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III. Jefferson’s Draft of a Constitution for Virginia, [May–June 1783]

III. Jefferson’s Draft of a Constitution for Virginia

To the citizens of the Commonwealth of Virginia, and all others whom it may concern, the Delegates of the said Commonwealth2 send greeting.

It is known to you and to the world that the government of Great Britain, with which the American states were not long since connected, assumed over them an authority which to some of them appeared3 unwarrantable and oppressive; that they endeavoured to enforce this authority by arms, and that the states of New Hampshire, Massachusets, Rhode island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, considering resistance, with all it’s train of horrors, as a lesser evil than abject submission, closed in the appeal to arms. It hath pleased the sovereign disposer of all human events, to give to this appeal an issue favourable to the rights of these states, to enable them to reject for ever all dependance on a government which had shewn itself so capable of abusing the trusts reposed in it, and to obtain from that government a solemn and explicit acknowlegement that we are free, sovereign and independant states. During the progress of that war through which we had to labour for the establishment of our rights, the legislature of the commonwealth of Virginia found it necessary to establish a form of government4 for preventing anarchy and pointing our efforts to the two important objects of war against our invaders and peace and happiness among ourselves. But this, like all other their acts of legislation, being subject to be changed5 by subsequent legislatures, possessing equal powers with themselves, it has been thought expedient that it should receive those amendments which time and trial have suggested, and be rendered permanent by a power superior to that of the ordinary legislature. The General assembly therefore of this state recommended it to the good people thereof to chuse delegates to meet in General convention with powers to form a constitution of government for them,6 to which all laws present and future shall be subordinate; and in compliance with this recommendation they have thought proper to make choice of us, and to vest us with powers for this purpose.

We therefore the Delegates chosen by the said good people of this state for the purpose aforesaid, and now assembled in General convention do, in execution of the authority with which we are invested, establish the following Constitution7 of government for the said state of Virginia.8

The said state shall hereafter for ever9 be governed as a Commonwealth.

The Legislative, Executive, and Judiciary departments shall be separate and distinct, so that no person, or collection of persons of any one of them shall exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others, except in the instances hereinafter expressly permitted.10

The Legislature º shall consist of two distinct branches, the concurrence of both of which expressed on three several readings, shall be necessary to the passage of a law. One of these branches shall be called the House of Delegates, the other the Senate, and both together the General Assembly.11

Delegates º for the General assembly shall be chosen on the Monday preceding the 25th. day of December which shall be in the year 178 and thenceforwards triennially.13 But if an election cannot be concluded on that day, it may be adjourned from day to day till it can be concluded.

The number of delegates shall be so proportioned to the number of qualified electors in the whole state14 that they shall never exceed 300. nor be fewer than 100. <For the> Whenever such excess or deficiency shall take place, the house of delegates so deficient or excessive, shall, notwithstanding this continue in being during it’s legal term; but they shall during that term, re-adjust the proportion so as to bring their number within the limits beforementioned at the ensuing election. If any county be reduced in it’s qualified electors below the number necessary15 to send one delegate, let it be annexed to some adjoining county.16

For the election of Senators, º let the several counties be allotted by the <legislature> Senate from time to time into such and so many districts as they shall find best, and let each county at the time of electing it’s delegates chuse Senatorial electors, qualified as themselves are, and four in number for each delegate their county is entitled to send, who shall convene and conduct themselves in such manner as the legislature shall direct with the Senatorial electors from the other counties of their district, and then chuse by ballot one Senator for every six delegates which their district is entitled to chuse. Let the Senatorial districts be divided into two classes, one of which shall be dissolved17 at the first ensuing general election of Delegates, the other at the next and so on alternately for ever.

All free male citizens of full age and sane mind, who for one year before shall have been resident in the county, or shall through the whole of that time have possessed therein real property of the value of or shall for the same time have been enrolled in the militia, and no others, shall have right to vote for delegates for the said county, <and persons of the same description qualified by the like residence, property, or military condition within the district shall have right to vote for Senatorial> and for Senatorial electors for the district. They shall give in their votes personally and by balot.19

The General assembly º shall meet at the place to which they shall have last adjourned themselves on the 14th. day after the day of the election of Delegates, <and so annually on that day till the period of their dissolution. The Governor shall have pow> and thenceforward at any other time or place on their own adjournment.20 But if they shall at any time adjourn for more than one year,21 such adjournment shall be void and they shall meet on that day twelve-month. Neither house without the concurrence of the other shall adjourn for more than one week, nor to any other place than the one at which they are sitting. The Governor shall also have power, with the advice of the council of state, to call them at any other time to the same place, or to a different one where22 that shall have become since the last adjournment, dangerous from an enemy or from infection.

A majority of either house shall be a Quorum23 and shall be requisite for doing business: but any smaller numbers which from time to time shall be thought expedient by the respective houses, shall be sufficient to call for and to punish their non-attending members and to adjourn themselves for any time not exceeding one week.

The members24 during their attendance on General assembly and for so long a time before and after as shall be necessary for travelling to and from the same shall be privileged from all personal restraint and assault, and shall have no other privilege whatsoever. They shall receive during the same time daily wages in gold or silver equal to the value of two bushels of wheat. This value shall be deemed one dollar by the bushel till the year 1790. in which and in every tenth year thereafter the General court at their first sessions in the year shall cause a special jury of the most respectable merchants and farmers to be summoned to declare what shall have been the averaged value of wheat during the last ten years; which averaged value shall be the measure of wages for the ten subsequent years.

Of this General assembly25 the Treasurer, Attorney General, Register, Ministers of the Gospel, officers of the regular armies of this state or of the United states, persons receiving salaries or emoluments from any power foreign to our Confederacy, <persons> those who <shall> are not resident in the counties for which they are chosen Delegates or districts for which they are chosen Senators,26 persons who shall27 have committed treason, felony or such other crime as would subject them to infamous punishment or who shall have been convicted by due course of law of bribery or corruption in endeavouring to procure an election to the said assembly, shall be incapable of being members. All others not herein elsewhere excluded who may elect, shall be capable of being elected thereto, and none else.28

Any member of the said assembly accepting any office of profit under this state, or the United states, or any of them shall thereby vacate his seat, but shall be capable of being re-elected.

Vacancies29 occasioned by such disqualifications, by death, or otherwise, shall be supplied by the electors on a writ from the Speaker of the respective house.

The General assembly30 shall not have power to infringe this constitution; to abridge the civil rights of any person on account of his religious belief; to restrain him from professing and supporting that belief, or to compel him to contributions, other than those he shall himself have stipulated, for the support of that or any other: to ordain death for any crime but treason or murder, or offences in the military line:31 to pardon or give a power of pardoning persons duly convicted of treason or felony, but instead thereof they may substitute one or two new trials and no more:32 to pass laws for punishing actions done before the existence of such laws: to pass any bill of attainder, <or other law declaring any person guilty> of treason or felony: to prescribe torture in any case:33 nor to permit the introduction of any more slaves to reside in this state, or the continuance of slavery beyond the generation which shall be living on the 31st. day of December 1800; all persons born after that day being hereby declared free.

The General assembly shall have power to sever from this state all of any part of it’s territory Westward of the Ohio or of the meridian of the mouth of the Great Kanhaway, and to cede to Congress 100 square miles in any other part of this state, exempted from the jurisdiction and government of this state so long as Congress shall hold their sessions therein or in any territory adjacent thereto which may be ceded to them by any other state.

They shall have power to appoint the Speakers of their respective houses, Treasurer, Auditors, Attorney general, Register [all General officers of the military]34 their own clerks, and serjeants <and doorkeep> and no other officers, except where in other parts of this constitution such appointment is expressly given them.

The Executive º powers shall be exercised by a Governor who shall be chosen by joint balot of both houses of assembly, and when chosen shall remain in office five35 years, and be ineligible a second time. During his term he shall hold no other office or emolument under this state or any other state or power whatsoever. By Executive powers we mean no reference to those powers exercised under our former government by the crown as of it’s prerogative; nor that these shall be the standard of what may or may not be deemed the rightful powers of the Governor. We give him those powers only which are necessary to carry into execution the laws,36 and which are not in their nature [either legislative or]34 Judiciary. The application of this idea must be left to reason. We do however expressly deny him the praerogative powers of erecting courts, offices, boroughs, corporations, fairs, markets, ports, beacons, lighthouses, and seamarks; of laying embargoes, of establishing precedence, of retaining within the state or recalling to it any citizen thereof, and of making denizens, except so far as he may be authorized from time to time by the legislature to exercise any of these powers. The powers of declaring war and concluding37 peace, of contracting alliances, of issuing letters of marque and reprisal, of raising or introducing armed forces, of building armed vessels, forts or strongholds, of coining money or regulating it’s value, of regulating weights and measures, <so far as they are or may be> we leave to be exercised under the authority of the Confederation; but in all cases respecting them which are out of the said confederation, they shall be exercised by the Governor under the regulation of such laws as the legislature may think it expedient to pass.

The whole military of the state, whether regular or militia, shall be subject to his directions; but he shall leave the execution of those directions to the General officers [appointed by the legislature.]34

His salary shall be fixed by the legislature at the session of assembly in which he shall be appointed, and before such appointment be made; or if it be not then fixed, it shall be the same which his next predecessor in office was entitled to. In either case he may demand it quarterly out of any money which shall be in the public treasury, and it shall not be in the power of the legislature to give him less or more, either during his continuance in office, or after he shall have gone out of it. The lands, houses, and other things appropriated to the use of the Governor, shall remain to his use, during his continuance in office.

A Council of State º shall be chosen by joint balot of both houses of assembly, who shall hold their offices [during good behavior, 7. years and be ineligible a second time,]38 and who, while they shall be of the said council shall hold no other office or emolument under this state or any other state or power whatsoever. Their duty shall be to attend and advise the Governor when called on by him, and their advice in any case shall be a sanction to him. They shall also have power and it shall be their duty to meet at their own will and to give their advice, tho’ not required by the Governor, in cases where they shall think the public good calls for it. Their advice and proceedings shall be entered in books to be kept for that purpose and shall be signed as approved or disapproved by the members present. These books shall be laid before either house of assembly when called for by them. The said council shall consist of eight members for the present: but their numbers may be increased or <diminished> reduced by the legislature whenever they shall think it necessary; provided such reduction be made only as the appointments become vacant by death, resignation, disqualification, or regular deprivation. A majority of their actual number <shall be a Quorum> and not fewer shall be a Quorum. They shall be allowed for the present 500.£39 each by the year, paiable quarterly out of any money which shall be in the public treasury. Their salary however may be increased or abated from time to time at the discretion of the legislature; provided such increase or abatement shall not by any ways or means be made to affect either then or at any future time any one of those then actually in office. At the end of each quarter their salary shall be divided into equal portions by the number of days on which during that quarter a council has been held, or required by the governor or their own adjournment, and one37 of those portions shall be withheld from each member for every of the said days which without cause allowed good by the board40 he failed to attend, or departed before adjournment without their37 leave <of the board>. If no board should have been held during the quarter there shall be no deduction.

They shall annually chuse º a President who shall preside in council in the absence of the governor, and who in case of his <death> office becoming vacant by death or otherwise shall have authority to exercise all his functions, till a new appointment be made, as he shall also in any interval during which the Governor shall declare himself unable to attend to the duties of his office.

The Judiciary powers º shall be exercised by County courts and such other inferior courts as the legislature shall think proper41 to erect, and by four Superior courts, to wit, a court of Admiralty, a General court of common law, a High court of Chancery and court of Appeals.

The judges of the High Court of Chancery, General court and Court of Admiralty shall be four in number each, to be appointed by joint balot of both houses of assembly, and to hold their offices during good behavior. While they continue judges they shall hold no other office or emolument under this state or any other state or power whatsoever, except that they may be delegated to Congress, receiving no additional allowance.

These judges assembled together shall constitute the Court of Appeals.42

A majority of the members of either of these courts, and not fewer, shall be a Quorum; but in the court of Appeals nine members shall be necessary to do business. Any smaller numbers however may be authorized by the legislature to adjourn their respective courts.

They shall be allowed for the present 500.£39 each by the year, paiable quarterly out of any money which shall be in the public treasury. Their salaries however may be increased or abated from time to time at the discretion of the legislature: provided such increase or abatement shall not by any ways or means be made to affect,43 either then or at any future time, any one of those then actually in office. At the end of each quarter their salary shall be divided into equal portions by the number of days on which during that quarter their respective courts sat, or should have sat, and one of these portions shall be withheld from each member for every of the said days <he failed to attend> which without cause allowed good by his court, he failed to attend or departed before adjournment without their leave. If no court should have been held during the quarter there shall be no deduction.

There shall moreover be a court of Impeachments to consist of three members of the Council of state, one of each of the Superior courts of Chancery, Common law, and Admiralty, two members of the House of Delegates and one of the Senate, to be chosen by the body respectively of which they are. Before this court any <one> member of the three branches <of government may impeach any member of the other two for any cause sufficient to remove him from his office; and the only sentence they shall have authority to give> of government, that is to say, the Governor, any member of the Council, of the two houses of legislature or of the Superior courts may be impeached by the Governor the Council, or either of the said houses or courts44 for <any sufficient> such misbehavior in office as would be sufficient to remove him therefrom: and the only sentence they shall have authority to pass shall be that of deprivation and future incapacity of office. Seven members shall be requisite to make a court and two thirds of those present must concur in the sentence. The offences cognisable by this court shall be cognisable by no other, and they shall be judges of fact as well as law.45

The Justices or judges of the inferior courts already erected, or hereafter to be erected shall be appointed by the Governor on advice of the Council of state, and shall hold their offices during good behavior or the existence of their court. For breach of the good behavior they shall be tried according to the laws of the land before the court of Appeals, who shall be judges of the fact as well as of the law. The only sentence they shall have authority to pass shall be that of deprivation and future incapacity of office, and two thirds of the members present must concur in the46 sentence.

All courts shall appoint their own clerks, who shall hold their offices during good behavior or the existence of their court: they shall also appoint all other their attending37 officers to continue during their pleasure. Clerks appointed by47 the Superior courts shall be removeable by their respective courts: those to be appointed by other courts shall have been previously examined and certified to be duly qualified by some two members of the General court and shall be removeable for breach of the good behavior by the court of Appeals only, who shall be judges of the fact as well as of the law, [and] two thirds of the members present must concur in the sentence.48

The justices or judges of the inferior courts may be members of the legislature.

The judgment of no inferior court shall be final in any civil case of greater value than 50. bushels of wheat as last rated in the General court for settling the allowance to the members of the General assembly, nor in any case of treason, felony, or other crime which would subject the party to infamous punishment.

In all <courts except that of Impeachment and that of Appeals in the particular cases before specified> causes depending before any court, other than those of Impeachments, of Appeals and Military courts facts [put in issue]34 shall be tried by jury, and <the> in all courts whatever49 witnesses shall give their testimony viv voce in open court wherever their attendance can be procured; and all parties shall be allowed Counsel and compulsory process for their witnesses.

Fines, amercements and terms of imprisonment left indefinite by the law other than for Contempts49 shall be fixed by the jury triers of the offence.

The Governor, º two Counsellors of state, and a judge from each of the Superior courts of Chancery, Common law and Admiralty, shall be a council to revise all bills which shall have passed both houses of assembly; in which council the Governor, when present, shall preside. Every bill, before it becomes law, shall be presented to this council, who shall have a right to advise it’s rejection, returning the <same> bill with their advice and reasons in writing to the house in which <said bill> it originated, who shall proceed to reconsider the said bill. But if after such reconsideration two thirds of the house shall be of opinion the bill should pass finally, they shall pass and send it with the advice and written reasons of the said council of revision to the other house, wherein if two thirds also shall be of opinion it should pass finally, it shall thereupon become law: otherwise it shall not.

<A bill rejected on advice of the Council of revision may again be brought in during the same session of Assembly with such alterations as will render it conformable to their advice.>

If any bill presented to the said Council be not within one week (exclusive of the day of presenting it) returned by them with their advice of rejection and reasons to the house wherein it originated, or to the clerk of the said house in case of it’s adjournment over the expiration of the week, it shall be law from the <time of such> expiration50 of the week and shall then be demandeable by the clerk of the house of Delegates to be filed of record in his office.

The bills which they approve, <or on which they omit to decide within the week before limited,> shall become law from the time of such approbation <or week’s omission,> and shall then be returned to or32 demandeable by the clerk of the House of Delegates to be filed of record in his office.

A bill rejected on advice of the Council of revision may again be <brought on> proposed during the same session of Assembly with such alterations as will render it conformable to their advice.

The members of the said Council of revision shall be appointed from time to time by the board or court of which they respectively are. Two of the Executive and two of the Judiciary members shall be requisite to do business. And to prevent the evils of non-attendance, the board and courts may at any time name all or so many as they will of their members in the particular order in which they would chuse the duty of attendance to devolve from preceding to subsequent members, the preceding failing to attend. They shall have additionally for their services in this council the same allowance as members of assembly have.51

The Confederation º is made a part of this constitution, subject to such future alterations as shall be agreed to by the legislature of this53 and by all the other confederating states. The Delegates to Congress shall be five in number.54 They shall be appointed by joint balot of both houses <of assembly and shall hold this office till revoked by the joint will of both the said houses, or until their incapacitation under the Confederation> of assembly for any term not exceeding one year, subject to be recalled at any time within the term by joint vote of both the said houses. They may at the same time be members of the Legislative or Judiciary departments.55

<Every citizen> º The benefits of the writ of Habeas corpus shall be extended by the legislature to every person within this state and without fee, and shall be so facilitated that no person may be detained in prison more than ten days after he shall have demanded and been refused such writ by the judge appointed by law, or if none be appointed, then by any judge of a superior court; nor more than ten days after such writ shall have been served on the person detaining him and no order given on due examination for his remandment or discharge.

The Military shall be subordinate to the civil power. º

Printing presses º shall be subject to no other restraint than liableness to legal prosecution for false <hoods> facts printed and published.

Any two of the three branches º of government concurring in opinion, each by the voices of two thirds of their whole existing37 number, that a Convention is necessary for altering this Constitution or correcting breaches of it, they shall be authorized to issue writs to every county for the election of so many delegates as they are authorized to send to the General assembly, which elections shall be held and writs returned as the laws shall have provided in the cases57 of elections of Delegates to assembly, mutatis mutandis, and the said delegates shall meet at the usual place of holding assemblies three months after the date of such writs, and shall be acknoleged to have equal powers with this present Convention. The said writs shall be signed by all the members approving of the same.

To introduce this government the following special and temporary provision is made.

This Convention having been <assemb> authorized58 only to amend those laws which constituted the form of government, no general dissolution of the whole system of laws can be supposed to have taken place; but all laws in force at the meeting of this Convention and not inconsistent with this Constitution, remain in full force, subject <however> to alterations by the ordinary legislature.

The present General assembly shall continue till the Monday preceding the 25th. day of December in this present year. The several counties shall then, by their electors59 qualified as provided by this constitution, elect delegates which for the present shall be in number one for every  militia of the said county according to the latest returns in possession of the Governor, and shall also chuse Senatorial electors in proportion thereto, which Senatorial electors shall meet on the 7th.60 day after the day of their election at the court house of that county of their present district which would stand first in an Alphabetical arrangement of their counties, and shall chuse Senators in the proportion fixed by this Constitution.

The elections and returns shall be conducted in all circumstances not hereby particularly prescribed by the same persons and under the same form and circumstances61 as prescribed by the present laws in elections of Senators and Delegates of assembly. The said Senators and Delegates shall constitute the first General assembly of the new government, and shall specially apply themselves to the procuring an exact return from every county of the number of it’s qualified electors, and to the settlement of the number of Delegates to be elected for the ensuing General assembly.

The present governor shall continue in office to the end of the term for which he was elected.

All other officers of every kind shall continue in office as they would have done had their appointment been under this constitution, and new ones, where new are hereby called for, shall be appointed by the authority to which such appointment is referred. One of the present judges of the General court, he consenting thereto, shall by joint ballot of both houses of assembly at their first meeting be transferred to the High court of Chancery.62

MS (DLC: Rives Papers); 10 p.; endorsed by William C. Rives: “Constitution of Virginia 1784,” and additionally, by Rives or another: “Drawn by Mr Jefferson.” (This MS is hereafter referred to as the Rives MS.) MS (MHi); 11 p.; bound with MS of TJ’s Notes on the State of Virginia, but having its own separate pagination. (This MS is hereafter referred to as the MHi MS.) Fragmentary Dft (DLC: TJ Papers, vol. 10, between p. 1597 and p. 1598); see note 62 below. There are also two early printed texts that should be mentioned: (1) Draught of a Fundamental Constitution of Virginia, a 14-page appendix in the first or private edition of Notes on the State of Virginia, Paris [1785]; “Paper is similar to that of the text [of this edition of Notes] but the type is different” (Coolie Verner, A Further Checklist of the Separate Editions of Jefferson’s Notes on the State of Virginia, Charlottesville, 1950, p. 5); (2) “[Appendix] No. ii” in the London edition (Stockdale, 1787) of Notes on the State of Virginia, p. [356]–382 (see note 1 below).

The relationship of the MSS and early printed texts has been established by collating all of them successively with the MS here employed as the master text, namely the Rives MS. The Rives MS was sent as an enclosure to Madison in TJ’s letter of 17 June 1783. It was certainly composed between TJ’s conversation with members of the General Assembly in Richmond early in May (see TJ to Madison, 7 May 1783) and 17 June 1783. Even if no telltale fragment of an early draft of this paper had been found, the characteristics of the Rives MS would make it clear that this is not a composition draft. Despite numerous deletions and substitutions (all of them recorded here either in the text or in footnotes), the strikingly handsome calligraphy and the occasional insertion of passages that could have been omitted only in the process of copying (see, e.g., note 43, below) indicate that TJ was copying, with occasional alterations and expansions, from an earlier draft.

That the MHi MS was copied from the Rives MS (or from a missing copy intervening between it and MHi MS) is certain from the fact that it incorporates all the alterations made in the latter and includes others that must have been made after TJ sent it to Madison; (see, for example, notes 8, 16, 43, and 55, below). All variations between the two MSS have been recorded in the footnotes below; they are numerous, and some of them are important. Either the MHi MS or a copy taken from it served as printer’s copy for the first printed text, Paris [1785]. Apart from punctuation, spelling, and capitalization, the variations between the MHi MS and the earliest printing on the one hand, and between the Paris [1785] and the London, 1787, printings on the other hand, are so minute as to be negligible. When, therefore, a variant reading in the MHi MS is recorded in the notes below, it is to be assumed that the printed texts incorporate this reading.

1MHi MS has the following title in the margin: “Draught of a Fundamental Constitution for the Commonwealth of Virginia”; a similar title in the Paris [1785] appendix to Notes on Virginia is recorded above. The London, 1787, appendix is without caption except “No. II,” but has the following introductory note not found elsewhere: “In the Summer of the Year 1783, it was expected, that the Assembly of Virginia would call a Convention for the Establishment of a Constitution. The following Draught of a Fundamental Constitution for the Commonwealth of Virginia was then prepared, with a Design of being proposed to such Convention, had it taken place.

2MHi MS adds at this point: “in Convention assembled.”

3MHi MS omits preceding six words.

4MHi reads: “make a temporary organization of government.”

5MHi MS reads: “subject to change.”

6MHi MS adds at this point: “and to declare those Fundamentals.”

7MHi MS adds at this point: “and Fundamentals.”

8In Rives MS this paragraph is written in the margin, with an indication that it is to be inserted in its present position. It appears in its proper place in MHi (and of course in the printed texts), corroborating the view advanced above that the Rives MS precedes the MHi MS.

9MHi MS reads: “for ever hereafter.”

10In MHi MS this paragraph reads as follows: “The powers of government shall be divided into three distinct departments, each of them to be confided to a separate body of magistracy: to wit, those which are legislative to one, those which are judiciary to another, and those which are executive to another. No person or collection of persons being of one of these departments, shall exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others, except in the instances hereinafter expressly permitted”; the corresponding passage in the Kentucky Constitution of 1792 follows the text here quoted almost literally (B. H. Young, History and Texts of the Three Constitutions of Kentucky, p. 16).

11In MHi MS this paragraph reads as follows: “The Legislature shall consist of two branches, the one to be called the House of Delegates, the other the Senate, and both together the General assembly. The concurrence of both of them, expressed on three several readings, shall be necessary to the passage of a law.”

12In MHi MS the gloss at this point is “Election”; beside the following paragraph is the gloss “Delegates.”

13In MHi MS this sentence reads: “Delegates for the General assembly shall be chosen on the last Monday of November in every year.”

14In MHi MS this sentence, up to this point, reads: “The number of Delegates which each county may send shall be in proportion to the number of it’s qualified electors, and the whole number of Delegates for the state shall be so proportioned to the whole number of qualified electors in it.”

15MHi MS reads: “authorized.”

16In Rives MS this sentence is an interlined afterthought, but it appears in its proper place in MHi MS and the printed texts.

17MHi MS reads: “two classes and let the members elected by one of them be dissolved,” &c.

18In MHi MS the gloss at this point is “Electors.”

19MHi MS deletes preceding three words and substitutes “and viv voce.”

20In MHi MS this sentence has been altered to read: “The General assembly shall meet at the place to which the last adjournment was on the 42d day after the day of election of delegates, and thenceforward at any other time or place on their own adjournment till their office expires which shall be on the day preceding that appointed for the meeting of the next General assembly.”

21In MHi MS the remainder of this sentence reads: “it shall be as if they had adjourned for one year precisely.”

22MHi MS: “if.”

23In MHi MS this word also appears as a marginal gloss beside this paragraph.

24In MHi MS the marginal gloss “Privileges” appears beside this paragraph.

25In MHi MS the marginal gloss “Exclusions” appears beside this paragraph.

26MHi MS adds at this point: “those who are not qualified as electors.”

27In the Rives MS, from the phrase “those who are not resident” to this point, this is an interlineation.

28In MHi MS the preceding three words are deleted.

29In MHi MS this word also appears as a marginal gloss beside this paragraph.

30In MHi MS the marginal gloss “Limits of power” appears beside this paragraph.

31MHi MS reads: “or military offences.”

32In Rives MS the preceding three words are interlined.

33MHi MS adds at this point: “whatever.”

34The brackets are in Rives MS; the words enclosed therein appear in MHi MS (and in the printed texts) without brackets.

35The number is bracketed in MHi MS, with another number written above it which was later deleted and is now illegible. Rives MS and printed texts read “five” without brackets. (This is the single instance found where the printed texts follow Rives MS rather than MHi MS.)

36MHi MS reads: “to execute the laws (and administer the government).”

37In Rives MS this word is interlined.

38Brackets in both Rives and MHi MSS. TJ is here offering alternatives for the councillors’ terms of office. In the printed texts he settled on the seven-year term rather than “good behavior.”

39MHi MS has a blank instead of a sum.

40In Rives MS the preceding eight words are interlined.

41In MHi MS, from this point on, this sentence reads: “to continue or to erect by three Superior courts, to wit, a court of Admiralty, a General court of Common law and a High court of Chancery, and by one supreme court to be called the court of Appeals.”

42MHi MS adds at this point: “whose business shall be to receive and determine appeals from the three superior courts; but to receive no original causes except in the cases expressly permitted herein.”

43In Rives MS the preceding four words are interlined. This omission of a passage essential to sense and syntax strongly suggests that TJ was copying rather than composing when he prepared this MS.

44MHi MS adds at this point: “and by no other.”

45MHi MS reads: “and they shall be triers of the fact as well as judges of the law.”

46MHi MS: “this.”

47MHi MS adds at this point: “the Supreme or.”

48In Rives MS this sentence is an interlined afterthought.

49In Rives MS the preceding four words are interlined.

50In Rives MS the remainder of this sentence is interlined.

51In Rives MS this sentence was altered from the following: “They shall have no additional allowance for their services in this council.”

52In MHi MS the gloss at this point is “Confederacy,” and the present gloss is moved down beside the following sentence, which begins a new paragraph.

53MHi MS adds at this point the word “state.”

54MHi MS adds at this point: “any three of whom, and no fewer, may be a representation.”

55In Rives MS this sentence is interlined. In MHi MS it has the following addition at the end: “but not of the Executive.”

56In Rives MS this marginal gloss is substituted for another that was deleted and is now illegible.

57MHi MS: “case.”

58MHi MS: “This Convention being authorized.”

59In MHi MS this paragraph is altered to read, up to this point, as follows: “The present General assembly shall continue till the 42d day after the last Monday of November in this present year. On the said last Monday of November in this present year the several counties shall, by their electors,” &c.

60MHi MS: “14th.”

61In MHi MS the preceding two words are deleted.

62TJ’s fragment of a composition draft of this document, mentioned in the descriptive note above, covers in abridged form and with numerous corrections most of the last three paragraphs. One passage, for example, reads: “All other officers of every kind shall continue in office as they would have done had their appmt. been under this constn, and new ones <shall be appd where new are> where new are called for by this constn. shall be appd by the authority to which such apptmt. is referred.”

Authorial notes

[The following note(s) appeared in the margins or otherwise outside the text flow in the original source, and have been moved here for purposes of the digital edition.]

º Legislature.

º H. of Delegates.12

º Senate.

º General Assembly18

º Executive Governor

º Council of State.

º President.

º Judiciary.

º Council of Revision.

º Delegates to Congress52

º Hab. corp.56

º Military.

º Printing.

º Convention

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