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<h2> Chapter V: Necessity Of Examining The Condition Of The States—Part II </h2>
<p>What, then, is the uniform plan on which the government is conducted, and
how is the compliance of the counties and their magistrates or the
townships and their officers enforced? In the States of New England the
legislative authority embraces more subjects than it does in France; the
legislator penetrates to the very core of the administration; the law
descends to the most minute details; the same enactment prescribes the
principle and the method of its application, and thus imposes a multitude
of strict and rigorously defined obligations on the secondary
functionaries of the State. The consequence of this is that if all the
secondary functionaries of the administration conform to the law, society
in all its branches proceeds with the greatest uniformity: the difficulty
remains of compelling the secondary functionaries of the administration to
conform to the law. It may be affirmed that, in general, society has only
two methods of enforcing the execution of the laws at its disposal: a
discretionary power may be entrusted to a superior functionary of
directing all the others, and of cashiering them in case of disobedience;
or the courts of justice may be authorized to inflict judicial penalties
on the offender: but these two methods are not always available.</p>
<p>The right of directing a civil officer presupposes that of cashiering him
if he does not obey orders, and of rewarding him by promotion if he
fulfils his duties with propriety. But an elected magistrate can neither
be cashiered nor promoted. All elective functions are inalienable until
their term is expired. In fact, the elected magistrate has nothing either
to expect or to fear from his constituents; and when all public offices
are filled by ballot there can be no series of official dignities, because
the double right of commanding and of enforcing obedience can never be
vested in the same individual, and because the power of issuing an order
can never be joined to that of inflicting a punishment or bestowing a
reward.</p>
<p>The communities therefore in which the secondary functionaries of the
government are elected are perforce obliged to make great use of judicial
penalties as a means of administration. This is not evident at first
sight; for those in power are apt to look upon the institution of elective
functionaries as one concession, and the subjection of the elected
magistrate to the judges of the land as another. They are equally averse
to both these innovations; and as they are more pressingly solicited to
grant the former than the latter, they accede to the election of the
magistrate, and leave him independent of the judicial power. Nevertheless,
the second of these measures is the only thing that can possibly
counterbalance the first; and it will be found that an elective authority
which is not subject to judicial power will, sooner or later, either elude
all control or be destroyed. The courts of justice are the only possible
medium between the central power and the administrative bodies; they alone
can compel the elected functionary to obey, without violating the rights
of the elector. The extension of judicial power in the political world
ought therefore to be in the exact ratio of the extension of elective
offices: if these two institutions do not go hand in hand, the State must
fall into anarchy or into subjection.</p>
<p>It has always been remarked that habits of legal business do not render
men apt to the exercise of administrative authority. The Americans have
borrowed from the English, their fathers, the idea of an institution which
is unknown upon the continent of Europe: I allude to that of the Justices
of the Peace. The Justice of the Peace is a sort of mezzo termine between
the magistrate and the man of the world, between the civil officer and the
judge. A justice of the peace is a well-informed citizen, though he is not
necessarily versed in the knowledge of the laws. His office simply obliges
him to execute the police regulations of society; a task in which good
sense and integrity are of more avail than legal science. The justice
introduces into the administration a certain taste for established forms
and publicity, which renders him a most unserviceable instrument of
despotism; and, on the other hand, he is not blinded by those
superstitions which render legal officers unfit members of a government.
The Americans have adopted the system of the English justices of the
peace, but they have deprived it of that aristocratic character which is
discernible in the mother-country. The Governor of Massachusetts *p
appoints a certain number of justices of the peace in every county, whose
functions last seven years. *q He further designates three individuals
from amongst the whole body of justices who form in each county what is
called the Court of Sessions. The justices take a personal share in public
business; they are sometimes entrusted with administrative functions in
conjunction with elected officers, *r they sometimes constitute a
tribunal, before which the magistrates summarily prosecute a refractory
citizen, or the citizens inform against the abuses of the magistrate. But
it is in the Court of Sessions that they exercise their most important
functions. This court meets twice a year in the county town; in
Massachusetts it is empowered to enforce the obedience of the greater
number *s of public officers. *t It must be observed, that in the State of
Massachusetts the Court of Sessions is at the same time an administrative
body, properly so called, and a political tribunal. It has been asserted
that the county is a purely administrative division. The Court of Sessions
presides over that small number of affairs which, as they concern several
townships, or all the townships of the county in common, cannot be
entrusted to any one of them in particular. *u In all that concerns county
business the duties of the Court of Sessions are purely administrative;
and if in its investigations it occasionally borrows the forms of judicial
procedure, it is only with a view to its own information, *v or as a
guarantee to the community over which it presides. But when the
administration of the township is brought before it, it always acts as a
judicial body, and in some few cases as an official assembly.</p>
<p class="foot">
p <br/> [ We shall hereafter learn what a Governor is: I shall content
myself with remarking in this place that he represents the executive power
of the whole State.]</p>
<p class="foot">
q <br/> [ See the Constitution of Massachusetts, chap. II. sect. 1.
Section 9; chap. III. Section 3.]</p>
<p class="foot">
r <br/> [ Thus, for example, a stranger arrives in a township from a
country where a contagious disease prevails, and he falls ill. Two
justices of the peace can, with the assent of the selectmen, order the
sheriff of the county to remove and take care of him.—Act of June
22, 1797, vol. i. p. 540.</p>
<p>In general the justices interfere in all the important acts of the
administration, and give them a semi-judicial character.] [Footnote s: I
say the greater number, because certain administrative misdemeanors are
brought before ordinary tribunals. If, for instance, a township refuses to
make the necessary expenditure for its schools or to name a
school-committee, it is liable to a heavy fine. But this penalty is
pronounced by the Supreme Judicial Court or the Court of Common Pleas. See
Act of March 10, 1827, Laws of Massachusetts, vol. iii. p. 190. Or when a
township neglects to provide the necessary war-stores.—Act of
February 21, 1822: Id., vol. ii. p. 570.]</p>
<p class="foot">
t <br/> [ In their individual capacity the justices of the peace take a
part in the business of the counties and townships.] [Footnote u: These
affairs may be brought under the following heads:—1. The erection of
prisons and courts of justice. 2. The county budget, which is afterwards
voted by the State. 3. The distribution of the taxes so voted. 4. Grants
of certain patents. 5. The laying down and repairs of the country roads.]</p>
<p class="foot">
v <br/> [ Thus, when a road is under consideration, almost all
difficulties are disposed of by the aid of the jury.]</p>
<p>The first difficulty is to procure the obedience of an authority as
entirely independent of the general laws of the State as the township is.
We have stated that assessors are annually named by the town-meetings to
levy the taxes. If a township attempts to evade the payment of the taxes
by neglecting to name its assessors, the Court of Sessions condemns it to
a heavy penalty. *w The fine is levied on each of the inhabitants; and the
sheriff of the county, who is the officer of justice, executes the
mandate. Thus it is that in the United States the authority of the
Government is mysteriously concealed under the forms of a judicial
sentence; and its influence is at the same time fortified by that
irresistible power with which men have invested the formalities of law.</p>
<p class="foot">
w <br/> [ See Act of February 20, 1786, Laws of Massachusetts, vol. i. p.
217.]</p>
<p>These proceedings are easy to follow and to understand. The demands made
upon a township are in general plain and accurately defined; they consist
in a simple fact without any complication, or in a principle without its
application in detail. *x But the difficulty increases when it is not the
obedience of the township, but that of the town officers which is to be
enforced. All the reprehensible actions of which a public functionary may
be guilty are reducible to the following heads:</p>
<p class="foot">
x <br/> [ There is an indirect method of enforcing the obedience of a
township. Suppose that the funds which the law demands for the maintenance
of the roads have not been voted, the town surveyor is then authorized, ex
officio, to levy the supplies. As he is personally responsible to private
individuals for the state of the roads, and indictable before the Court of
Sessions, he is sure to employ the extraordinary right which the law gives
him against the township. Thus by threatening the officer the Court of
Sessions exacts compliance from the town. See Act of March 5, 1787, Id.,
vol. i. p. 305.]</p>
<p>He may execute the law without energy or zeal;</p>
<p>He may neglect to execute the law;</p>
<p>He may do what the law enjoins him not to do.</p>
<p>The last two violations of duty can alone come under the cognizance of a
tribunal; a positive and appreciable fact is the indispensable foundation
of an action at law. Thus, if the selectmen omit to fulfil the legal
formalities usual at town elections, they may be condemned to pay a fine;
*y but when the public officer performs his duty without ability, and when
he obeys the letter of the law without zeal or energy, he is at least
beyond the reach of judicial interference. The Court of Sessions, even
when it is invested with its official powers, is in this case unable to
compel him to a more satisfactory obedience. The fear of removal is the
only check to these quasi-offences; and as the Court of Sessions does not
originate the town authorities, it cannot remove functionaries whom it
does not appoint. Moreover, a perpetual investigation would be necessary
to convict the officer of negligence or lukewarmness; and the Court of
Sessions sits but twice a year and then only judges such offences as are
brought before its notice. The only security of that active and
enlightened obedience which a court of justice cannot impose upon public
officers lies in the possibility of their arbitrary removal. In France
this security is sought for in powers exercised by the heads of the
administration; in America it is sought for in the principle of election.</p>
<p class="foot">
y <br/> [ Laws of Massachusetts, vol. ii. p. 45.]</p>
<p>Thus, to recapitulate in a few words what I have been showing: If a public
officer in New England commits a crime in the exercise of his functions,
the ordinary courts of justice are always called upon to pass sentence
upon him. If he commits a fault in his official capacity, a purely
administrative tribunal is empowered to punish him; and, if the affair is
important or urgent, the judge supplies the omission of the functionary.
*z Lastly, if the same individual is guilty of one of those intangible
offences of which human justice has no cognizance, he annually appears
before a tribunal from which there is no appeal, which can at once reduce
him to insignificance and deprive him of his charge. This system
undoubtedly possesses great advantages, but its execution is attended with
a practical difficulty which it is important to point out.</p>
<p class="foot">
z <br/> [ If, for instance, a township persists in refusing to name its
assessors, the Court of Sessions nominates them; and the magistrates thus
appointed are invested with the same authority as elected officers. See
the Act quoted above, February 20, 1787.]</p>
<p>I have already observed that the administrative tribunal, which is called
the Court of Sessions, has no right of inspection over the town officers.
It can only interfere when the conduct of a magistrate is specially
brought under its notice; and this is the delicate part of the system. The
Americans of New England are unacquainted with the office of public
prosecutor in the Court of Sessions, *a and it may readily be perceived
that it could not have been established without difficulty. If an accusing
magistrate had merely been appointed in the chief town of each county, and
if he had been unassisted by agents in the townships, he would not have
been better acquainted with what was going on in the county than the
members of the Court of Sessions. But to appoint agents in each township
would have been to centre in his person the most formidable of powers,
that of a judicial administration. Moreover, laws are the children of
habit, and nothing of the kind exists in the legislation of England. The
Americans have therefore divided the offices of inspection and of
prosecution, as well as all the other functions of the administration.
Grand jurors are bound by the law to apprise the court to which they
belong of all the misdemeanors which may have been committed in their county.
*b There are certain great offences which are officially prosecuted by the
States; *c but more frequently the task of punishing delinquents devolves
upon the fiscal officer, whose province it is to receive the fine: thus
the treasurer of the township is charged with the prosecution of such
administrative offences as fall under his notice. But a more special
appeal is made by American legislation to the private interest of the
citizen; *d and this great principle is constantly to be met with in
studying the laws of the United States. American legislators are more apt
to give men credit for intelligence than for honesty, and they rely not a
little on personal cupidity for the execution of the laws. When an
individual is really and sensibly injured by an administrative abuse, it
is natural that his personal interest should induce him to prosecute. But
if a legal formality be required, which, however advantageous to the
community, is of small importance to individuals, plaintiffs may be less
easily found; and thus, by a tacit agreement, the laws may fall into
disuse. Reduced by their system to this extremity, the Americans are
obliged to encourage informers by bestowing on them a portion of the
penalty in certain cases, *e and to insure the execution of the laws by
the dangerous expedient of degrading the morals of the people. The only
administrative authority above the county magistrates is, properly
speaking, that of the Government.</p>
<p class="foot">
a <br/> [ I say the Court of Sessions, because in common courts there is a
magistrate who exercises some of the functions of a public prosecutor.]</p>
<p class="foot">
b <br/> [ The grand-jurors are, for instance, bound to inform the court of
the bad state of the roads.—Laws of Massachusetts, vol. i. p. 308.]</p>
<p class="foot">
c <br/> [ If, for instance, the treasurer of the county holds back his
accounts.—Laws of Massachusetts, vol. i. p. 406.] [Footnote d: Thus,
if a private individual breaks down or is wounded in consequence of the
badness of a road, he can sue the township or the county for damages at
the sessions.—Laws of Massachusetts, vol. i. p. 309.]</p>
<p class="foot">
e <br/> [ In cases of invasion or insurrection, if the town-officers
neglect to furnish the necessary stores and ammunition for the militia,
the township may be condemned to a fine of from $200 to $500. It may
readily be imagined that in such a case it might happen that no one cared
to prosecute; hence the law adds that all the citizens may indict offences
of this kind, and that half of the fine shall belong to the plaintiff. See
Act of March 6, 1810, vol. ii. p. 236. The same clause is frequently to be
met with in the law of Massachusetts. Not only are private individuals
thus incited to prosecute the public officers, but the public officers are
encouraged in the same manner to bring the disobedience of private
individuals to justice. If a citizen refuses to perform the work which has
been assigned to him upon a road, the road surveyor may prosecute him, and
he receives half the penalty for himself. See the Laws above quoted, vol.
i. p. 308.]</p>
<p>General Remarks On The Administration Of The United States Differences of
the States of the Union in their system of administration—Activity
and perfection of the local authorities decrease towards the South—Power
of the magistrate increases; that of the elector diminishes—Administration
passes from the township to the county—States of New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania—Principles of administration applicable to the whole
Union—Election of public officers, and inalienability of their
functions—Absence of gradation of ranks—Introduction of
judicial resources into the administration.</p>
<p>I have already premised that, after having examined the constitution of
the township and the county of New England in detail, I should take a
general view of the remainder of the Union. Townships and a local activity
exist in every State; but in no part of the confederation is a township to
be met with precisely similar to those of New England. The more we descend
towards the South, the less active does the business of the township or
parish become; the number of magistrates, of functions, and of rights
decreases; the population exercises a less immediate influence on affairs;
town meetings are less frequent, and the subjects of debate less numerous.
The power of the elected magistrate is augmented and that of the elector
diminished, whilst the public spirit of the local communities is less
awakened and less influential. *f These differences may be perceived to a
certain extent in the State of New York; they are very sensible in
Pennsylvania; but they become less striking as we advance to the
northwest. The majority of the emigrants who settle in the northwestern
States are natives of New England, and they carry the habits of their
mother country with them into that which they adopt. A township in Ohio is
by no means dissimilar from a township in Massachusetts.</p>
<p class="foot">
f <br/> [ For details see the Revised Statutes of the State of New York,
part i. chap. xi. vol. i. pp. 336-364, entitled, "Of the Powers, Duties,
and Privileges of Towns."</p>
<p>See in the Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania, the words Assessors,
Collector, Constables, Overseer of the Poor, Supervisors of Highways; and
in the Acts of a general nature of the State of Ohio, the Act of February
25, 1834, relating to townships, p. 412; besides the peculiar dispositions
relating to divers town-officers, such as Township's Clerk, Trustees,
Overseers of the Poor, Fence Viewers, Appraisers of Property, Township's
Treasurer, Constables, Supervisors of Highways.]</p>
<p>We have seen that in Massachusetts the mainspring of public administration
lies in the township. It forms the common centre of the interests and
affections of the citizens. But this ceases to be the case as we descend
to States in which knowledge is less generally diffused, and where the
township consequently offers fewer guarantees of a wise and active
administration. As we leave New England, therefore, we find that the
importance of the town is gradually transferred to the county, which
becomes the centre of administration, and the intermediate power between
the Government and the citizen. In Massachusetts the business of the
county is conducted by the Court of Sessions, which is composed of a
quorum named by the Governor and his council; but the county has no
representative assembly, and its expenditure is voted by the national
legislature. In the great State of New York, on the contrary, and in those
of Ohio and Pennsylvania, the inhabitants of each county choose a certain
number of representatives, who constitute the assembly of the county. *g
The county assembly has the right of taxing the inhabitants to a certain
extent; and in this respect it enjoys the privileges of a real legislative
body: at the same time it exercises an executive power in the county,
frequently directs the administration of the townships, and restricts
their authority within much narrower bounds than in Massachusetts.</p>
<p class="foot">
g <br/> [ See the Revised Statutes of the State of New York, part i. chap.
xi. vol. i. p. 340. Id. chap. xii. p. 366; also in the Acts of the State
of Ohio, an act relating to county commissioners, February 25, 1824, p.
263. See the Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania, at the words County-rates
and Levies, p. 170. In the State of New York each township elects a
representative, who has a share in the administration of the county as
well as in that of the township.]</p>
<p>Such are the principal differences which the systems of county and town
administration present in the Federal States. Were it my intention to
examine the provisions of American law minutely, I should have to point
out still further differences in the executive details of the several
communities. But what I have already said may suffice to show the general
principles on which the administration of the United States rests. These
principles are differently applied; their consequences are more or less
numerous in various localities; but they are always substantially the
same. The laws differ, and their outward features change, but their
character does not vary. If the township and the county are not everywhere
constituted in the same manner, it is at least true that in the United
States the county and the township are always based upon the same
principle, namely, that everyone is the best judge of what concerns
himself alone, and the most proper person to supply his private wants. The
township and the county are therefore bound to take care of their special
interests: the State governs, but it does not interfere with their
administration. Exceptions to this rule may be met with, but not a
contrary principle.</p>
<p>The first consequence of this doctrine has been to cause all the
magistrates to be chosen either by or at least from amongst the citizens.
As the officers are everywhere elected or appointed for a certain period,
it has been impossible to establish the rules of a dependent series of
authorities; there are almost as many independent functionaries as there
are functions, and the executive power is disseminated in a multitude of
hands. Hence arose the indispensable necessity of introducing the control
of the courts of justice over the administration, and the system of
pecuniary penalties, by which the secondary bodies and their
representatives are constrained to obey the laws. This system obtains from
one end of the Union to the other. The power of punishing the misconduct
of public officers, or of performing the part of the executive in urgent
cases, has not, however, been bestowed on the same judges in all the
States. The Anglo-Americans derived the institution of justices of the
peace from a common source; but although it exists in all the States, it
is not always turned to the same use. The justices of the peace everywhere
participate in the administration of the townships and the counties, *h
either as public officers or as the judges of public misdemeanors, but in
most of the States the more important classes of public offences come
under the cognizance of the ordinary tribunals.</p>
<p class="foot">
h <br/> [ In some of the Southern States the county courts are charged
with all the details of the administration. See the Statutes of the State
of Tennessee, arts. Judiciary, Taxes, etc.]</p>
<p>The election of public officers, or the inalienability of their functions,
the absence of a gradation of powers, and the introduction of a judicial
control over the secondary branches of the administration, are the
universal characteristics of the American system from Maine to the
Floridas. In some States (and that of New York has advanced most in this
direction) traces of a centralized administration begin to be discernible.
In the State of New York the officers of the central government exercise,
in certain cases, a sort of inspection or control over the secondary
bodies. *i</p>
<p class="foot">
i <br/> [ For instance, the direction of public instruction centres in the
hands of the Government. The legislature names the members of the
University, who are denominated Regents; the Governor and
Lieutentant-Governor of the State are necessarily of the number.—Revised
Statutes, vol. i. p. 455. The Regents of the University annually visit the
colleges and academies, and make their report to the legislature. Their
superintendence is not inefficient, for several reasons: the colleges in
order to become corporations stand in need of a charter, which is only
granted on the recommendation of the Regents; every year funds are
distributed by the State for the encouragement of learning, and the
Regents are the distributors of this money. See chap. xv. "Instruction,"
Revised Statutes, vol. i. p. 455.</p>
<p>The school-commissioners are obliged to send an annual report to the
Superintendent of the Republic.—Id. p. 488.</p>
<p>A similar report is annually made to the same person on the number and
condition of the poor.—Id. p. 631.]</p>
<p>At other times they constitute a court of appeal for the decision of
affairs. *j In the State of New York judicial penalties are less used than
in other parts as a means of administration, and the right of prosecuting
the offences of public officers is vested in fewer hands. *k The same
tendency is faintly observable in some other States; *l but in general the
prominent feature of the administration in the United States is its
excessive local independence.</p>
<p class="foot">
j <br/> [ If any one conceives himself to be wronged by the
school-commissioners (who are town-officers), he can appeal to the
superintendent of the primary schools, whose decision is final.—Revised
Statutes, vol. i. p. 487.</p>
<p>Provisions similar to those above cited are to be met with from time to
time in the laws of the State of New York; but in general these attempts
at centralization are weak and unproductive. The great authorities of the
State have the right of watching and controlling the subordinate agents,
without that of rewarding or punishing them. The same individual is never
empowered to give an order and to punish disobedience; he has therefore
the right of commanding, without the means of exacting compliance. In 1830
the Superintendent of Schools complained in his Annual Report addressed to
the legislature that several school-commissioners had neglected,
notwithstanding his application, to furnish him with the accounts which
were due. He added that if this omission continued he should be obliged to
prosecute them, as the law directs, before the proper tribunals.]</p>
<p class="foot">
k <br/> [ Thus the district-attorney is directed to recover all fines
below the sum of fifty dollars, unless such a right has been specially
awarded to another magistrate.—Revised Statutes, vol. i. p. 383.]</p>
<p class="foot">
l <br/> [ Several traces of centralization may be discovered in
Massachusetts; for instance, the committees of the town-schools are
directed to make an annual report to the Secretary of State. See Laws of
Massachusetts, vol. i. p. 367.]</p>
<p>Of The State</p>
<p>I have described the townships and the administration; it now remains for
me to speak of the State and the Government. This is ground I may pass
over rapidly, without fear of being misunderstood; for all I have to say
is to be found in written forms of the various constitutions, which are
easily to be procured. These constitutions rest upon a simple and rational
theory; their forms have been adopted by all constitutional nations, and
are become familiar to us. In this place, therefore, it is only necessary
for me to give a short analysis; I shall endeavor afterwards to pass
judgment upon what I now describe.</p>
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