
One is to provide for a judicial committee
of the two Houses, to sit in judgment, as if they
were judges, and pronounce upon the result of the
evidence. The English House of Commons used to
reject or admit members, from considerations of party.
Englishmen have thought that they had at last succeeded
in establishing a tribunal which would decide with
impartiality and justice. We should be able to
devise means equally sure of arriving at a result
just in itself, and satisfactory to all. The
considerations in favor of a judicial committee of
the two Houses are cogent, though they may not be
conclusive. They are, the necessity of a speedy
decision, and the desirableness of keeping, if possible,
the ordinary courts out of contact with questions
of the greatest political significance.
But if it be found impossible to agree
upon the formation of such a committee, then a resort
to the courts should certainly be had. The public
conscience must be satisfied that the person sitting
in our highest seat of magistracy is there by a just
title; and it can be satisfied of that, in doubtful
cases, only by a judicial inquiry.
An act of Congress might provide either
for the case of a double declaration of the votes,
one by each House of Congress, or of a single declaration
by the two Houses acting in concert. In either
case the Supreme Court could be reached only by appeal,
and the court of first instance might be either the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia or any of
the Circuit Courts. The Court of the District
should seem to be the most convenient, the most speedy,
and the most appropriate, as being at the seat of
Government.
For the case of a double declaration
it might be provided, that if, upon the counting of
the votes the Senate should find one person elected
and the House another, an information should be immediately
filed in the Supreme Court of the District, in the
name of United States, against both the persons thus
designated, alleging the fact, and calling upon each
to sustain his title. The difficulty of this
process would be how to expedite the proceedings so
that a decision should be had before the 4th of March,
in order to avoid an interregnum. But I think
this difficulty could be overcome. To this end,
the time of the courts engaged in the case should be
set apart for it. The rival claimants would naturally
be in Washington, prepared for the investigation.
The evidence previously taken by the two Houses for
they would assuredly have taken it could
be used, with the proper guards against hearsay testimony,
and any additional evidence necessary would probably
be ready, if the claimants or their friends knew beforehand
that a trial was likely to be had. It might indeed
happen that the questions to be decided would involve
little dispute about facts; as, for example, the present
Oregon case. It should be provided that the trial
must be concluded and judgment pronounced within a
certain number of days, either party being at liberty
to appeal, within twenty-four hours after the judgment,
to the Supreme Court of the United States, by which
the appeal should be heard and decided before the
4th day of March.
In case of a single declaration, and
consequent induction into office, an information might
be filed in the Supreme Court of the District in the
names of the United States and the claimant, against
the incumbent, and proceedings carried on in the ordinary
manner of proceedings in the nature of quo warranto.
Any lawyer could readily frame a bill
to embrace these several provisions. An amendment
of the Constitution would not be necessary. The
provisions would operate as a check upon fraud.
They would furnish a more certain means of establishing
the right. The objection that the courts would
thus be brought into connection with politics is the
only objection. But the questions which they
would be called upon to decide, would be questions
of law and fact, judicial in their character, and
kindred to those which the courts are every day called
upon to adjudge. The greatness of the station
is only a greater reason for judicial investigation.
The dignity of the presidential office is not accepted
as a reason why the incumbent should not be impeached
and tried. It can be no more a reason why a usurper
should not be ousted and a rightful claimant admitted.
The President is undoubtedly higher in dignity and
greater in power than the Governor of a State, but
the reasons why the title of a Governor should be
subjected to judicial scrutiny are of the same kind
as those which go to show that the title of a President
of the United States should be subjected, upon occasion,
to a like scrutiny. The process was tried and
found useful in the Capitol of Wisconsin, and, for
similar reasons, it may be tried and found useful
in the Capitol of the Union. So far from degrading
the office, or offending the people to whom the office
belongs, it can but help to make fraud less defiant
and right more safe, and add a new crown to the majesty
of law. That triumph of peace and justice in
Wisconsin has, to the eye of reason, given an added
glory to her prairies and hills, and a brighter light
to the waters of her shining lakes.