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Virginia v. West Virginia

Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. (11 Wall.) 39 (1871), is a 6-3 ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States that held that if a governor has discretion in the conduct of the election, the legislature is bound by his action and cannot undo the results based on fraud. The Court implicitly affirmed that the breakaway Virginia counties had received the necessary consent of both the Commonwealth of Virginia and the United States Congress to become a separate U.S. state. The Court also explicitly held that Berkeley County and Jefferson County were part of the new State of West Virginia.

Virginia v. West Virginia
Decided March 6, 1871
Full case nameState of Virginia v. State of West Virginia
Citations78 U.S. 39 (more)
11 Wall. 39; 20 L. Ed. 67
Holding
Where a governor has discretion in the conduct of the election, the legislature is bound by his action and cannot undo the results based on fraud.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Salmon P. Chase
Associate Justices
Samuel Nelson · Nathan Clifford
Noah H. Swayne · Samuel F. Miller
David Davis · Stephen J. Field
William Strong · Joseph P. Bradley
Case opinions
MajorityMiller, joined by Chase, Nelson, Swayne, Strong, Bradley
DissentDavis, joined by Clifford, Field

Background

When the American Civil War started, Virginia seceded from the United States in 1861 over slavery,[1] but many of the northwestern counties of Virginia were decidedly pro-Union.[2][3] At a convention called by the governor and authorized by the legislature, delegates voted on April 17, 1861 to approve Virginia's secession from the United States.[4] Although the resolution required approval from voters at an election scheduled for May 23, 1861, Virginia's governor entered into a treaty of alliance with the Confederate States of America on April 24, elected delegates to the Confederate Congress on April 29, and formally entered the Confederacy on May 7.[4] For US President Abraham Lincoln, those actions proved that rebels had taken over the state and turned the machinery of the state toward insurrection. The individuals had not acted with popular support and thus Lincoln later felt justified in recognizing the Reorganized Government.[5]

Unionist sentiment was so high in the northwestern counties that civil government began to disintegrate, and the Wheeling Intelligencer newspaper called for a convention of delegates to meet in the city of Wheeling to consider secession from the Commonwealth of Virginia.[6] Delegates duly assembled, and at the First Wheeling Convention (also known as the May Convention), held May 13 to 15, the delegates voted to hold off on secession from Virginia until the state had formally seceded from the United States.[7][8] Concerned that the irregular nature of the First Wheeling Convention might not democratically represent the will of the people, formal elections were scheduled for June 4 to elect delegates to a second convention, if necessary.[7][8] Virginians voted to approve secession on May 23. On June 4, elections were held and delegates to an elected Second Wheeling Convention. Those elections were irregular as well. Some were held under military pressure, some counties sent no delegates, some delegates never appeared, and voter turnout varied significantly.[9][10] On June 19, the Second Wheeling Convention declared the offices of all government officials who had voted for secession vacant and reconstituted the executive and legislative branches of the Virginia government from their own ranks.[3][11][12] The Second Wheeling Convention adjourned on June 25 with the intent of reconvening on August 6.[13]

 
Francis Harrison Pierpont, Reorganized Governor of Virginia.

The new Reorganized Governor, Francis Harrison Pierpont, asked Lincoln for military assistance,[13][14] and Lincoln recognized the new government.[13][15] The region elected new US Senators, and its two existing US Representatives took their old seats in the House, which effectively gave congressional recognition to the Reorganized Government as well.[3][13][16]

After reconvening on August 6, the Second Wheeling Convention again debated secession from Virginia. The delegates adopted a resolution authorizing the secession of 39 counties, with Berkeley, Greenbrier, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Morgan, and Pocahontas Counties to be added if their voters approved, and it authorized any counties contiguous with them to join the new state if they so voted as well.[15][17] On October 24, 1861, voters in the 39 counties, as well as voters in Hampshire and Hardy Counties, voted to secede from the Commonwealth of Virginia. In eleven counties, voter participation was less than 20%, and Raleigh and Braxton Counties had a voter turnout of only 5% and 2%.[18][19][20] The ballot also allowed voters to choose delegates to a constitutional convention, which met from November 26, 1861 to February 18, 1862.[21] The convention chose the name "West Virginia" but then engaged in lengthy and acrimonious debate over whether to extend the state's boundaries to other counties that had not voted to secede.[22] Added to the new state were McDowell, Mercer, and Monroe Counties.[23] Berkeley, Frederick, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Morgan, and Pendleton Counties were again offered the chance to join, which all but Frederick County accepted.[23] Eight counties, Greenbrier, Logan, McDowell, Mercer, Monroe, Pocahontas, Webster, and Wyoming Counties, never participated in any of the polls initiated by the Wheeling government, but they were still included in the new state.[18] A new constitution for West Virginia was adopted on February 18, 1862 and was approved by voters on April 4.[24]

Governor Pierpont recalled the Reorganized state legislature, which voted on May 13 to approve the secession and to include Berkeley, Frederick, and Jefferson Counties if they approved the new West Virginia constitution as well.[24][25] After much debate over whether Virginia had truly given its consent to the formation of the new state,[26][27] the US Congress adopted a statehood bill on July 14, 1862, which contained the proviso of freeing all blacks in the new state under the age of 21 on July 4, 1863.[28][29][30] Lincoln was unsure of the bill's constitutionality, but pressed by northern senators, he signed the legislation on December 31, 1862.[31][32]

The West Virginia constitutional convention had not adjourned sine die but was rather subject to recall. Every county except Webster and Monroe Counties sent representatives to the session that convened on February 12, 1863 with Abraham D. Soper as its president.[33] After spirited debate concerning compensation for slaveowners whose slaves were freed (the matter ultimately being tabled), the convention amended the state's constitution on February 17 to include the congressionally-required slave freedom provisions and adjourned sine die on February 20.[33][34] The state's voters ratified the slave freedom amendment on March 26, 1863.[34] On April 20, Lincoln announced that West Virginia would become a state in 60 days.[34]

 
Map of the political development of West Virginia. Counties in white are the original counties. Berkeley (red) and Jefferson (dark blue) Counties were the focus of Virginia v. West Virginia.

Since they were then under the military control of the Confederacy, Berkeley, Frederick, and Jefferson Counties never held votes on secession or the new West Virginia state constitution.[35] On January 31, 1863, the Restored Government of Virginia passed legislation authorizing the reorganized governor to hold elections in Berkeley County on whether or not to join West Virginia.[36] The Reorganized legislature similarly approved on February 4, 1863 an election for Jefferson County and others.[37] The elections were held, voters approved secession, and Berkeley and Jefferson Counties were admitted to West Virginia.[38]

However, on December 5, 1865, the Virginia Assembly in Richmond passed legislation repealing all the acts of the reorganized government regarding secession of the 39 counties and the admission of Berkeley and Jefferson Counties to Virginia.[39]

On March 10, 1866, Congress passed a resolution acknowledging the transfer of the two counties to West Virginia from Virginia.[40]

Virginia sued, arguing that no action had taken place under the act of May 13, 1862, requiring elections, and that the elections in 1863 had been fraudulent and irregular. West Virginia filed a demurrer, which alleged that the Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction over the case because it was of a purely political nature.

Decision

Majority holding

Associate Justice Samuel Freeman Miller wrote the decision for the majority, joined by Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase and Associate Justices Samuel Nelson, Noah Haynes Swayne, William Strong, and Joseph P. Bradley.

Justice Miller first disposed of the demurrer. He concluded that the demurrer could not be granted "without reversing the settled course of decision in this court and overturning the principles on which several well-considered cases have been decided."[41] He noted that the court had asserted its jurisdiction in several cases before, including The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations v. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 37 U.S. 657 (1838); State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660 (1849); Florida v. Georgia, 58 U.S. 478 (1854); and State of Alabama v. State of Georgia, 64 U.S. 505 (1860).[42]

Justice Miller then posed three questions for the Court to answer: :"1. Did the State of Virginia ever give a consent to this proposition which became obligatory on her? 2. Did the Congress give such consent as rendered the agreement valid? 3. If both these are answered affirmatively, it may be necessary to inquire whether the circumstances alleged in this bill, authorized Virginia to withdraw her consent, and justify us in setting aside the contract, and restoring the two counties to that State."[43] Justice Miller then reviewed the various acts taken to reorganize the government of Virginia in 1861 and the various acts that the Reorganized Government and the United States took to create the state of West Virginia and extend its jurisdiction over the counties in question.[44] In answering the first question, Miller wrote, "Now, we have here, on two different occasions, the emphatic legislative proposition of Virginia that these counties might become part of West Virginia; and we have the constitution of West Virginia agreeing to accept them and providing for their place in the new-born State."[45] There was no question, in the mind of the majority, that Virginia had given its consent. Although the elections had been postponed because of a "hostile" environment, the majority concluded that the Reorganized Government of Virginia had acted in "good faith" to carry out its electoral duties in the two counties.[46]

In regard to the second question, Miller pondered the nature of congressional consent. Congress could not be expected to give its explicit consent to every single aspect of the proposed state constitution, Miller argued.[47] Clearly, Congress had intensively considered the proposed state constitution, which contained provisions for accession of the two counties in question, because Congress had seriously considered the slavery question regarding the admission of the new state and required changes in the proposed constitution before statehood could be granted.[48] That debate could lead the Court to only a single conclusion, Miller stated: "It is, therefore, an inference clear and satisfactory that Congress by that statute, intended to consent to the admission of the State with the contingent boundaries provided for in its constitution and in the statute of Virginia, which prayed for its admission on those terms, and that in so doing it necessarily consented to the agreement of those States on that subject. There was then a valid agreement between the two States consented to by Congress, which agreement made the accession of these counties dependent on the result of a popular vote in favor of that proposition."[49]

Miller then considered the third question. The majority held that although the language of the two statutes of January 31, 1863 and February 4, 1863, were different, they had the same legal intent and force.[50] Virginia showed "good faith" in holding the elections, Miller asserted.[50] That the Reorganized Virginia legislature did not require vote totals to be reported to it and delegated the transmission of the vote totals to West Virginia was not at issue, according to Miller. That gave the Reorganized Governor discretion as to when, where, and hope to hold the votes to certify them. The legislature acted within its power to delegate these duties to the Reorganized Governor, "and his decision [was] conclusive as to the result."[51] Were the votes fair and regular? The Virginia Assembly, Miller noted, made only "indefinite and vague" allegations about vote fraud, and unspecified charges that somehow, Governor Pierpont must have been "misled and deceived" by others into believing the voting was fair and regular.[51] Miller pointedly observed that not a single person was charged with fraud, no specific act of fraud was stated, and no legal wrongs asserted.[51] The Virginia Assembly also did not claim that West Virginia had interfered in the elections.[51] Absent such allegations, Virginia's accusations cannot be sustained, Miller concluded. However, even if that aspect of Virginia's argument was ignored, Miller wrote, the Reorganized legislature had delegated all its power to certify to the election to Governor Pierpont, and he had certified it. That alone laid to rest Virginia's allegations.[52] "[She] must be bound by what she had done. She can have no right, years after all this has been settled, to come into a court of chancery to charge that her own conduct has been a wrong and a fraud; that her own subordinate agents have misled her governor, and that her solemn act transferring these counties shall be set aside, against the will of the State of West Virginia, and without consulting the wishes of the people of those counties."[53]

Dissenting opinion

Associate Justice David Davis wrote a dissent, joined by Associate Justices Nathan Clifford and Stephen Johnson Field.

Davis concluded that Congress had never given its consent to the transfer of Berkeley and Jefferson Counties to West Virginia.[53] By the time that Congress did so, on March 10, 1866, the Legislature of Virginia had already withdrawn its consent to the transfer of the two counties.[53]

Davis disagreed with the majority's view that Congress had consented to the transfer of the two counties by debating the proposed West Virginia constitution. There was nothing in the debates to ever suggest that, Davis wrote.[54] Congress agreed to that the two counties should be offered the chance to join West Virginia by the time of the new state's admission to union with the United States.[54] The conditions had not been met by the time of admission and thus no transfer could be constitutionally made.[54] Congress had not agreed to additional legislative acts of transfer and thus they could not be made without Virginia's assent, which had since been withdrawn.[54]

Assessment

 
Former Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis argued the case for Virginia.

When Virginia v. West Virginia first came to the Supreme Court in 1867, there were only eight Justices on the bench because of the death of Justice James Moore Wayne on July 5, 1867. The Court would not have nine Justices again until the resignation of Justice Robert Cooper Grier on January 31, 1870 and that year's confirmation of Justices William Strong in February and Joseph P. Bradley in March. During those three years, the Supreme Court was divided 4-4 as to whether it had jurisdiction over the case.[55][56] Chief Justice Chase delayed taking up the case until a majority had emerged in favor of affirming the Court's original jurisdiction, rather than seeking a ruling on the issue.[55] The acceptance of original jurisdiction in that matter is now considered one of the most significant jurisdictional cases in Supreme Court history.[57]

It is noteworthy that former Associate Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis argued unsuccessfully the case on behalf of Virginia before the Court.[57] Curtis, as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, had dissented from the holding in Dred Scott v. Sandford.

Many in Congress questioned both the legality of the Reorganized Virginia government and the constitutionality of the creation of West Virginia.[26][27] Many scholars since have questioned the democratic nature of the Second Wheeling Convention, the legal and moral legitimacy of the Reorganized Government, and the constitutionality of the creation of West Virginia.[58] However, most lengthy scholarly treatments of the issue assert the legality of the Reorganized government. In Luther v. Borden, 48 U.S. 1 (1849), the Supreme Court held that only the federal government could determine what constituted a "republican form of government" in a state, as provided for in the Guarantee Clause of Article Four of the United States Constitution.[59] Virginia was not alone in having two governments, one unionist, one rebel, with the union government recognized by the United States.[60] The Supreme Court had held in Luther v. Borden, "Under this article of the Constitution it rests with Congress to decide what government is the established one in a State."[61] As both the President and Congress had recognized the Reorganized government, that provision was met and so the entire process was legal.[15][62]

There were precedents for such action as well. As one legal scholar has noted, Michigan was admitted to the union after irregular elections for three unauthorized constitutional conventions led to a request for statehood being eventually granted by Congress in 1837.[63] Kansas despite undergoing a highly-irregular statehood process marked by violence, mass meetings masquerading as legislative assemblies, and allegations of vote fraud, but was also admitted to the union.[63] One widely-cited legal analysis concluded that "the process of West Virginia statehood was hyper-legal."[64] Indeed, denying the legality of the Reorganized government would create significant problems, two legal scholars have argued since it "follows, we submit, that 'Virginia' validly consented to the creation of West Virginia with its borders. Indeed, one can deny this conclusion only if one denies one of Lincoln's twin premises: the unlawfulness of secession; or the power of the national government, under the Guarantee Clause, to recognize alternative State governments created by loyal citizens in resistance to insurrectionary regimes that have taken over the usual governing machinery of their States."[65]

Although the US Supreme Court never ruled on the constitutionality of the state's creation, decisions such as those in Virginia v. West Virginia have led to a de facto recognition of the state that is now considered unassailable.[34][66][67] West Virginia's first constitution explicitly agreed to pay a portion of Virginia's debt in helping build roads, canals, railroads, and other public improvements in the new state. However, the debts were never paid, and Virginia sued to recover them. In the case, Virginia v. West Virginia, 220 U.S. 1 (1911), Virginia admitted in its briefings the legality of the secession of West Virginia.[68][69] A second constitutional question arises as to whether the Constitution permits states to be carved out of existing states, whether consent is given or not. Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1, of the US Constitution states:

States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.[70]

Should the phrase between the first and the second semicolons be read as absolutely barring the creation of a state within the jurisdiction of an existing state, or should it be read in conjunction with the following clause, which permits such creation with the consent of the existing state? If the former interpretation is adopted, not only West Virginia but also Kentucky, Maine, and possibly Vermont were also created unconstitutionally.[71]

Virginia v. West Virginia was also one of the first cases to establish the principle that Congress may give implied consent, which may be inferred from the context in which action was taken. It was not the first time the Court had so ruled (it had done so in Poole v. Fleeger, 36 U.S. 185, (1837) and Green v. Biddle, 21 U.S. 1 (1823)).[72] However, the statement in Virginia v. West Virginia is the one most cited by the court in its subsequent rulings in Virginia v. Tennessee, 148 U.S. 503 (1893); Wharton v. Wise, 153 U.S. 155 (1894); Arizona v. California, 292 U.S. 341 (1934); James v. Dravo Contracting Co., 302 U.S. 134 (1937); and De Veau v. Braisted, 363 U.S. 144 (1960).[73][74]

References

  1. ^ As one historian has noted: "[Southern soldiers] entered military service to defend rights that the Constitution bequeathed to them, the very same basis upon which their home states of Virginia and Alabama seceded from the Union: They acted to protect the institution of slavery. The Army of Northern Virginia fought for many reasons, but the events that led to its formation clarified the key factor of the Civil War: It was fought over slavery." Glatthaar, 2009, p. 10. James M. McPherson agrees: "The claim that [Lincoln's] call for troops was the cause of the upper South's decision to secede is misleading.... Scores of [pro-secession] demonstrations took place from April 12 to 14, before Lincoln issued his call for troops. Many conditional unionists were swept along by this powerful tide of southern nationalism; others were cowed into silence." McPherson, 1988, p. 278 (emphasis in original). See also Freehling, 2007, p. 511-513, 526 (discussing pro-secession majority in the Virginia secession convention prior to U.S. President Abraham Lincoln's call for troops).
  2. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 112.
  3. ^ a b c McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, 1988, p. 298.
  4. ^ a b Rice & Brown 1993, p. 116.
  5. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, pp. 311–312.
  6. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 117-118.
  7. ^ a b Rice & Brown 1993, p. 118-120.
  8. ^ a b Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 438-439.
  9. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 121.
  10. ^ Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 441.
  11. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 121-122
  12. ^ Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 443-444.
  13. ^ a b c d Rice & Brown 1993, p. 122.
  14. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 312.
  15. ^ a b c Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 300.
  16. ^ Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 453.
  17. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 123.
  18. ^ a b Curry, Richard O., A House Divided, Statehood Politics & The Copperhead Movement in West Virginia, Univ. of Pittsburgh Press, 1964, pgs. 149-151
  19. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 140
  20. ^ McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, 1988, p. 298-299; Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 451-452.
  21. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 140-141.
  22. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 141-143.
  23. ^ a b Rice & Brown 1993, p. 143.
  24. ^ a b Rice & Brown 1993, p. 146.
  25. ^ Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 452.
  26. ^ a b Davis and Robertson, Virginia at War, Kentucky, 2005, p. 151.
  27. ^ a b Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, pp. 314–319.
  28. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 147
  29. ^ McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, 1988, p. 303-304; Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 460-461
  30. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 319.
  31. ^ Rice & Brown 1993, p. 149-150
  32. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, pp. 319–325.
  33. ^ a b Gooden 2011.
  34. ^ a b c d Rice & Brown 1993, p. 151.
  35. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 42.
  36. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 44-45.
  37. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 46.
  38. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 47-48.
  39. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 48.
  40. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 49.
  41. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 53.
  42. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 54-55.
  43. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 56.
  44. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 56-58.
  45. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 58-59.
  46. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 59.
  47. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 59-60.
  48. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 60.
  49. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 60-61.
  50. ^ a b Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 61.
  51. ^ a b c d Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 62.
  52. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 62-63.
  53. ^ a b c Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 63.
  54. ^ a b c d Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39, 64.
  55. ^ a b Fairman 1987, p. 625; Egger 1990, p. 475.
  56. ^ Reynolds & Young 1983, p. 44.
  57. ^ a b Fenn 1996, p. 2478.
  58. ^ McGregor, The Disruption of Virginia, 1922, p. 206-223; Randall, Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln, 1951, p. 437-444, 453; Cohen, The Civil War in West Virginia: A Pictorial History, 1996, p. 7; Hoar, Constitutional Conventions: Their Nature, Powers, and Limitations, 1987, p. 22-24; Ebenroth and Kemner, "The Enduring Political Nature of Questions of State Succession and Secession and the Quest for Objective Standards," University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law, Fall 1996, p. 786; Donald, Lincoln, 1996, p. 300-301.
  59. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 310.
  60. ^ McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, 1988, p. 291-297.
  61. ^ Luther v. Borden, 48 U.S. 1, 42.
  62. ^ Lesser, Rebels at the Gate: Lee and McClellan on the Front Line of a Nation Divided, 2004, p. 78.
  63. ^ a b Jameson, The Constitutional Convention: Its History, Powers, and Modes of Proceeding, 1867, p. 186-207.
  64. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 302.
  65. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, pp. 312–313.
  66. ^ Barnes, "Towards Equal Footing: Responding to the Perceived Constitutional, Legal and Practical Impediments to Statehood for the District of Columbia," University of the District of Columbia Law Review, Spring 2010, p. 18 n.138
  67. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 395.
  68. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 220 U.S. 1, 24-25.
  69. ^ Ebenroth and Kemner, "The Enduring Political Nature of Questions of State Succession and Secession and the Quest for Objective Standards," University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law, Fall 1996, p. 786-787.
  70. ^ U.S. Constitution, Art. IV, Sec. 3, cl. 1.
  71. ^ Kesavan & Paulsen 2002, p. 332.
  72. ^ Greve 2003, p. 287, n. 6.
  73. ^ Kogan 2008, p. 525.
  74. ^ "Note: To Form a More Perfect Union?" 1989, p. 844.

Bibliography

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  • Curry, Richard O. A House Divided, Statehood Politics & the Copperhead Movement in West Virginia, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1964.
  • Davis, William C. and Robertson, James I. Virginia at War. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, 2005.
  • Donald, David Herbert. Lincoln. Paperback ed. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.
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  • Freehling, William W. The Road to Disunion: Secessionists Triumphant, 1854-1861. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.
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  • Kogan, Lawrence A. (Spring 2008). "Symposium: The Extra-WTO Precautionary Principle: One European "Fashion" Export the United States Can Do Without". Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review. 17: 491.
  • Lesser, W. Hunter. Rebels at the Gate: Lee and McClellan on the Front Line of a Nation Divided. Naperville, Ill.: Sourcebooks, 2004.
  • McGregor, James C. The Disruption of Virginia. New York: MacMillan Co., 1922.
  • McPherson, James M. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.
  • "Note: To Form a More Perfect Union?: Federalism and Informal Interstate Cooperation". Harvard Law Review. 102 (4): 842–863. February 1989. doi:10.2307/1341307. JSTOR 1341307.
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  • Reynolds, William L. & Young, Gordon G. (October 1983). "Equal Divisions in the Supreme Court: History, Problems, and Proposals". North Carolina Law Review. 62: 29.
  • Rice, Otis K. & Brown, Stephen Wayne (1993). West Virginia: A History. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky.

External links

  • Text of Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. (11 Wall.) 39 (1871) is available from: Findlaw  Justia  Library of Congress  OpenJurist 

virginia, west, virginia, this, article, about, 1871, case, later, case, 1911, wall, 1871, ruling, supreme, court, united, states, that, held, that, governor, discretion, conduct, election, legislature, bound, action, cannot, undo, results, based, fraud, court. This article is about the 1871 case For the later case see Virginia v West Virginia 1911 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 11 Wall 39 1871 is a 6 3 ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States that held that if a governor has discretion in the conduct of the election the legislature is bound by his action and cannot undo the results based on fraud The Court implicitly affirmed that the breakaway Virginia counties had received the necessary consent of both the Commonwealth of Virginia and the United States Congress to become a separate U S state The Court also explicitly held that Berkeley County and Jefferson County were part of the new State of West Virginia Virginia v West VirginiaSupreme Court of the United StatesDecided March 6 1871Full case nameState of Virginia v State of West VirginiaCitations78 U S 39 more 11 Wall 39 20 L Ed 67HoldingWhere a governor has discretion in the conduct of the election the legislature is bound by his action and cannot undo the results based on fraud Court membershipChief Justice Salmon P Chase Associate Justices Samuel Nelson Nathan CliffordNoah H Swayne Samuel F MillerDavid Davis Stephen J FieldWilliam Strong Joseph P BradleyCase opinionsMajorityMiller joined by Chase Nelson Swayne Strong BradleyDissentDavis joined by Clifford Field Contents 1 Background 2 Decision 2 1 Majority holding 2 2 Dissenting opinion 3 Assessment 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksBackground EditWhen the American Civil War started Virginia seceded from the United States in 1861 over slavery 1 but many of the northwestern counties of Virginia were decidedly pro Union 2 3 At a convention called by the governor and authorized by the legislature delegates voted on April 17 1861 to approve Virginia s secession from the United States 4 Although the resolution required approval from voters at an election scheduled for May 23 1861 Virginia s governor entered into a treaty of alliance with the Confederate States of America on April 24 elected delegates to the Confederate Congress on April 29 and formally entered the Confederacy on May 7 4 For US President Abraham Lincoln those actions proved that rebels had taken over the state and turned the machinery of the state toward insurrection The individuals had not acted with popular support and thus Lincoln later felt justified in recognizing the Reorganized Government 5 Unionist sentiment was so high in the northwestern counties that civil government began to disintegrate and the Wheeling Intelligencer newspaper called for a convention of delegates to meet in the city of Wheeling to consider secession from the Commonwealth of Virginia 6 Delegates duly assembled and at the First Wheeling Convention also known as the May Convention held May 13 to 15 the delegates voted to hold off on secession from Virginia until the state had formally seceded from the United States 7 8 Concerned that the irregular nature of the First Wheeling Convention might not democratically represent the will of the people formal elections were scheduled for June 4 to elect delegates to a second convention if necessary 7 8 Virginians voted to approve secession on May 23 On June 4 elections were held and delegates to an elected Second Wheeling Convention Those elections were irregular as well Some were held under military pressure some counties sent no delegates some delegates never appeared and voter turnout varied significantly 9 10 On June 19 the Second Wheeling Convention declared the offices of all government officials who had voted for secession vacant and reconstituted the executive and legislative branches of the Virginia government from their own ranks 3 11 12 The Second Wheeling Convention adjourned on June 25 with the intent of reconvening on August 6 13 Francis Harrison Pierpont Reorganized Governor of Virginia The new Reorganized Governor Francis Harrison Pierpont asked Lincoln for military assistance 13 14 and Lincoln recognized the new government 13 15 The region elected new US Senators and its two existing US Representatives took their old seats in the House which effectively gave congressional recognition to the Reorganized Government as well 3 13 16 After reconvening on August 6 the Second Wheeling Convention again debated secession from Virginia The delegates adopted a resolution authorizing the secession of 39 counties with Berkeley Greenbrier Hampshire Hardy Jefferson Morgan and Pocahontas Counties to be added if their voters approved and it authorized any counties contiguous with them to join the new state if they so voted as well 15 17 On October 24 1861 voters in the 39 counties as well as voters in Hampshire and Hardy Counties voted to secede from the Commonwealth of Virginia In eleven counties voter participation was less than 20 and Raleigh and Braxton Counties had a voter turnout of only 5 and 2 18 19 20 The ballot also allowed voters to choose delegates to a constitutional convention which met from November 26 1861 to February 18 1862 21 The convention chose the name West Virginia but then engaged in lengthy and acrimonious debate over whether to extend the state s boundaries to other counties that had not voted to secede 22 Added to the new state were McDowell Mercer and Monroe Counties 23 Berkeley Frederick Hampshire Hardy Jefferson Morgan and Pendleton Counties were again offered the chance to join which all but Frederick County accepted 23 Eight counties Greenbrier Logan McDowell Mercer Monroe Pocahontas Webster and Wyoming Counties never participated in any of the polls initiated by the Wheeling government but they were still included in the new state 18 A new constitution for West Virginia was adopted on February 18 1862 and was approved by voters on April 4 24 Governor Pierpont recalled the Reorganized state legislature which voted on May 13 to approve the secession and to include Berkeley Frederick and Jefferson Counties if they approved the new West Virginia constitution as well 24 25 After much debate over whether Virginia had truly given its consent to the formation of the new state 26 27 the US Congress adopted a statehood bill on July 14 1862 which contained the proviso of freeing all blacks in the new state under the age of 21 on July 4 1863 28 29 30 Lincoln was unsure of the bill s constitutionality but pressed by northern senators he signed the legislation on December 31 1862 31 32 The West Virginia constitutional convention had not adjourned sine die but was rather subject to recall Every county except Webster and Monroe Counties sent representatives to the session that convened on February 12 1863 with Abraham D Soper as its president 33 After spirited debate concerning compensation for slaveowners whose slaves were freed the matter ultimately being tabled the convention amended the state s constitution on February 17 to include the congressionally required slave freedom provisions and adjourned sine die on February 20 33 34 The state s voters ratified the slave freedom amendment on March 26 1863 34 On April 20 Lincoln announced that West Virginia would become a state in 60 days 34 Map of the political development of West Virginia Counties in white are the original counties Berkeley red and Jefferson dark blue Counties were the focus of Virginia v West Virginia Since they were then under the military control of the Confederacy Berkeley Frederick and Jefferson Counties never held votes on secession or the new West Virginia state constitution 35 On January 31 1863 the Restored Government of Virginia passed legislation authorizing the reorganized governor to hold elections in Berkeley County on whether or not to join West Virginia 36 The Reorganized legislature similarly approved on February 4 1863 an election for Jefferson County and others 37 The elections were held voters approved secession and Berkeley and Jefferson Counties were admitted to West Virginia 38 However on December 5 1865 the Virginia Assembly in Richmond passed legislation repealing all the acts of the reorganized government regarding secession of the 39 counties and the admission of Berkeley and Jefferson Counties to Virginia 39 On March 10 1866 Congress passed a resolution acknowledging the transfer of the two counties to West Virginia from Virginia 40 Virginia sued arguing that no action had taken place under the act of May 13 1862 requiring elections and that the elections in 1863 had been fraudulent and irregular West Virginia filed a demurrer which alleged that the Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction over the case because it was of a purely political nature Decision EditMajority holding Edit Associate Justice Samuel Freeman Miller wrote the decision for the majority joined by Chief Justice Salmon P Chase and Associate Justices Samuel Nelson Noah Haynes Swayne William Strong and Joseph P Bradley Justice Miller first disposed of the demurrer He concluded that the demurrer could not be granted without reversing the settled course of decision in this court and overturning the principles on which several well considered cases have been decided 41 He noted that the court had asserted its jurisdiction in several cases before including The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations v The Commonwealth of Massachusetts 37 U S 657 1838 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 1849 Florida v Georgia 58 U S 478 1854 and State of Alabama v State of Georgia 64 U S 505 1860 42 Justice Miller then posed three questions for the Court to answer 1 Did the State of Virginia ever give a consent to this proposition which became obligatory on her 2 Did the Congress give such consent as rendered the agreement valid 3 If both these are answered affirmatively it may be necessary to inquire whether the circumstances alleged in this bill authorized Virginia to withdraw her consent and justify us in setting aside the contract and restoring the two counties to that State 43 Justice Miller then reviewed the various acts taken to reorganize the government of Virginia in 1861 and the various acts that the Reorganized Government and the United States took to create the state of West Virginia and extend its jurisdiction over the counties in question 44 In answering the first question Miller wrote Now we have here on two different occasions the emphatic legislative proposition of Virginia that these counties might become part of West Virginia and we have the constitution of West Virginia agreeing to accept them and providing for their place in the new born State 45 There was no question in the mind of the majority that Virginia had given its consent Although the elections had been postponed because of a hostile environment the majority concluded that the Reorganized Government of Virginia had acted in good faith to carry out its electoral duties in the two counties 46 In regard to the second question Miller pondered the nature of congressional consent Congress could not be expected to give its explicit consent to every single aspect of the proposed state constitution Miller argued 47 Clearly Congress had intensively considered the proposed state constitution which contained provisions for accession of the two counties in question because Congress had seriously considered the slavery question regarding the admission of the new state and required changes in the proposed constitution before statehood could be granted 48 That debate could lead the Court to only a single conclusion Miller stated It is therefore an inference clear and satisfactory that Congress by that statute intended to consent to the admission of the State with the contingent boundaries provided for in its constitution and in the statute of Virginia which prayed for its admission on those terms and that in so doing it necessarily consented to the agreement of those States on that subject There was then a valid agreement between the two States consented to by Congress which agreement made the accession of these counties dependent on the result of a popular vote in favor of that proposition 49 Miller then considered the third question The majority held that although the language of the two statutes of January 31 1863 and February 4 1863 were different they had the same legal intent and force 50 Virginia showed good faith in holding the elections Miller asserted 50 That the Reorganized Virginia legislature did not require vote totals to be reported to it and delegated the transmission of the vote totals to West Virginia was not at issue according to Miller That gave the Reorganized Governor discretion as to when where and hope to hold the votes to certify them The legislature acted within its power to delegate these duties to the Reorganized Governor and his decision was conclusive as to the result 51 Were the votes fair and regular The Virginia Assembly Miller noted made only indefinite and vague allegations about vote fraud and unspecified charges that somehow Governor Pierpont must have been misled and deceived by others into believing the voting was fair and regular 51 Miller pointedly observed that not a single person was charged with fraud no specific act of fraud was stated and no legal wrongs asserted 51 The Virginia Assembly also did not claim that West Virginia had interfered in the elections 51 Absent such allegations Virginia s accusations cannot be sustained Miller concluded However even if that aspect of Virginia s argument was ignored Miller wrote the Reorganized legislature had delegated all its power to certify to the election to Governor Pierpont and he had certified it That alone laid to rest Virginia s allegations 52 She must be bound by what she had done She can have no right years after all this has been settled to come into a court of chancery to charge that her own conduct has been a wrong and a fraud that her own subordinate agents have misled her governor and that her solemn act transferring these counties shall be set aside against the will of the State of West Virginia and without consulting the wishes of the people of those counties 53 Dissenting opinion Edit Associate Justice David Davis wrote a dissent joined by Associate Justices Nathan Clifford and Stephen Johnson Field Davis concluded that Congress had never given its consent to the transfer of Berkeley and Jefferson Counties to West Virginia 53 By the time that Congress did so on March 10 1866 the Legislature of Virginia had already withdrawn its consent to the transfer of the two counties 53 Davis disagreed with the majority s view that Congress had consented to the transfer of the two counties by debating the proposed West Virginia constitution There was nothing in the debates to ever suggest that Davis wrote 54 Congress agreed to that the two counties should be offered the chance to join West Virginia by the time of the new state s admission to union with the United States 54 The conditions had not been met by the time of admission and thus no transfer could be constitutionally made 54 Congress had not agreed to additional legislative acts of transfer and thus they could not be made without Virginia s assent which had since been withdrawn 54 Assessment Edit Former Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis argued the case for Virginia When Virginia v West Virginia first came to the Supreme Court in 1867 there were only eight Justices on the bench because of the death of Justice James Moore Wayne on July 5 1867 The Court would not have nine Justices again until the resignation of Justice Robert Cooper Grier on January 31 1870 and that year s confirmation of Justices William Strong in February and Joseph P Bradley in March During those three years the Supreme Court was divided 4 4 as to whether it had jurisdiction over the case 55 56 Chief Justice Chase delayed taking up the case until a majority had emerged in favor of affirming the Court s original jurisdiction rather than seeking a ruling on the issue 55 The acceptance of original jurisdiction in that matter is now considered one of the most significant jurisdictional cases in Supreme Court history 57 It is noteworthy that former Associate Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis argued unsuccessfully the case on behalf of Virginia before the Court 57 Curtis as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court had dissented from the holding in Dred Scott v Sandford Many in Congress questioned both the legality of the Reorganized Virginia government and the constitutionality of the creation of West Virginia 26 27 Many scholars since have questioned the democratic nature of the Second Wheeling Convention the legal and moral legitimacy of the Reorganized Government and the constitutionality of the creation of West Virginia 58 However most lengthy scholarly treatments of the issue assert the legality of the Reorganized government In Luther v Borden 48 U S 1 1849 the Supreme Court held that only the federal government could determine what constituted a republican form of government in a state as provided for in the Guarantee Clause of Article Four of the United States Constitution 59 Virginia was not alone in having two governments one unionist one rebel with the union government recognized by the United States 60 The Supreme Court had held in Luther v Borden Under this article of the Constitution it rests with Congress to decide what government is the established one in a State 61 As both the President and Congress had recognized the Reorganized government that provision was met and so the entire process was legal 15 62 There were precedents for such action as well As one legal scholar has noted Michigan was admitted to the union after irregular elections for three unauthorized constitutional conventions led to a request for statehood being eventually granted by Congress in 1837 63 Kansas despite undergoing a highly irregular statehood process marked by violence mass meetings masquerading as legislative assemblies and allegations of vote fraud but was also admitted to the union 63 One widely cited legal analysis concluded that the process of West Virginia statehood was hyper legal 64 Indeed denying the legality of the Reorganized government would create significant problems two legal scholars have argued since it follows we submit that Virginia validly consented to the creation of West Virginia with its borders Indeed one can deny this conclusion only if one denies one of Lincoln s twin premises the unlawfulness of secession or the power of the national government under the Guarantee Clause to recognize alternative State governments created by loyal citizens in resistance to insurrectionary regimes that have taken over the usual governing machinery of their States 65 Although the US Supreme Court never ruled on the constitutionality of the state s creation decisions such as those in Virginia v West Virginia have led to a de facto recognition of the state that is now considered unassailable 34 66 67 West Virginia s first constitution explicitly agreed to pay a portion of Virginia s debt in helping build roads canals railroads and other public improvements in the new state However the debts were never paid and Virginia sued to recover them In the case Virginia v West Virginia 220 U S 1 1911 Virginia admitted in its briefings the legality of the secession of West Virginia 68 69 A second constitutional question arises as to whether the Constitution permits states to be carved out of existing states whether consent is given or not Article IV Section 3 Clause 1 of the US Constitution states States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States or Parts of States without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress 70 Should the phrase between the first and the second semicolons be read as absolutely barring the creation of a state within the jurisdiction of an existing state or should it be read in conjunction with the following clause which permits such creation with the consent of the existing state If the former interpretation is adopted not only West Virginia but also Kentucky Maine and possibly Vermont were also created unconstitutionally 71 Virginia v West Virginia was also one of the first cases to establish the principle that Congress may give implied consent which may be inferred from the context in which action was taken It was not the first time the Court had so ruled it had done so in Poole v Fleeger 36 U S 185 1837 and Green v Biddle 21 U S 1 1823 72 However the statement in Virginia v West Virginia is the one most cited by the court in its subsequent rulings in Virginia v Tennessee 148 U S 503 1893 Wharton v Wise 153 U S 155 1894 Arizona v California 292 U S 341 1934 James v Dravo Contracting Co 302 U S 134 1937 and De Veau v Braisted 363 U S 144 1960 73 74 References Edit As one historian has noted Southern soldiers entered military service to defend rights that the Constitution bequeathed to them the very same basis upon which their home states of Virginia and Alabama seceded from the Union They acted to protect the institution of slavery The Army of Northern Virginia fought for many reasons but the events that led to its formation clarified the key factor of the Civil War It was fought over slavery Glatthaar 2009 p 10 James M McPherson agrees The claim that Lincoln s call for troops was the cause of the upper South s decision to secede is misleading Scores of pro secession demonstrations took place from April 12 to 14 before Lincoln issued his call for troops Many conditional unionists were swept along by this powerful tide of southern nationalism others were cowed into silence McPherson 1988 p 278 emphasis in original See also Freehling 2007 p 511 513 526 discussing pro secession majority in the Virginia secession convention prior to U S President Abraham Lincoln s call for troops Rice amp Brown 1993 p 112 a b c McPherson Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era 1988 p 298 a b Rice amp Brown 1993 p 116 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 pp 311 312 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 117 118 a b Rice amp Brown 1993 p 118 120 a b Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 438 439 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 121 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 441 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 121 122 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 443 444 a b c d Rice amp Brown 1993 p 122 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 312 a b c Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 300 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 453 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 123 a b Curry Richard O A House Divided Statehood Politics amp The Copperhead Movement in West Virginia Univ of Pittsburgh Press 1964 pgs 149 151 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 140 McPherson Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era 1988 p 298 299 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 451 452 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 140 141 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 141 143 a b Rice amp Brown 1993 p 143 a b Rice amp Brown 1993 p 146 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 452 a b Davis and Robertson Virginia at War Kentucky 2005 p 151 a b Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 pp 314 319 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 147 McPherson Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era 1988 p 303 304 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 460 461 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 319 Rice amp Brown 1993 p 149 150 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 pp 319 325 a b Gooden 2011 a b c d Rice amp Brown 1993 p 151 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 42 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 44 45 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 46 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 47 48 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 48 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 49 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 53 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 54 55 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 56 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 56 58 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 58 59 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 59 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 59 60 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 60 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 60 61 a b Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 61 a b c d Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 62 Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 62 63 a b c Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 63 a b c d Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 39 64 a b Fairman 1987 p 625 Egger 1990 p 475 Reynolds amp Young 1983 p 44 a b Fenn 1996 p 2478 McGregor The Disruption of Virginia 1922 p 206 223 Randall Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln 1951 p 437 444 453 Cohen The Civil War in West Virginia A Pictorial History 1996 p 7 Hoar Constitutional Conventions Their Nature Powers and Limitations 1987 p 22 24 Ebenroth and Kemner The Enduring Political Nature of Questions of State Succession and Secession and the Quest for Objective Standards University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law Fall 1996 p 786 Donald Lincoln 1996 p 300 301 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 310 McPherson Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era 1988 p 291 297 Luther v Borden 48 U S 1 42 Lesser Rebels at the Gate Lee and McClellan on the Front Line of a Nation Divided 2004 p 78 a b Jameson The Constitutional Convention Its History Powers and Modes of Proceeding 1867 p 186 207 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 302 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 pp 312 313 Barnes Towards Equal Footing Responding to the Perceived Constitutional Legal and Practical Impediments to Statehood for the District of Columbia University of the District of Columbia Law Review Spring 2010 p 18 n 138 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 395 Virginia v West Virginia 220 U S 1 24 25 Ebenroth and Kemner The Enduring Political Nature of Questions of State Succession and Secession and the Quest for Objective Standards University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law Fall 1996 p 786 787 U S Constitution Art IV Sec 3 cl 1 Kesavan amp Paulsen 2002 p 332 Greve 2003 p 287 n 6 Kogan 2008 p 525 Note To Form a More Perfect Union 1989 p 844 Bibliography EditBarnes Johnny Towards Equal Footing Responding to the Perceived Constitutional Legal and Practical Impediments to Statehood for the District of Columbia University of the District of Columbia Law Review 13 1 Spring 2010 Cohen Stan The Civil War in West Virginia A Pictorial History Charleston W Va Pictorial Histories Publishing Co 1996 Curry Richard O A House Divided Statehood Politics amp the Copperhead Movement in West Virginia University of Pittsburgh Press 1964 Davis William C and Robertson James I Virginia at War Lexington Ky University Press of Kentucky 2005 Donald David Herbert Lincoln Paperback ed New York Simon amp Schuster 1996 Ebenroth Carsten Thomas and Kemner Matthew James The Enduring Political Nature of Questions of State Succession and Secession and the Quest for Objective Standards University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law 17 753 Fall 1996 Egger Daniel November 1990 Court of Appeals Review of Agency Action The Problem of En Banc Ties Yale Law Journal 100 2 471 489 doi 10 2307 796622 JSTOR 796622 Fairman Charles 1987 Reconstruction and Reunion 1864 88 2nd ed New York MacMillan Fenn Charles T July 1996 Supreme Court Justices Arguing Before the Court After Resigning from the Bench Georgetown Law Journal 84 2473 Freehling William W The Road to Disunion Secessionists Triumphant 1854 1861 New York Oxford University Press 2007 Glatthaar Joseph T General Lee s Army From Victory to Collapse New York Simon and Schuster 2009 Gooden Randall S 8 December 2011 Constitutional Convention of 1861 63 e WV The West Virginia Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2019 08 09 Retrieved 18 August 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Greve Michael S Spring 2003 Compacts Cartels and Congressional Consent Missouri Law Review 68 285 Hoar Roger Sherman Constitutional Conventions Their Nature Powers and Limitations Littleton Colo F B Rothman 1987 Jameson John Alexander The Constitutional Convention Its History Powers and Modes of Proceeding New York C Scribner and Co 1867 Kesavan Vasan Paulsen Michael Stokes 2002 Is West Virginia Unconstitutional California Law Review 90 2 291 400 doi 10 2307 3481282 JSTOR 3481282 Kogan Lawrence A Spring 2008 Symposium The Extra WTO Precautionary Principle One European Fashion Export the United States Can Do Without Temple Political amp Civil Rights Law Review 17 491 Lesser W Hunter Rebels at the Gate Lee and McClellan on the Front Line of a Nation Divided Naperville Ill Sourcebooks 2004 McGregor James C The Disruption of Virginia New York MacMillan Co 1922 McPherson James M Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era New York Oxford University Press 1988 Note To Form a More Perfect Union Federalism and Informal Interstate Cooperation Harvard Law Review 102 4 842 863 February 1989 doi 10 2307 1341307 JSTOR 1341307 Randall James G Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln Rev ed Urbana Ill University of Illinois Press 1951 Reynolds William L amp Young Gordon G October 1983 Equal Divisions in the Supreme Court History Problems and Proposals North Carolina Law Review 62 29 Rice Otis K amp Brown Stephen Wayne 1993 West Virginia A History Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky External links EditText of Virginia v West Virginia 78 U S 11 Wall 39 1871 is available from Findlaw Justia Library of Congress OpenJurist Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Virginia v West Virginia amp oldid 1169452490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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