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The State Secession Issue & Texas v. White
Intellectual Conservative ^ | June 27th, 2009 | Steven D. Laib

Posted on 06/28/2009 8:16:03 AM PDT by cowboyway

In my experience, whenever the subject of the Confederate secession or of a modern attempt at the same thing occurs someone is bound to respond with a reference to the infamous case of Texas v. White (7 Wall. 700 ). This Reconstruction Era case was written essentially to put a headstone on the Confederacy's grave and to stifle any other State's interests in leaving the Union in the future. It was in all significant respects a politically motivated decision. It ignored certain specific constitutional provisions as well as prior decisions of the court. In short, the decision was just plain wrong.

A lot of readers may ask why this particular case of relevant today. The answer lies in the fact that the subject is now being discussed again by many citizens to a degree not experienced since 1860. There is a good reason for it. The overbearing attitude of the federal government which is trampling on and attempting to further trample on the rights of the states and the citizens makes many patriotic individuals wonder whether or not the only way to save the USA is to destroy it and rebuild it in the image of what the founders intended in 1789. If all of the states all broke of and left the feds hanging as a government without a country, it would present a singular problem for those who want to wield power. Of course, there are many individuals who put down this idea for various reasons. Some go so far as to assert that states cannot secede. These people are wrong, at least within the bounds of U.S. Constitutional law. An analysis of why follows.

The Relevant Facts

When the state of Texas was admitted to the Union it received a large number of federal treasury bonds in exchange for dropping its claims in a territorial dispute with Oklahoma. Many of these bonds remained in the state treasury when the War Between the States began. After Texas withdrew from the Union, the State Treasurer of the Secession Government endorsed a number of them for sale to several English companies, one of which was named White & Chiles. In exchange, this company provided various supplies to Texas. These supplies were destroyed by Union Army troops during the war, and when White & Chiles attempted to cash in the bonds, the U.S. Treasury refused to accept them. When the war ended, the reconstruction government of Texas, instigated suit against White and others, to recover the bonds, which they received from Texas during the war.

The Issues

This case is really about the rights of a good faith holder of government paper versus the government that had transferred that paper to them, albeit under unusual circumstances. One would think that White was the logical plaintiff complaining that the United States had refused to pay on its obligations. However, the suit was filed by Texas, essentially repudiating its own prior actions. This created a political issue because Texas had undergone changes in government, from pre-secession to secession to reconstruction since the bonds were originally issued. The bonds were received by the pre-secession government, were executed by the secession government, and the suit was filed by the reconstruction government. The suit was almost certainly contrived and calculated to provide a legal basis to prevent any other States from attempting to leave the Union in the future. That is exactly what the Court's opinion did.

The Court first examined the act of secession and made a determination as to whether the secession by Texas, and by the rest of the Confederacy, was constitutionally legal. In making this determination, the Court also decided whether the secession governments of the Confederate states were legal. On these questions hung the issue of whether Texas had the power to endorse the bonds while in secession, and what was to be done about them.

Interestingly, the Court's opinion failed to consider the possibility that in leaving the Union, Texas might have given up its rights in the bonds, or ceased to be a state, and therefore had no right to sue. The majority also neglected the possibility that Texas was not a state when the suit was filed. However, because the issue of the bonds had become essentially a pretext for the suit, and the majority of the Court accepted this pretext, they refused to deal properly with this question. The dissenting opinions did so, and are well worth studying.

Analysis of the Court's Position

- Political Questions The Court began its discussion of this case by outlining the history of the bonds, Texas' admission to the Union, the election of the Secession Government and endorsement of the bonds by that government. This historical background is essentially accurate. It could be taken seriously were it not for the histrionic language employed by Chief Justice Salmon Chase in which he thoroughly condemned the State's actions as having no legal basis. First, he attacked the delegates who convened and called for election of a new government as "irregular." Then he glossed over the fact that the regularly chosen legislature ratified this convention and that the Ordinance of Secession was ratified by popular vote of the people. This was certainly sufficient to remove any claim of irregularity. Chase then declared "Thus was established the rebel government of Texas." One wonders if Chase would take the same position with respect to the delegates who convened in 1776 to sign the American Declaration of Independence, and call their actions "irregular." Recall that English law at the time did not recognize a colony"s right to govern its own affairs, or "secede" from the English crown, either.

Aside from Chase"s view of the "irregular" actions of the people of Texas, this judgment was improper because the Court had previously addressed a similar question in the case of Luther v. Borden. In Luther, the Court had been asked to decide what constituted the legitimate government of the State of Rhode Island. Because of an electoral dispute, for a short time there were two governments in the state, both claiming legitimacy. Eventually, one was put down by force, and later, the Court stated that the matter was a political, and not a legal dispute. The Court declined any authority to rule in political disputes, and so matters in Maryland were let stand. The same course should have been taken in Texas, as the Courts no longer had any authority to decide what was the legal government of any state. It had voluntarily given up any right to do so. On that basis, the case could not go forward in the manner that it did. The Court's bias and its total neglect of Luther are obvious, and should have been denounced by legal scholars. Such criticism is conspicuous by its absence.

- A More Perfect Union? After the above error, Justice Chase attacks secession by using the Preamble to the Constitution; very unusual step, as preambles to legal documents are almost never considered a part of the effective body of the document. In business contracts the specific intent of the parties is contained in the body of the document, which is enforced if it comes before a court of law. This opinion by Justice Chase is the only occasion, of which this author is aware after much research, when the Preamble to the Constitution has been cited as having any legal effect. The United States Codes Annotated and United States Code Service reference digests, which cover the Constitution in great detail, do not mention any such use; not even this one. It appears likely that this was the only such use.

Chase's reasoning begqn with language in Preamble to the Articles of Confederation, which stated the intent that the union under their auspices was to be "perpetual." Because the Articles were replaced by the Constitution in 1789, with a stated purpose "to form a more perfect Union", Chase argued that this "more perfect union" was one that could never be broken under any circumstances. Nowhere in the body text of the Articles or the Constitution was it stated that the Union was to be permanent or perpetual. The report of the Annapolis Convention of 1786 revealed that a real danger of dissolution of the Pre-1789 Confederation existed, and that if the Constitution had not been created, it is likely that the original states would have gone their separate ways.

Chase's reliance on these particular items was wrong. Perhaps he did so only because he had nothing else to use and he needed something to fit his purpose. He cites no other authority to back his contention that the framers of the Constitution intended a perpetual and permanent union. The Constitution does not directly address the questions of secession or perpetuity at all. Chase did not cite any writings by the authors of the Constitution or delegates to the convention on the subject. Thus, Chase had insufficient legal authority to form a valid conclusion of law on this point.

It is also important to note that the forces driving the original states apart before 1789 and those which led to the Southern Secession were essentially the same. They were issues of the state's rights to control their own destinies and for their citizens to freely engage in commercial activity. By 1860 the use of federal power to restrain some states, while granting others favorable positions had become a major concern to the South. Before 1789 there were several instances of states on the verge of border wars over commercial competition and land ownership disputes. A more perfect union was needed, but not one, which enslaved the states to the federal system. Rather, a union which limited disputes between states and which provide an orderly system of resolving them was the proper prescription.

- The Tenth Amendment Despite all the above, and assuming that the Supreme Court could rule on the subject, there really was only one conclusion which the Court to reach, within the text of the Constitution. The simple fact is that the four corners of the document do not contain any reference whatsoever to the subject of a state leaving the Union. There is no permission, nor is there any prohibition. This lack leads us to look at the Tenth Amendment, which states that any powers not delegated to the Federal Government are reserved to the States or to the people. It should thus be incontrovertible that the power to leave the Union is a reserved power specifically held by the States or people under the Tenth Amendment. Recall that the people of the State of Texas voted to secede in a statewide election and that the election was held at the behest of the state legislature. In seceding Texas could very easily be seen as simply exercising a constitutional power reserved for it by the Tenth Amendment.

- The Strange Matter of West Virginia As mentioned above, the Supreme Court stated in its opinion that the Union was perpetual and indivisible. It also stated that the Union was composed of indivisible states. On this basis it concluded that Texas could not leave the Union, and therefore, had never left the Union. Somehow the Court never got around to discussing how this rule applied to the state of West Virginia.

Virginia was one of the states that left the Union and joined the Confederacy. When Virginia did this a small portion of the state petitioned Washington DC to be admitted to the Union as a state in its own right. Congress granted the petition, and West Virginia became a separate state independent of Virginia proper.

When the Supreme Court decided Texas v. White it clearly forgot to order Virginia and West Virginia to get back together. Because Texas could not leave the Union, clearly Virginia could not either. Because Texas had never left the Union, Virginia also had not. Therefore, the West Virginians had no cause and no power to petition for statehood. Finally, because the Court ruled that the states and the Union are indivisible, West Virginia could not separate itself from the rest of the state of Virginia. Clearly, we should only have 49 states today, given what has happened since 1865.

- Was There Proper Jurisdiction? There is also another issue, which needs to be discussed; whether or not the Court had proper jurisdiction because of the question of whether Texas was actually a state at the time that the case was filed.

This question was addressed in the dissenting opinions, which suggested that there was no jurisdiction based on statehood, and claimed that Texas had ceased to be a state at some poorly defined point, and certainly was not being governed as a sovereign state at the time that the case was filed. If Texas was no longer a state, then it had no right to file the case at all. The reconstruction government certainly placed severe limitations on Texas' sovereignty, and in many respects the system looked more like the federal administration of either a conquered enemy, or an unincorporated territory. There clearly was a serious issue here, which the majority of justices failed to recognize. Perhaps they accepted Justice Chase's position; that because Texas could not leave the Union, it never ceased being a state, which then asks us why it was not independent and self-governing after the war ended, and why the federally dominated Reconstruction government was necessary.

The Correct Opinion

Having dissected the Supreme Court opinion, what remains is to explain what the Court should have done. Despite the heavy patina of constitutional law placed there by the Court to disguise its actions, the answer to this case is really quite simple if you carefully examine one salient background fact.

When White and the other parties to the transactions accepted the federal bonds as payment for their wares, they also accepted the risk that the US Treasury would not honor them. Consider that if regardless of whether Confederacy prevailed, the Treasury would have been unlikely to honor bonds endorsed by a "rebel" government. This is exactly what happened. And, if the Confederacy had prevailed against the Union the chances of the bonds being honored would be even less because of the success of the "rebellion." Either way, White had lost his money.

The fortunes of war often dictate events and circumstances, which are beyond the ordinary expectations of commerce. That is why virtually all commercial contracts contain provisions allowing non-performance by the parties when it is due to an act of war, government intervention, or extreme circumstances sometimes referred to as an "act of God." White assumed that risk and lost.

As the Confederate secession had become a political matter, settled by political means, the disposition of the bonds also became a political issue. White, as a holder in due course, was now the proud possessor of worthless paper due to the fortunes of war. The Treasury had no duty, other than that of ordinary commerce, to honor the endorsement of a foreign government whether legitimate or otherwise. The Court could still have ruled that White and his compatriots had a duty to return the bonds to Texas; however, enforcement might have been difficult if not impossible, if White and the other holders refused to comply. To sum up the situation, if Washington, DC wanted to and had a duty to restore Texas to its original position, it would have been a very simple matter to cancel the old bonds and issue new ones to replace them. It would have been even simpler to do it by accounting entries. All of the fuss and bother of a court fight could have been prevented. There is a reason why the Treasury did not do so. It was necessary for the Court to get involved solely to condemn the right of secession.

For this reason, and those others articulated above, the Supreme Court had no business hearing or ruling on this case at all, unless it was to support the right to secede.


TOPICS: Agriculture; Education; History; Society
KEYWORDS: bho44; bhofascism; confederacy; cwii; dixie; donttreadonme; fed; liberty; lping; rebel; secede; secession; statesrights
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People have a right to choose their own destiny and no government, particularly a morally corrupt one such as the one currently in power in Washington, can take that away. They didn't have that right in 1861 and they don't have it now.
1 posted on 06/28/2009 8:16:04 AM PDT by cowboyway
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To: cowboyway

Why is it that only our side is restricted by the law? If Texas wants to secede, they should simply do it. And the Supreme Court and Congress can hold all the hearings they want, who cares? States should simply defy what’s going on in Congress, and aggressively rebel against any repercussions attempted by the commie vermin running our country.

COULD WE PLEASE SHOW SOME GUTS ON OUR SIDE, EVERYBODY?


2 posted on 06/28/2009 8:21:49 AM PDT by raptor29
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To: cowboyway

I’ve always had a premonition that I’d move to Texas someday. We’re headed for trouble.


3 posted on 06/28/2009 8:22:39 AM PDT by NoobRep
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To: raptor29

Think about how different secession was in 1860 and how it would be now. The states (not Texas) have become so intertwined with the Federal government. For example, if I live in a state that secedes, does the Federal government just keep what I paid into social security? What about people that still live in the state-would what remains of the Federal government freeze their social security, medicare and medicaid that they’ve become attached to like leeches? What would become of the Federal military complexes that are scattered throughout the country?


4 posted on 06/28/2009 8:28:23 AM PDT by NoobRep
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To: cowboyway

www.texasnationalist.com


5 posted on 06/28/2009 8:29:24 AM PDT by broken_arrow1 (I regret that I have but one life to give for my country - Nathan Hale "Patriot")
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To: raptor29
COULD WE PLEASE SHOW SOME GUTS ON OUR SIDE, EVERYBODY?

Damn right. Texas should tell Washington to shove it where the sun don't shine. Texas has seaports, oil, farm land, manufacturing, etc, and can survive without the corrupt rotten Washington we have now. We are no longer a free Country, but under King Obama and his corrupt machine. We have evolved into a Communists nation.

6 posted on 06/28/2009 8:30:48 AM PDT by Logical me (Oh, well!!!)
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To: NoobRep
For example, if I live in a state that secedes, does the Federal government just keep what I paid into social security?

This was a tongue-in-cheek comment right? You have no $$$ in SSI now...it is a con game....

7 posted on 06/28/2009 8:31:47 AM PDT by cbkaty (I may not always post...but I am always here......)
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To: NoobRep
For example, if I live in a state that secedes, does the Federal government just keep what I paid into social security?

If you haven't already retired you're probably not going to get it anyway. Think of how much more money you'd have if Fedzilla wasn't devouring a big chunk of your paycheck.

What about people that still live in the state-would what remains of the Federal government freeze their social security, medicare and medicaid that they’ve become attached to like leeches?

Let em leave or become productive citizens.

What would become of the Federal military complexes that are scattered throughout the country?

There are federal military complexes all over the world. Why would this have to be different?

8 posted on 06/28/2009 8:38:33 AM PDT by cowboyway ("The beauty of the Second Amendment is you won't need it until they try to take it away"--Jefferson)
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To: cowboyway

Because of nuclear weapons and other stuff the Federal government doesn’t want us to see. Imagine if Nevada seceded. Wouldn’t it be quite a fight as to what happens to Groom Lake and what they’ve got going on out there.


9 posted on 06/28/2009 8:41:36 AM PDT by NoobRep
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To: NoobRep

Your knee jerk reaction is to look for reasons why not, and not for reasons why. Gotta change that.

Social Security? Oh, that $900 per month that some people get, the one that requires 15% of everyone’s income to be withheld? So what if Texans no longer have to put FIFTEEN percent of their income into Social Security? You think the state might be able to cover whatever “losses” might result from no longer being in line for the Federal Government’s table scraps? C’mon.


10 posted on 06/28/2009 8:50:20 AM PDT by raptor29
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To: NoobRep
Lincoln and his supporters wanted a centralized ,national government and they instituted it.

Hasn't anyone noticed the modern Communists speak of Lincoln with approval?

11 posted on 06/28/2009 8:50:37 AM PDT by hoosierham (Waddaya mean Freedom isn't free ?;will you take a credit card?)
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To: NoobRep
Imagine if Nevada seceded. Wouldn’t it be quite a fight as to what happens to Groom Lake and what they’ve got going on out there.

Treaty.

12 posted on 06/28/2009 8:51:33 AM PDT by cowboyway ("The beauty of the Second Amendment is you won't need it until they try to take it away"--Jefferson)
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To: raptor29

No I’m all for state’s rights and I believe that it will take a state like Texas declaring independence to reclaim our freedoms. It’s just the logistics of the deal are so different because the Fed government in 1860 had virtually none of the ties that bind them with states today.


13 posted on 06/28/2009 8:54:37 AM PDT by NoobRep
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To: NoobRep

The wealth that would move to Texas would be outstanding. Professionals, business, billions of dollars, etc. They could do it and hurt the Washington a22hats big time. Sure it would be hard at first, but within a short time Texas would be the richest Country in the World. Texas has a military now, every branch of the Service. They could give those Federal units a choice, join Texas or get the hell out. America is gone.


14 posted on 06/28/2009 8:56:11 AM PDT by Logical me (Oh, well!!!)
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To: NoobRep

Those “ties” you mention benefit no one but the freeloaders in this country. Every one can be broken and discarded, as long as the people of Texas (or whatever other state) just remains firm. And it’s long overdue that our side decides to get some guts and stand up. With weapons, if need be.


15 posted on 06/28/2009 9:03:26 AM PDT by raptor29
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To: NoobRep
Because of nuclear weapons and other stuff the Federal government doesn’t want us to see. Imagine if Nevada seceded. Wouldn’t it be quite a fight as to what happens to Groom Lake and what they’ve got going on out there.

Groom Lake is just a front now; to keep the smoke and mirrors alive. Operations moved to Colorado some years back; or so I have read ;-)

16 posted on 06/28/2009 9:08:53 AM PDT by Michael Barnes
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To: cowboyway
What would become of the Federal military complexes that are scattered throughout the country?

The actual fighting in the Civil War began over precisely this issue, with the Yankee govt. claiming that it had a right to maintain a fortress (Ft. Sumpter) within a major seaport of a newly-independent State.

It would be almost impossible to form a new Confederacy today, because there are statist colonies (e.g. Austin, TX) within even the most freedom- and secessionist-minded States. There is an 0bammunist Fifth Column everywhere. 0bama could simply order the U.S. military to reconquer the liberated territories, as his hero Lincoln did.

17 posted on 06/28/2009 10:24:34 AM PDT by hellbender
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To: Logical me
Memoirs of Service Afloat by Raphael Semmes (commander of the CSS Alabama) is full of unreconstructed Confederate thinking. I think he claimed that the Confederate States had the 3rd largest economy in the world (I guess the 1st and 2nd were Great Britain and the U.S.) Yet we all know how that turned out.
18 posted on 06/28/2009 10:27:56 AM PDT by hellbender
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To: hoosierham

HUH!!!

Lincoln issued greenbacks because he did not want to pay the central banks 24-36% interest rate.
You oppose those central bankers and you have problems.

http://www.michaeljournal.org/lincolnkennedy.htm


19 posted on 06/28/2009 10:58:28 AM PDT by freedommom
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To: cowboyway

I don’t give a d*rn what the Federal Government wants, as a citizen I have just as much right to interpret..withhold my delegated authority to govern as the Supreme Court has..and it is getting high time we as US Citizens get together and “seceede” or Re-”Indepedence Declaration” in order to preserve our liberty, peacefully on our part-of course!


20 posted on 06/28/2009 12:49:55 PM PDT by JSDude1 (DHS, FBI, FEMA, etc have been bad little boys. They need to be spanked and sent to timeout!)
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