53 Ga. 472 | Ga. | 1874
Were this question entirely a new one, I should not myself hesitate to hold that the language of the constitution of this-.state, as well as that of the United States, guarantees only the right to keep and bear the “arms” necessary for a militiaman. It is to secure- the existence of a well regulated militia; that, by the express words of the clause,, was the object of it, and I have always been at a loss to follow the line of thought that extends the guarantee to the right t© carry pistols, dirks, Bowie-knives, and those other weapons of like ■character, which, as all admit, are the greatest nuisances ■of our day. It is in my judgment a perversion of the meaning of the word arms, as used in the phrase “the right to keep and bear arms,” to treat it as including weapons of this ■character. The preamble to the clause is the key to the meaning of it. The word “arms,,” evidently means the arms ■of a militiaman, the weapons ordinarily used in battle, to-wit; guns of every kind, swords, bayonets, horseman’s pisitols, etc.. The very words, “bear arms,” had. then and now Lave, a technical meaning. The “arms bearing” part of a people, were its men fit for service on the field of battle. That country was “armed” that liad an army ready for fight.
Section 5 of the bill of rights is in these words: “ The right of the people to appeal to the courts, to petition government in all matters and peaceably to assemble for the consideration of any matter, shall not be impairedIs this section violated if the courts are, not always‘in session? If the legislature restrict the appeal to certain times and places, and under certain reasonable conditions necessary for the public good -, if it pass a statute of limitations, or regulate the rules of evidence or provide that one judgment of the court shall be conclusive, all these are limitations upon the right to appeal to the courts. But they are necessities of society, and are enacted because this guarantee of the right to appeal to the courts is not all of the constitution, and is to be construed, in reference to the fact that there are other duties cast upon the legislature besides keeping this right of appeal to the courts unimpaired. So, too, of the right to petition government upon any matter. Has a witness upon the stand, or a juryman in the bos, a right to quit his post of duty and obstruct the progress of business by devoting himself to the preparation of a petition to the government for a redress of grievances ? So, too, there is a guarantee of the right of the people peaceably to assemble for the consideration of any matter. May they assemble any where, on any land, in any house, and that against the consent of the owner? Obviously, all these provisions and guarantees are to be construed in reference to their nature, and to other clauses and other duties of the constitution. One guarantee is not to swallow up all ethers, but each is to be construed reasonably in reference to its plain intent, and in reference to other duties cast upon .the legislature, and other rights guaranteed to ¿lie people. The right to go into a court-house and peace
The right peaceably to meet and worship God, or to vote for public officers, or to do any other public duty, are rights just as sacred,just as solemnly guaranteed, and just as necessary for the existence of a free state as the right to bear arms, and either of them is seriously interfered with if it is the right and the custom of lt people” to attend such meetings armed as though for battle. Under such circumstances those assembled are under the protection of the law. They are met at the command or under the. permission of the law, and it is a high constitutional duty of the state to protect them, to see that good order is preserved, and that they may perform the purpose of their assembling unmolested by terror, or danger, or insult. To suppose that the framers of the constitution ever dreamed, that in their anxiety to secure to the state- a well regulated militia, they were sacrificing the dignity of their courts of justice, the sanetity of their houses of worship, and the peacefulness and good order of their other necessary public assemblies, is absurd. To do so, is to assume that they took it for granted that their whole scheme of law and order, and government and protection, would be a failure, and that the people, instead of depending upon the laws and the public authorities for protection, were each man to take care of himself, and to be always ready to resist to the death, then and there, all opposers. We do not so believe, and we are not ready so to suppose. On the contrary, we take it for granted that they meant what they have said, and that in guaranteeing the right to keep and bear arms, they never dreamed they were authorizing practices, common enough, it is true, among savages, and not unusual even in the olden
We have thus far considered the question as though the provision referred to had no other limitations than those deduced from the preamble, from the nature of the right and from the other duties cast by the constitution upon the legislature. But it must be remembered that as a qualification to the very guarantee itself, it is expressly and in terms provided, that “ the general assembly may prescribe the manner in which arms may be borne.” It is contended that this is only a permission to the legislature to prohibit the carrying of arms .secretly upon the person. But it seems a very unfair criticism upon the language used so to confine it. One cannot help inquiring why, if this alone was the intent, apt and proper words expressing if, were not used. It would have been more simple and more apt to say “but the legislature may prohibit, by law, the carrying of arms secretly upon the person.” Instead of this, the words used are “the legislature may prescribe the manner in which arms may be borne,” implying more than one prohibition, and conveying the idea of various restrictions upon the general guarantee. If the words “manner of bearing arms” covers only the particular way in which they may be carried upon the person, as openly or secretly, on the shoulder or in the hand, etc., it would be illegal for the legislature to prohibit one from going into a crowd
The manner of bearing arms includes not only the particular way they may be carried upon the person, that is openly or secretly, on the shoulder or in the hand, loaded or
In Numbers, 9th chapter, 14 verse, it is commanded that a stranger shall keep the passover according to the manner thereof, to-wit: as described in the 11th verse of the same chapter; and in Exodus, 12th chapter, 3-11: “ On the 14th of the second month, at even, in a house, with the loins girded, the shoes on the feet, a staff in hand and in haste.” So in the 4th chapter of Ruth, Boaz had, with his kinsman, gone to the gate of the city into the presence of the elders, and there, his kinsman, had pulled off his shoe to Boaz, in order to re
■ In Deuteronomy 25th ■ chapter, 7th and 9th verses : This “manner” is prescribed in detail, and includes the place, the persons present and the special act to be done, to-wit: pull-off the'shoe, and passing it. So in 1st Samuel 8th and 9th verses, Samuel undertakes to tell the Jews “the manner of the king” they were longing for, and he proceeds to present him as a tyrant who would do as he pleased with their sons and daughters, their servants and their lands and themselves. So Christ was buried as the manner of the Jews was to bury, including the time and place, the spices and the tomb : John 19th chapter and 40th verse. So the water-pots, the contents of which were turned into wine, were after the “manner of purifying of the Jews:” John 2d chapter and 6th verse. So it is said in Hebrew, 1st chapter and 1st verse: “God who, at sundry times and in divers manners, hath spohe to your fathers by the prophets.” This, withoutdoubt, includes not only when he spoke to Moses, “ mouth to mouth apparently,'and not in dark speeches,” but when he revealed himself by dreams or visions, by his finger on the tables of stone on the mount, or by Urim and Thummin, in the holy place. And it will be found that the “ manner ” of doing a thing often, both in looks and in speech, includes the time and place as well as the precise detail of the special act itself. If I were to ask an old farmer his manner of sowing turnips, is it supposable that he would leave out the time, the dark nights in August, or the character of the land, and the mode of preparing it ? We think, therefore, that under the power expressly granted to prescribe .the manner in which arms may be borne, the legislature may prescribe, not only that they shall be borne openly and plainly exposed to view, but that it may prohibit the. bearing at such times and places, and under such circumstances, as is necessary for the preservation of the peace, the protection of the person and property of the
Judgment affirmed.