Mr. Justice Wayne.
I concur altogether in the opinion of the Court, as it has been given by my brother Story.
In that opinion it is decided:
1. That the provision in the second section of the-fourth article of the Constitution, relative to fugitives from service or labour, confers upon the owner of h fugitive slave the right, by himself or his agent, to seize and arrest, without committing a breach of the peace, his fugitive slave, as property, in any state of the Union; and that no state law is constitutional which interferes with such right.
2. That the provision authorizes and requires legislation by Congress to guard that right of seizure arid arrest against all state .and. other interference, to make the delivery of fugitive slaves more effectual when the claims of owners are contested; and to insure to owners the unmolested transportation of fugitive slaves, through any of the states, to the state from which they may have fled. .
3. That the legislation by Congress upon the provision, as the supreme law of the land, excludes all state legislation upon the same subject; and that no state can pass any law or regulation, or interpose such as may have been a law or regulation when the Constitution of the United States was ratified,to superadd to, control, qualify, or impede a remedy, enacted by Congress, for the delivery of fugitive slaves to the parties to whom their service or labour is due. • -
4. That the power of legislation by Congress upon the provision is exclusive; and that no state can pass any law as a remedy upon the subject, whethér Congress had or had not legisíaied upon it.
5. That the act of Congress of the 12th February, 1793, entitled “An act, respecting fugitives from justice, and persons escaping from the service of their masters,” gives a remedy; but does not exhaust the remedies, which Congress may legislate upon the subject.
6. That the points so decided are not intended to interfere in any way, nor do they interfere in any manner, with the police power in the. states, to arrest and imprison fugitive slaves, to guard against their misconduct and depredations; or to punish them for offences /and crimes committed in the states to which they may have fled.
7. These points being. so decided and applied to the case before the Court, it follows that the law of Pennsylvania, upon which the plaintiff is indicted is unconstitutional; and that the judgment given by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania against the plaintiff must be reversed.
Ail of” the judges ofthe Court concur in the opinion that the law under which the plaintiff in error was indicted is unconstitutional. All of them concur, also, in the declaration; that the provision in the Constitution was a compromise between the slaveholding, and the non-slaveholding .states, to secure to the former fugitive slaves as property. All of the members of the Court, too, except my brother Baldwin, concur in the opinion that legislation by Congress, to carry the provision into execution, is constitutional; and he contends that the provision gives to the owners of fugitive slaves all the rights of seizure and removal which legislation could give; but he concurs in the opinion, if legislation by Congress be necessary, that the right to legislate is exclusively in Congress.
There is no difference, then, among the judges as to the reversal of the judgment; none in respect to the origin and object of the provision, or the obligation to exercise it. But differences do exist as to thé mode of execution. Three of the judges have expressed the opinion, that the states may legislate upon the provision, in aid of the object it was intended to secure; and that such legislation is constitutional, when it does not conflict with the remedy which Congress may enact.
I believe, that the power to legislate upon the provision is exclusively in Congress.
The provision is; that “ No person, held to service or .labour in one state, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of anylaWof regulation thereinrbe discharged from such service or labour, but shall be delivered- up on claim of the party to whom such service or labour is due/’
The clause contains four, substantive declarations 5 or two conditions, a prohibition, and a. direction.
First, The fugitive must owe service or labour under the .law of the state from which he has escaped; second, he must have fled from it. The ■ prohibition is, that he cannot be discharged from service, in consequence of any law or regulation of the state in which he may be; and the direction is affirmative of-an. obligation upon the states, and declarative of a .right in the- party to whom the service or labour of a fugitive is due.
. My object,- and.the only object which-I have in view, in what I am about to say, is, to establish the position that Congress has the exclusive right to legislate upon this provision of the Constitution. I shall endeavour to prove it by the condition of the states when the Constitution was formed; by references to the provision itself; and to the.Constitution generally;
Let it be remembered, that the conventioners who • formed the Constitution, were the representatives of equal sovereignties. That they were assembled to form a more perfect union than then existed between the states under the confederacy. That they cooperated to the same end; but that they were divided into, two .parties, having antagonist interests in respect to slavery.
One of these parties, consisting of several states, required as a condition; upon which any constitution should be presented to the states for ratification, a full and perfect security for their slaves as property, when they fled into any of the states of the Union. The fact is not more plainly stated by me than it urns put in the convention. The representatives from the non-slaveholding states assented to the condition.- The provision under review was proposed and adopted by the unanimous vote of the convention It, with an allowance of a certain portion of slaves with the whites, for representative population in-Congress,and the importation of slaves from abroad, for a number of years; were the great obstacles in the way of forming a constitution. Each of them was. equally insisted- upon by the representatives from the slaveholding states; and without all of them being provided for, it was well understood, that the convention would have been dissolved, without a constitution being formed.- I mention the facts as they were. They cannot be denied. I have nothing to do, judicially, with what a part of the world may think of the attitude of the different parties upon this interesting topic. I am satisfied wHh what was done; -and revere the men- and their motives for insisting, politically, upon what was done. When the three points relating to slaves Had been accomplished, every impediment in the way of. forming a constitution was removed. The agreement concerning them was called, in the convention, a compromise. . The provision in respect to fugitives from service or labour, was called a guarantee of a right of property in fugitive slaves, wherever they might be found in the Union. The Constitution-was p esented to the states for adoption, .with the understanding that the provisions in it.relating to slaves were a compromise and guarantee ; and with such an understanding in every state, it was adopted by all of them. Not a "guarantee mcrelvin the professional acceptation of the word, but a great nation; engagement, in which the states surrendered a sovereign right, making-it a part of that instrument, which was intended to make them one nation, within the sphere of its action. The provision, then, must be interpreted by those rules of construction assented •to by all civilized nations, as obligatory in ascertaining the rights growing out of these agreements. We shall see, dire.ctly how thése rules bear upon the question of the power of legislation upon this subject being exclusively in Congress; and why the states are excluded from legislating upon- it.
The prohibition upon the states to disciiarge fugitive slaves is absolute.-
. The provision, however, does not contain, in detail, the manner of asserting the right it was meant to secure. .Nor is there in it any expressed power of legislation; nor any expressed prohibition of stqte legislation. But it does provide, that delivery of a’ fugitive shall be made on the claim .of the owner — that the fugi tive slave owing service and labour in the state from which he fled, and escaping therefrom, shall be decisive of the owners right to a delivery. It does not, however, provide the mode of proving that service and labour is due in a contested case, nor for any such evidence of the right, when- it has been established, as will insure to an owner the unmolested transportation of the fugitive, through other states, to the state from which he fled. But the right to convey is the necessary consequence of a right to delivery. The latter would be good for nothing without the former. Proof of ownership gives both, if it gives either or any thing; and yet the right might be in the larger number of instances unavailing, if it were not certified by some official document, that -the right had been established. A certificate from an officer authorized to inquire into the facts, is the easiest way to secure the right to its contemplated intent. ‘ It was foreseen that claims would be made, which would be contested, Some tribunal was necessary to decide them,- and to authenticate the fact that a claim had been established. . Without such authentication, the contest might be renewed in other tribunals of the state in which the fact had been established; and-in those of the other states through which the fugitive might be carried on his way to the state from which he fled. Such a certificate too, being required, protects persons who are not fugitives from being seized and transported. It has the effect of securing the benefit of a lawful claim; and of preventing the accomplishment of one that is false. Such a certificate, to give a right to transport-a fugitive slave through another state, a state cannot give. Its operation Would be confined to its own boundaries; and would be useless to assert the right in another sovereignty. Ihis analysisof the provision is given to show that legislation was contemplated to carry it fully into effect, in many of the cases that might occur; and to prevent its abuse when attempts might be made to apply it to those who were not fugitives. And it brings me to the point I have asserted, that Congress has the exclusive right to legislate upon the provision.
Those who contend that the states may legislate in aid of the object of the provision, admit that-Congress can legislate to the full extent to carry it into execution. There is, then, no necessity for the states to legislate. This is a good reason why they should not legislate; and that it was intended that they should not do so. For legislation by Congress makes the mode of asserting the right uniform throughout the Union; and legislation by the states Would be as various as the separate legislative will and policv of the different states might choose to make it. Certainly such an interest as the Constitution was intended to secure, we may well think the framers of the Constitution intended to- provide for by a uniform- law. I admit, however, that such considerations do not necessarily exclude. the right of the states to legislate. The argument in favour of the right, is, that the states are not in express terms prohibited from legislating, and that the exclusion is not necessarily implied. I further admit, if it be not necessarily implied, that the fight exists. Such is the rule, in respect to the right of legislation by the states, in all cases under the Constitution when the question of a right to legislate is merely such.
My first remark is, and I wish it to be particularly observed, that the question is not one only of the right of the states to legislate in aid of this provision, .unconnected with other considerations bearing directly upon the question. The true question in the case is, by what rules shall the compromise or guarantee be construed; so that the obligations and rights of the states under the provision may be ascertained and secured.
It is admitted, that the provision raises what is properly termed á perfect obligation upon all of the states to abstain from doing any thing which may interfere with the rights secured. Will this be so, if any part of what may be necessary to discharge the obligation is reserved by each state, to be done as each may think proper ? The obligation is common to all of them, to the same extent. Its object is to secure the property of some of the states, and the individual rights of their citizens in that property. Shall, then, each state be permitted to legislate in its own way, according to its - own judgment, and their separate notions, in what manner the obligation shall be discharged to those states to which it is due,? To permit some of the states to say to the others, how the property included in the provision was to be secured by legislation, without the assent of the latter, would certainly be, to destroy the equality..and force of the guarantee, and the equality of the states by which it was made. That was not anticipated by the representatives of the slaveholding states in the convention, nor could it have been intended by the framers of the Constitution.
Is it not more reasonable to infer, as the states were forming, a government for themselves, to the extent of the powers conceded in the Constitution, to which legislative power was given to make all laws necessary.and proper to carry into execution all powers vested in it — that they meant that the right for which some of the states stipulated., and to which all acceded, should, from the peculiar nature of the property in .which only some of the states were interested — be carried into execution by that department of the general government in which they were all to be represented, the Congress of the United States.
But is not this power of legislation by the states, upon this, provision, a claim for each to. use its discretion in interpreting the manner in which the guarantee sháll be fulfilled ?
-Are there no rules of interpretation, founded upon reason and nature, to settle ,this question, and to secure the rights given by. the provision, better than the discretion of the parties to the obligation ? Has not- experience’ shown that those rules must be applied to conventions between nations, in order that justicé may be done ? All civilized nations have consented to be bound by them; and they are a part of the laws of nations. Is not one. of those rules, the maxim that neither one or the other of the interested or contracting powers has a right to interpret his act or treaty at his pleasure ? Such is the rule in respect to the treaties and conventions of nations foreign to each other. It applies with equal necessity and force to states united in one general government. Especially to states making a provision in respect to property peculiar to some of them, which has become so interwoven with their institutions and .their representation in the general government of all of them, that the right to such property must be maintained and guarded, in order to preserve their- sepárate existence, and to -keep up their constitutional representation in-Congress. Such cannot be" the case, .unless there is uniformity in the‘law for asserting the right to fugitive slaves; and if the states can legislate, as each of them may think it should be done, a remedy, by which the right of property in fugitive slaves is to be ascertained and finally concluded. Nor does it matter that the rule to which I have adverted as being exclusive of the -right of the states to legislate upon the provision, does not appear in it. It is exactly to such cases that the rule applies,, and it must be so applied, unless the contrary has been expressly provided.. The mode of its application is as authoritative as the rule; The rule, too, applies to the provision without- any conflict with the other rule that the states may legislate in all cases, when they are not expressly orimpliedly prohibited- by the Constitution. The latter rule is in no way trenched upon by excluding the states -from legislating in this case. This provision is the only one in the Constitution in which a security for a particular kind of property is provided; provided, too, expressly against the interference by the states in their sovereign character. The surrender of a sovereign right carries with it all its incidents. It differs from yielding a participation to another government, in a sovereign right. In the latter, both may have jurisdiction. The state yielding the right, retaining jurisdiction to the. extentóf doing nothing rppugnant to the exercise of the right by the government to which it has been fielded.
But it is said, all that is contended for, is, that the states may legislate to aid the. object, and that such legislation will be constitutional if it does not conflict with the remedies which Congress may enact. This is a cautious way of asserting the right in the states, and it seems to impose a limitation which makes it unobjectionable. But the reply to it is, that the right to legislate a remedy, implies so much indefinite power over the subject, and such protracted continuance, as to the mode of finally determining whether a fugitive owes service and labour, that the requirements of the remedy, without being actually .in conflict with-the provision ur the enactments of Congress might be oppressive to those most interested in the provision, by interposing delays and expenses more costly than the value of the fugitive sought to be reclaimed. Ordinarily, and when rightly understood, it is true that the abuse of a thing is no argument against its correctness or its use; but that, suggestion can only be correctly made in cases in support of a right or power abstractly and positively right, and which has been abused under the pretence of using it; or where the proper use has beenmistaken. In matters of government, however, a power liable to be abused is always a goci reason for withholding it. It is the reason why the powers of the United States, under the Constitution, aré so cautiously given— why the express prohibitions upon the states not to legislate in certain cases were expressed — why the limitation upon the former, that the powers not- granted are reserved to the- states, as it is expressed in the amendments to the Constitution. But in truth, any additional legislation in this, case by a state, acting as a remedy, in aid of the remedy given by the Constitution and by Congress, would be, in practice, in conflict with the. latter, if it be a process differing from it; though it might make the mode of recovering a fugitive easier than the former, and much inoré so, when it made it moré difficult. The right to legislate a remedy implies the ability to do either; and it is because it-does so, and may be the latter, that I deny all right in the states to legislate upon this subject; unless it bé to aid, by mere ministerial acts, the protection of an owner’s right to a fugitive slave— the prevention of all interference with it by the officers of a state, or its citizens, or an authority to its magistrates to execute the law of Congress — and such legislation over fugitives as may be strictly of a police character.
■ Admit the states to legislate remedies in this case, besides such as are given by Congress, and there will be no security for the delivery of fugitive slaves in half of the states of the Union. Such was the case when the Constitution was adopted. The states might legislate in good faith, according to their notions how such a right of property-should be tried. They have already-done so, and the act of Pennsylvania, now .under .consideration, shows, that the assertion of a right to a fugitive slave is burdened by provisions entailing expenses disproportioned to his value.; and that it is- only to be asserted, by arraying against the claim all of those popular prejudices which, under other circumstances, would be proper feelings against slavery.
-But the propriety of the rule of interpretation, which I have invoked to exclude the states from -legislating upon this provision. of the Constitution, becomes more obvious, when it is -remembered that the provision was not intended only to secure the property of individuals, but that through their rights, that the institutions of the states-should be preserved, so long as any one of the states chose to continue slavery as a part of its policy-
The subject has usually been argued as if the rights of individuals only were intended to be secured, and-as if the legislation by the states would only act upon such rights.
The framers of the Constitution did -not act upon such narrow grounds. They weré engaged in forming a government .for all of the states; by concessions of sovereign rights from all, without impairing the actual, sovereignty of any one, except within the sphere of what was conceded. One great object was,-that all kinds of property, as well that which was common, in all of the states; as that which was peculiar to any of them, should be protected in all of the states, as well from any interference with it by the United States, as by the states.- Experience had shown that under the confederacy, the reclamation of fugitive slaves was embarrassed and uncertain, and that they were yielded to by the states only from comity. It was intended that it should be no longer so. The policy of the different states, some of them contiguous, had already become marked and decided upon the subject of slavery. There was no doubt it would become more so. It was foreseen, unless the delivery of fugitive slaves was made.a part of the Constitution, and that the right of the states to discharge them from service was taken away, that some of the states would become the refuge of runaways; and, of course, that in proportion to the facility and certainty of-any state being a refuge, so would the right of individuals,, and the institutions of the slaveholding states, be impaired. The latter were bound, when forming a general government with the other states, under which there was to be a community of rights and privileges for all citizens in the several states, to protect that property of their citizens which was essential to the preservation of their state constitutions. If this had not been done, all of the property of the citizens would have been protected in every state, except that which was the most valuable in. a number of them. In such a case, the states would have become members of the Union upon unequal terms. Besides, the property of an individual is not the less his, because it is in another state than that in which he lives. It continues to be his, and forms á part of the wealth of his state. The provision, then, in respect to fugitive .slaves, only comprehended within the general rule a species of property not within it before. By doing so, the right of individuals, and that of the statéS in "which /slavery was continued, were preserved. It remained’in the states as a-,past of that wealth, from which .contributions were-to be raised ’ by -taxes laid with the consent of the Owners to meet the wants of the state’as a body politic. If this be so, upon what principle shall the states act by their’legislation upon property, which is national as. well as individual; and direct the •mode’whéü it .is within their jurisdiction, without the consent of the owners, and withoüt thefault of the. states where, the owners reside, how the right of property, should be ascertained and determined. The case of a fugitive slave is not like that of a contest for other property, to be. determined between two claimants by the remedy given by the tribunals of the state where the property may be. It is not a controversy between two persons claiming the right to a thing, but the assertion by one person of a right of property in another, to be determined upon principles peculiar to such, relation. If the provision had not been introduced into- the Constitution, the states might have adjudged the right in the way it. pleased; but having surrendered the right to discharge, they are not now to be allowed to assume a right to legislate, to. try the obligation of a fugitive to servitude, in any other way than in conformity to the principles peculiar to the relation of master and slave. : Their legislation, then, inthe way of remedy, would bear upon state as well as. individual rights; and I am sure, when the “Constitution was formed, the states never intended to give any “such right to each other. If it has such am effect, I think J may rightly conclude that legislation in the case before us is forbidden to the states.
■But I have a further reason for the conclusion to which I have come upon this point; to which I cannot see that an answer can be given.
The provision contemplates, besides the right of Seizure by the ■owner; that a claim may bemade, when a seizure has not been effected, or afterwards, if his right shall be contested.. That the claim shall be good, upon the.showing- by the claimant that the person charged as a fugitive owes service, or labour, under the. laws of the state from which, he fled.
The prohibition in the provision, is, that he shall riot be “discharged, in consequence of any law or regulation- of a state” where he maybe. • If then, in a controverted case,.a person charged as a fugitive, shall be discharged under a remedy legislated by a state to try the fact of his owing service or labour, is he not discharged under á law or regulation of a state ? It is no answer to this question, to say, that the discharge was not made in-virtue of any law discharging the fugitive from servitude-; and thatthedischarge .occurred, only from the .mode of trial to ascértajn if he owed service and labour. For that is to assume, that the provision- only prevented discharges from being made by the states, by enactment hr-law, declaring that fugitive slaves might be discharged. The provision-will not admit of such an. interpretation. -Nor is it any answer to say,, that state regulations to ascertain whether a fugitive owes service br labour, are distinguishable from such as- directly or by construction- would lead to his discharge’; for if a discharge be made under one or the other — whether the discharge be right or wrong, it .is a discharge under the regulation of a- state.
T understand the provision to mean; and when its object and the surrender by the.statestof the right to discharge are kept in mind, its.obvious meaning to every one must be, that the states are not ohl-y prohibited from discharging a fugitive from service by a law, but that theyshall not make or apply-regulations to try the question of the fugitive owing service. The languagé of the provision, is,‘“No person, &c., shall in consequence of any law.or regulation therein,” be discharged from such service or labour. - The words “ in consequence,” meaning the effect of a cause — certainly embrace-regulations to try the right of property, as well’as -laws, directly discharging a fugitive .from Service,
If this be not so, the states may regulate the mode of an owner’s seizing a fugitive, slave, prohibiting it from -being done except’ by warrant, and by an officer; thus denying to an owner the right to use a casual opportunity to repossess himself of this kind of property, which theré is a right to. do, in respect, to all other kinds of property, where not in the possession of some one else. It may regulate the quantity and quality of the proof to establish the right’ of an -owner to a fugitive, and give compensatory and. punitory damages against a claimant, if his right benot established’ according, to such proof. It might limit the trial, to particular times and Courts; give- appeals from one to other Courts; and protract the ultimate decision, until the value in controversy Was exceeded by the cost of establishingit. S etch rights of legislation inthe states to try a right of property in a fugitive slave, are surely inconsistent with that security, which Judge Iredell told the people of North Carolina, in the convention, that the Constitution gave to them for their slaves when they fled into other states. Speaking of this clause of the Constitution, he sáys, “ In •some of the northern states, they have emancipated all of their slaves. If any one of our slaves go there, and remain there a certain time, theywould, by the present laws, be entitled to their freedom, so that their masters could not get them again. This would be extremely prejudicial to the inhabitants of the southern states; and, to prevent it, thisclause is inserted in the Constitution.” To the same purpose, and with more-positiveness, Charles Cotesworth Pincknéy said to the people of South Carolina, in the convention of that state, “We have obtained a right to recover our slaves in whatever part of -America they may take refuge; which is a right we had not before.”
But further, does not the language of this provision in the precise terms used, “ shall not be discharged from such service or labour,” show, that the states surrendering the right to discharge, meant to exclude themselves from legislating amode-of trial, which, from the time it would take, would be a qualified or temporary discharge to the injury of the-owner ? Would not a.postponement ofthe trial of a fugitive owing service or labour, for one ■month,be a loss to the owner of his service, equivalent to a discharge for that time. ■ And if a state can postpone by legislation the trial for one month, may it not do so for a longer time ? And whether it be for a longer-or a shorter time, is it not a discharge from service, for whatever time it may be ? -It is no answer to this argument,, to say, that time is necessarily involved in the prosecution of all rights. The question here is not as to a time being more or less necessary — but as to the right of a state by regulations to try the obligation of a fugitive to service or labour, to fix in its discretion the time it may take.
The subject- might be further discussed and illustrated by arguments, equally cogent with those already given. But I forbear. For the foregoing reasons, hi addition to- those given in the opinioii of the Court, I am constrained to come to the conclusion,that the right, of legislating upon that clause in the Con stitution, preventing the states from discharging fugitive slaves, is exclusively in the Congress of the United States. I am as little inclined as any one can l?e, to. deny, in a doubtful case, a right of legislation in the states 5 but I cannot concede that it exists under the Constitution in a case relating to the property, of .some ■of the states in which the others have no interest; and whose legislators, from the nature of .the subject, and the human mind in relation to it, cannot be supposed to be best fitted to secure the right guarantied by the Constitution.
I had intended to give an account of the beginning and progress of the legislation of the states upon this subject; but my remarks are, already so much extended, that I must decline doing so. It would have, shown, perhaps, as much as any other instance, how a mistaken, doubtful, and hesitating exercise of power in the commencement, becomes,.by use, a conviction .of its correctness. It would also have shown that thé. legislation of the states in respect to fugitive slaves, and particularly that which has most embarrassed the recovery of fugitive slaves, has been in opposition to an unbroken current- of decisions in the Courts of the states,- and those of the United States. Not a point has been decided, in the cause fiow before this Court, which has not been ruled in the Courts of Massachusetts, New York, and Penn-. sylvania, and in other State Courts. Judges have differed as to.some of them, but the Courts of the states have announced all of them, with the consideration, and solemnity of judicial conclusion. In cases too, in which the decisions were appropriate, because the points were raised by the record.
I consider the point I have been maintaining, more important than any other in the opinion of the Court. It removes those causes which have contributed more than any other to disturb that harmony which is essential to the continuance of the Union. The framers of the Constitution knew it to be so, and inserted the provision in it. Hereaftef they ca.nnot occur, if the judgment of this Court in -this cause shall meet with the same .patriotic acquiescence which the tribunals of the states and the people ofthe states have heretofore accorded to its decisions. The recovery of fugitive slaves will hereafter, be exclusively regur lated by the Constitution of the United States, and the acts of Congress. -
Apart from the position that the states may legislate in all cases, where they are not expressly prohibited, or by necessary impljcátion; the claim for .the states to legislate is mainly advocated upon the-ground that they are bound to protect free.blacks and persons of colour residing in them from being carried into slavery by any summary process. The answer to this is, that legislation may- be confined to that end, and be made effectual, without making such a remedy applicable to fugitive slaves. There is no propriety in making a remedy to protect those who are free the probable means- of freeing those who are not so. It is also .said, the states may aid by remedies the- acts of Congress, when they are not in conflict with them. I reply, Congress has full power to enact all that such aid could give; and if experience shows any deficiency in its enactments, Congress will no doubt supply it. If there are not now agencies enough to make the assertion of the right to fugitives convenient to their owners, Congress can multiply them. But if it should not be done, better is it that the inconvenience should be borne, than-that the states should be brought into collision upon this subject as ithey have been-; and that they should attempt to supply deficiencies, upon their separate views of what the remedies should be to recover fugitive slaves within their jurisdictions.
I have heard it Suggested, also, as a reason why the states should, legislate upon this subject, that Congress -may repeal the remedy it has given, and leave the provision unaided by legislation ‘ and that then the states might carry it into execution. Be it so; but the latter is not .needed, for though legislation by Con-, gress supports the rights intended to be secured, there is energy enough in the Constitution without legislation upon ¡this subject, to protect and enforce -what it gives.