Page:Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1st ed, 1833, vol II).djvu/30

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CONSTITUTION OF THE U. STATES.
[BOOK III.

§ 539. If, then, occasional or periodical appeals to the people would not afford an effectual barrier against the inroads of the legislature upon the other departments of the government, it is manifest, that resort must be had to some contrivances in the interior structure of the government itself, which shall exert a constant check, and preserve the mutual relations of each with the other. Upon a thorough examination of the subject, it will be found, that this can be best accomplished, if not solely accomplished, by an occasional mixture of the powers of each department with that of the others, while the separate existence, and constitutional independence of each are fully provided for. Each department should have a will of its own, and the members of each should have but a limited agency in the acts and appointments of the members of the others. Each should have its own independence secured beyond the power of being taken away by either, or both of the others. But at the same time the relations of each to the other should be so strong, that there should be a mutual interest to sustain and protect each other. There should not only be constitutional means, but personal motives, to resist encroachments of one, or either of the others. Thus, ambition would be made to counteract ambition; the desire of power to check power; and the pressure of interest to balance an opposing interest.[1]

§ 540. There seems no adequate method of producing this result but by a partial participation of each

    the utter inefficacy of any such periodical conventions, is abundantly established by the history of Pennsylvania under her former constitution.[a 1]

  1. The Federalist, No. 48, 50, 51.
  1. The Federalist, No. 50. See 2 Pitkin's Hist. 305, 306.