Page:Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1st ed, 1833, vol I).djvu/187

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CH. XVII.]
GENERAL REVIEW.
147

governor, council, and assembly being annually chosen by the freemen of the colony, and all other officers appointed by their authority.[1] By the statutes of 7 & 8 William 3, (ch. 22, § 6,) it was indeed required, that all governors appointed in charter and proprietary governments should be approved of by the crown, before entering upon the duties of their office; but this statute was, if at all, ill observed, and seems to have produced no essential change in the colonial policy.[2]

§ 162. The circumstances, in which the colonies were generally agreed, notwithstanding the diversities of their organization into provincial, proprietary, and charter governments, were the following.

§ 163. (1.) They enjoyed the rights and privileges of British born subjects; and the benefit of the common laws of England; and all their laws were required to be not repugnant unto, but, as near as might be, agreeable to the laws and statutes of England.[3] This, as we have seen, was a limitation upon the legislative power contained in an express clause of all the charters; and could not be transcended without a clear breach of their fundamental conditions. A very liberal exposition of this clause seems, however, always to have prevailed, and to have been acquiesced in, if not adopted by the crown. Practically speaking, it seems to have been left to the judicial tribunals in the colonies to ascertain, what part of the common law was applicable to the situation of the colonies;[4] and of course, from a dif-
  1. 1 Chalmers's Annals, 274, 293, 294; Stokes's Hist. Colon. 21, 22, 23.
  2. 1 Chalmers's Annals, 295; Stokes's Hist. Colon. 20.
  3. Com. Dig. Navigation, G. 1; Id. Ley. C.; 2 Wilson's Law Lect. 48, 49, 50, 51, 52.
  4. 1 Chalm. Annals, 677, 678, 687; 1 Tucker's Black. Comm. 384; 1 Vez. 444, 449; 2 Wilson's Law Lect. 49 to 54; Mass. State Papers, (Ed. 1818,) 375, 390, 391.