The Resolutions, which had now become twenty-three in number, on July 26, were referred to the Committee of Detail to prepare Articles in conformity therewith. On August 6, that Committee made its report of twenty-three worded Articles. In Article XXII was embodied the requirement that the Constitution should be submitted “to a convention chosen in each state, under the recommendation of its legislature, in order to receive the ratification of such convention.” This provision, the Philadelphia answer and always the only legal answer to the question as to who can validly grant power to interfere with individual freedom, was later seen not properly to belong in the Constitution itself. For which reason, it was taken out of the Constitution and embodied in a separate Resolution which went with the Constitution from Philadelphia.
In Article XXI, the first draft of our Article VII, it was provided: “The ratification of the conventions of —— states shall be sufficient for organizing this Constitution.” (5 Ell. Deb. 381.)
The month of August was passed in the great debates on the proposed grants of national power and the other proposed Articles. When the Convention was drawing to a close on August 30, Articles XXI and XXII were reached.
Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania “moved to strike out of Article XXI the words, ‘conventions of the,’ after ‘ratification,’ leaving the states to pursue their own modes of ratification.” Rufus King “thought that striking out ‘conventions,’ as the requisite mode, was equivalent to giving up the business altogether.” Madison pointed out that, “The people were, in fact, the fountain of all power.” The motion of Morris was beaten. An attempt was made to fill the blank in Article XXI with the word “thirteen.” “All the states were ‘No’ except Maryland.” The blank was then filled by the word “nine” the vote being eight to three. The two articles were then passed, the vote thereon being ten to one. (5 Ell. Deb. 499-502.)
On September 10, the beginning of the last business week of the Convention, Gerry of Massachusetts moved to reconsider these two Articles. The short discussion was not in connection with any matter in which we are now interested. His motion was lost. The entire set of worded Articles was then referred to a committee for revising the style and arrangement of the Articles agreed upon. (5 Ell. Deb. 535.)
On Wednesday, September 12, that Committee reported our Constitution, with its seven Articles, as we know them except for some slight changes made during the discussions of the last three or four days of the Convention. In these seven Articles, the language of the earlier Article XXII did not appear. As it really was the statement of the correct legal conclusion of the Convention that its proposed Articles, because they would grant power to interfere with individual freedom, must necessarily be made by the people themselves, its proper place was outside the Constitution itself and in a special Resolution of the same nature as every Congress resolution proposing an amendment to that Constitution. That was the view of the Committee and, on Thursday, September 13, the Committee reported such special Resolutions, in the very words of the former Article XXII. “The proceedings on these Resolutions are not given by Mr. Madison, nor in the Journal of the Federal Convention. In the Journal of Congress, September 28, 1787, Volume 4, p. 781, they are stated to have been presented to that body, as having passed in the Convention on September 17 immediately after the signing of the Constitution.” (5 Ell. Deb. 602.)
This is the Resolution:
“Resolved, That the preceding Constitution be laid before the United States in Congress assembled; and that it is the opinion of this Convention, that it should afterwards be submitted to a convention of delegates chosen in each state by the people thereof, under the recommendation of its legislature, for their assent and ratification; and that each convention, assenting to and ratifying the same, should give notice thereof to the United States in Congress assembled.
“Resolved, That it is the opinion of this Convention, that, as soon as the conventions of nine states shall have ratified this Constitution, the United States in Congress assembled should fix a day, etc.” (5 Ell. Deb. 541.)
This Resolution is the most authoritative statement of the legal conclusion reached by these leaders of a people then “better acquainted with the science of government than any other people in the world.” The conclusion itself was compelled by accurate knowledge that the government of “citizens” can validly obtain only from the citizens themselves, by their direct grant, any power to interfere with their individual freedom. The expression of that knowledge, in the Resolution, is, in many respects, one of the most important recorded legal decisions ever made in America. We average Americans, educated with those Americans at Philadelphia through their experience of the years between 1775 and 1787, cannot misunderstand the meaning and importance of that decision. Instructed by our review of their actions and their reasoning at Philadelphia in reaching that conclusion and making that legal decision, we know, with an accurate certainty, that it was their declaration to the world and to us that no proposal from Philadelphia suggested that Americans again resume the relation of “subjects” to any government or governments.