Slave Trade

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“The migration or importation of such persons as any of the states now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by Congress prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a tax or duty may be imposed on such importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each person.” Article 1, Section 9, clause 1, US Constitution.

This clause deals with a compromise made by the Founders concerning the slave trade. In this post, I will attempt to give you some of the background and thinking of the times on this “nefarious institution” and “curse of heaven”. Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania on the floor of the Constitutional Convention spoke these words in 1787. You can read about his speech at this web site: http://www.mrsoshouse.com/puzpro/gouvmorrislavery.html

The first debate during the Convention concerning slavery was concerning representation. Please see my post on Article 1, Section 2, Clause 3 – https://barbbaran.wordpress.com/2013/02/27/the-great-compromise/

This second debate had to do with the Congress’ power to regulate commerce. The Southern states felt that if Congress had unrestricted power to regulate commerce that they could use that power to restrict or outlaw the slave trade. They saw this as a threat to their economic interests.

The Slave Trade Clause is the first restraint on the power of Congress in the document. It is ahead of habeas corpus.

There was much debate. The issue went from the Committee of Details to the Committee of Eleven. There, the compromise was hammered out. The final clause stated that the slave trade would continue unfettered by Congress for 20 years. There was a $10 tax imposed on the slave-owners for each person who was a brought here as a slave.

It should be noted that many of the delegates thought slavery to be immoral. According to Matthew Spalding, Vice President of American Studies, Director, B. Kenneth Simon Center for Principles and Politics, writing for Heritage Foundation: “It is significant that the words slave and slavery are not used in the Constitution of 1787, and that the Framers used the word person rather than property. This would assure, as Madison explained in The Federalist No. 54, that a slave would be regarded “as a moral person, not as a mere article of property.” It was in the context of the slave trade debate at the Constitutional Convention that Madison argued that it was “wrong to admit in the Constitution the idea that there could be property in men.”

On January 1, 1808, Congress passed the legislation for federal prohibition of slave trade. This was the first day following the provision in the Constitution. President Thomas Jefferson signed this into law.

“For God shows no partiality [Undue favor or unfairness; with Him one man is not different from another].” Romans 2:11 Amplified Bible

I cannot say that there is any benefit to “we the people” for this part of the document.

References:

http://www.heritage.org/constitution/#!/articles/1/essays/60/slave-trade

Findlay, Bruce Allyn and Findlay, Esther Blair. Your Rugged Constitution. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1950

McClellan, James. Liberty, Order, and Justice. Indianapolis, Liberty Fund, Inc., 2000

Skousen, W. Cleon. The 5000 Year Leap. National Center for Constitutional Studies, 2006

Amplified Bible

That Crazy Little Thing Called Law

Supreme_Court_US_2010

As discussed in my previous post, the Commerce Clause has changed in meaning and scope over the years since it was written. In order to take the Commerce Clause back to the Original Intent, we would have to repeal the New Deal, Great Society, and a vast amount of federal legislation and regulation that has been put in place over the last 2/3rd’s of the 20th Century.

Constitutional language varies in level of abstraction or generality. Some language is more concrete, and some is less concrete. The original definition of interstate commerce was the buying and selling of goods between states. The definition now includes the power to directly regulate labor, manufacturing, agriculture, and industry. Over the years, the Courts have expanded the Commerce Clause to include all of these activities.

According to Bork and Troy in an Internet article called, “Locating the Boundaries: The Scope of Congress’s Power to Regulate Commerce”:
“In generally ascending order of breadth, various writers and Justices have defined “commerce” as:
1. The trafficking and trading of economic commodities
2. The trafficking and trading of economic commodities and the modes of their transportation
3. The trafficking and trading of any kind of commodity and the mode of its transportation
4. The movement of any thing or any person and its mode of transportation
5. Economic activity that substantially or causally impacts on the trafficking, trading, or transportation of commodities
6. Any human activity or other phenomenon that has any ultimate impact on activities in more states than one”

From the time of the Founding, Congress had little reason to address the Commerce Clause for the next century. The Founders did not consider the activities that preceded trade to be part of commerce (manufacturing, agriculture).
Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist 12, states, “”Could that which procures a freer vent for the products of the earth, which is the most powerful instrument in increasing the quantity of money in a state – could that, in fine (commerce), which is the faithful handmaid of labor and industry…”

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John Marshall

In 1824, under the John Marshall Court, the case of Gibbons v. Ogden was heard. This case involved a conflict between two steamship companies. The two lines wanted to travel between New York and New Jersey. The question was whether “commerce” included navigation. The court concluded that it did. Chief Justice John Marshall said that the way Congress decides to regulate commerce is completely at the discretion of Congress. This was an opening for a future broader interpretation of this clause.

From 1895 until 1938, the Courts experimented with different opinions of the Commerce Clause. By1938, according to David F. Forte, Professor of Law, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, the court abandoned any serious role in monitoring Congress’ use of this enumerated power.

According to Bork and Troy, by the end of the 19th Century, the Courts had clarified three key aspects:
1. Although the lines between the state and federal powers remain fuzzy, the Court recognized that some power was concurrent (exist together).
2. In Asper Kidd v. Miln the Court decided that the State regulatory power as it and effects on interstate commerce was broad, but that the State would not be permitted to invade Federal power.
3. The term “commerce” was understood to include buying and selling, but that it did not include pre-commerce production. The pre-commerce production still remained in control of the State.

In 1895, US v. E C Knight Co declared that the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (limits cartels and monopolies) could not apply to monopolies in manufacturing. The case involved sugar production. The Court ruled that the federal government could not become involved in this production because it was local and therefore under exclusive control of the states.
The Court’s definition of manufacturing was stated as, “fashioning raw materials into a change of form for use…the buying and selling and the transportation indicated thereto constitute commerce.”

In 1903, the Court heard the case of Champion v. Ames. This case concerned the shipping of lottery tickets across state lines. The Court upheld the prohibition of the shipment of these tickets not because they were goods, but because they were objects encouraging immorality. This impinged upon the policing power of the States. This was the first example of the Courts prohibiting transportation of goods as well as controlling the exchange.
This was the first time that the Courts blessed Congressional regulation of interstate commerce for reasons that had nothing to do with preserving the free flow of goods and services across state lines.

In 1936, in the case of Carter v. Carter Coal Company, the Court still defined commerce as, “intercourse for the purposes of trade”. The Court decided that the Commerce Clause did not give Congress the power to regulate coal production before it entered into commerce. Other laws at the time were upheld if they had a substantive effect on interstate activity.

Until 1936, the Court decisions were straightforward, for the most part, and there was a distinction between commerce and manufacturing. In 1937, during the Progressive era, there was a change in the understanding of commerce.

In 1937, during the case of NLRB v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation, Justice Cardozi held the more narrow view that commerce power could not reach out to areas that were indirect and remote. However, after his death, the new liberal Court in 1941 embraced an expansive interpretation of the law.

In 1941, in the case of US v. Darby, the Court ruled to uphold the Fair Labor Relations Act of 1936. This law had previously been the responsibility of the States to enforce. The Federal government was now in the role of regulating employment under the Commerce Clause. They prohibited shipments of products by manufacturers who did not comply with the Fair Labor Relations Act.

In 1942, the case of Wichard v. Filburn is considered another true turning point for the Commerce Clause. This case allowed the federal government to regulate economics. In this case, a wheat farmer was fined for growing wheat for his family without penalty. The reasoning of the Court was that growing wheat for his family would interfere with the interstate wheat market.

According to Forte, “By these means, the Court turned the commerce power into the equivalent of a general regulatory power and undid the Framers’ original structure of limited and delegated powers, as also observed by Justice Clarence Thomas in his dissent in Gonzales v. Raich (2005).”

At the close of the 20th Century, cases that were heard in the Rehnquist court were an attempt to expand the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

One example was US v. Lopez, 1995. This case was an attempt to criminalize possession of guns near a school (Gun Free School Zones Act). The Court struck this down because Congress does not have the power to control local school laws and because the action of Lopez did not interfere with interstate commerce.

Justice Rehnquist declared that the “commerce power extends to (1) the use of the channels of interstate commerce; (2) the regulation of instrumentalities of interstate commerce, or person or things in interstate commerce; and (3) a local commercial activity having a substantial relation to interstate commerce. Possessing a gun is not a commercial activity, even though gun violence affects commerce.”

In another example, In the US v. Morrison (2000), the Court struck down the concept that a victim could sue their attacker in a federal court under the Commerce Clause. This was part of the Violence Against Women Act. The Court ruled that non-economic activities cannot be connected to the interstate commerce.

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John Roberts

On June 28, 2012, the Court, under Chief Justice John Roberts, ruled on the Affordable Care Act. The question before the court was in constitutionality of the individual mandate. The individual mandate is defined, as “is a requirement by law that certain persons purchase or otherwise obtain a good or service”.

The Court ruled that the mandate was constitutional. Further analysis of the ruling shows that there are two parts to the decision. The question before the Court was whether this mandate is constitutional under the Tax and Spend Clause as well as under the Commerce Clause.

In writing for the majority, Justice Roberts shows that the mandate is indeed a tax. He wrote:
“Under the mandate, if an individual does not maintain health insurance, the only consequence is that he must make an additional payment to the IRS when he pays his taxes. That, according to the Government, means the mandate can be regarded as establishing condition – not owning health insurance- that triggers a tax- the required payment to the IRS. Under that theory, the mandate is not a legal command to buy insurance. Rather, it makes going without insurance just another thing the Government taxes, like buying gasoline or earning income. And if the mandate is in effect just a tax hike on certain taxpayers who do not have health insurance, it may be within Congress’s power to tax.”

He was able, with his opinion on the mandate being constitutional under the Commerce Clause, to push back the overreaching power of Congress regarding the Commerce Clause. He wrote:
“The individual mandate, however, does not regulate existing commercial activity. It instead compels individuals to become active in commerce by purchasing a product, on the ground that their failure to do so affects interstate commerce. Construing the Commerce Clause to permit Congress to regulate individuals precisely because they are doing nothing would open a new and potentially vast domain to congressional authority.”
The Court refused to buy the government’s sweeping (and over-reaching) interpretation of the Commerce Clause.

And so, the debate over the vast and over-reaching powers of the Congress via the Commerce Clause continues to this day.

References:
Bork and Troy, “Locating the Boundaries: The Scope of Congress’s Power to Regulate Commerce”, http://www.constitution.org/lrev/bork-troy.htm

David F. Forte, Professor of Law, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, http://www.heritage.org

http://www.wikipedia.com

Federalist Papers, Number 12

Online Dictionary

To Regulate Commerce

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potcoplays.wikia.com

  “When those who are governed do too little, those who govern can- and often will- do too much.”
Second Inaugural Address as Governor of California, Sacramento, January 4, 1971

“To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;” Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3

The few words of the Commerce Clause have a tremendous impact on the power of the Congress to regulate and control international, interstate, and Indian Tribe activity. Since the clause is so broad and undefined, it lends itself to attempts at Congressional overreach of power. Through the years, this clause has been interpreted and re-interpreted many times by the Courts.

Commerce is defined as the buying and selling of goods on a large scale and between different places.

The first part of the clause “To regulate commerce with foreign nations” gives Congress complete and exclusive control over international commerce. This clause allows congress to pass import and export laws, to control the means of transportation of goods and services as well as communication about them, and to exercise control over the immigration process.

A positive aspect this power is that it helps to keep our commercial relationships with other countries uniform. As an example, it prevents individual states with seaports from setting their own rules, regulations, and fees.

Congress also deals with collection of tariffs on imported goods, protection from importation of diseased foods or other products, and prevention of exportation of materials that are necessary for production of goods within the United States (as in times of war).

We the people give Congress complete control over foreign commerce.

The benefit to we the people is:
• Government revenue and protection of home industries
• Safeguards to health
• Regulation of immigration
• Operation of seaports and airports
• Uniform regulation of international trade

The most controversial and often-discussed part of the clause is “to regulate commerce…and among the several States…” This is the regulation of interstate commerce; it goes hand-in-hand with Clause 1 of Section 8, the Spending (Tax and Spend) Clause. These powers have enabled our country to make the changes necessary to go from an agricultural nation to a large industrial nation. The powers enable the Congress to address problems on a uniform, national level.

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commons.wikimedia.org

According to the Findlay’s in Your Rugged Constitution, the regulation of interstate commerce includes:
• All things that move among the states, including goods, persons, and words.
• The modes of transportation including railroads, airplanes, ships, express companies, and the waterways and airspace.

Interstate commerce refers to movement from state to state or through a state to get to another state. It also includes products that are made or mined in one state for use in another state. An example of this would be mining iron ore in Wisconsin for use in a steel mill in Illinois.

Interstate commerce law also restricts the states in that Congress may challenge laws or taxes established by a state unconstitutional in the Courts if they interfere with interstate commerce or regulation of commerce.

The third part of the clause “to regulate commerce…with the Indian tribes;” gives the federal government the power to communicate with and oversee the activities of Indian Tribes. This allows for uniform treatment via the federal government vs. potential inconsistency of laws between the states.

We the people give Congress the authority to regulate interstate commerce and supervise trade with Indian Tribes.

The benefit to we the people is:
• Free flow of goods among the states without tariffs
• Maintenance and supervision of transportation by water, land, and air
• Prevention of the movement of harmful goods into the country
• Protection of Indians from exploitation

This post discusses the way the Commerce Clause was viewed in our country before the 1930’s. After that time, the Courts allowed the congress to expand the power of the Commerce Clause many times. Most recently, this concern was addressed in the Supreme Court decision on the Affordable Care Act. In writing about this decision, Chief Justice Roberts shows how he managed to open the way for a push-back of the broad-reaching Congressional power via the Commerce Clause. In my next post, I will discuss some aspects of the historic changes to the Congressional power of regulating commerce over the last 80 or so years.

References:

Findlay, Bruce Allyn and Findlay, Esther Blair. Your Rugged Constitution. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1950

Hannaford, Peter. The Quotable Ronald Reagan. Washington, DC: Regnery Press, 1998

Webster’s Dictionary

US Constitution