The Amendments
Article I.
Section 1
1. The senate of
this State shall consist of fifty representatives, biennially
chosen by ballot, and to be elected by districts; which districts
shall be laid off by the general assembly, at its first session
after the year one thousand eight hundred and forty-one; and
afterwards, at its first session after the year one thousand eight
hundred and fifty-one; and then every twenty years thereafter, in
proportion to the public taxes paid into the treasury of the State,
by the citizens thereof; and the average of the public taxes paid
by each county into the treasury of the State, for the five years
preceding the laying off of the districts, shall be considered as
its proportion of the public taxes, and constitute the basis of
apportionment: Provided that no county shall be divided in the
formation of a senatorial district. And when there are one or more
counties having an excess of taxation above the ratio to form a
senatorial district, adjoining a county or counties deficient in
such ratio, the excess or excesses aforesaid shall be added to the
taxation of the county or counties deficient; and if, with such
addition, the county or counties receiving it shall have the
requisite ratio, such county and counties each shall constitute a
senatorial district.
2. The house of
commons shall be composed of one hundred and twenty
representatives, biennially chosen by ballot, to be elected by
counties according to their federal population, that is, according
to their respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to
the whole number of free persons, including those bound to service
for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three-fifths
of all other persons; and each county shall have at least one
member in the house of commons, although it may not contain the
requisite ratio of population.
3. This apportionment shall be made by the general assembly, at
the respective times and periods when the districts for the senate
are hereinbefore directed to be laid off; and the said
apportionment shall be made according to an enumeration to be
ordered by the general assembly, or according to the census which
may be taken by order of congress, next preceding the making such
apportionment.
4. In making the apportionment in the house of commons, the
ratio of representation shall be ascertained by dividing the amount
of federal population in the State, after deducting that
comprehended within those counties which do not severally contain
the one hundred and twentieth part of the entire federal population
aforesaid, by the number of representatives less than the number
assigned to the said counties. To each county containing the said
ratio, and not twice the said ratio, there shall be assigned one
representative; to each county containing twice, but not three
times the said ratio, there shall be assigned two representatives,
and so on progressively; and then the remaining representatives
shall be assigned severally to the
counties having the largest fractions.
Section 2.
1. Until the first session of the general assembly, which shall
be had after the year eighteen hundred and forty-one, the senate
shall be composed of members to be elected from the several
districts hereinafter named, that is to say,
- the first district shall consist of the counties of Perquimans
and Pasquotank;
- the 2nd district of Camden and Currituck;
- the 3rd district, Gates and Chowan;
- the 4th district, Washington and Tyrrell;
- the 5th district, Northampton;
- the 6th district, Hertford;
- the 7th district, Bertie;
- the 8th district, Martin;
- the 9th district, Halifax;
- the 10th district, Nash;
- the 11th district, Wake;
- the 12th district, Franklin;
- the 13th district, Johnston;
- the 14th district, Warren;
- the 15th district, Edgecombe;
- the 16th district, Wayne;
- the 17th district, Greene and Lenoir;
- the 18th district, Pitt;
- the 19th district, Beaufort and Hyde;
- the 20th district, Carteret and Jones;
- the 21st district, Craven;
- the 22d district, Chatham;
- the 23d district, Granville;
- the 24th district, Person;
- the 25th district, Cumberland;
- the 26th district, Sampson;
- the 27th district, New Hanover;
- the 28th district, Duplin;
- the 29th district, Onslow;
- the 30th district, Brunswick, Bladen, and Columbus;
- the 31st district, Robeson and Richmond;
- the 32d district, Anson;
- the 33d district, Cabarrus;
- the 34th district, Moore and Montgomery;
- the 35th district, Caswell;
- the 36th district, Rockingham;
- the 37th district, Orange;
- the 38th district, Randolph;
- the 39th district, Guilford;
- the 40th district, Stokes;
- the 41st district, Rowan;
- the 42d district, Davidson;
- the 43d district, Surry;
- the 44th district, Wilkes and Ashe;
- the 45th district, Burke and Yancey;
- the 46th district, Lincoln;
- the 47th district, Iredell;
- the 48th district, Rutherford;
- the 49th district, Buncombe, Haywood, and Macon;
- the 50th district, Mecklenburg;
—each district to be entitled to one senator.
2. Until the first session of the general assembly after the
year eighteen hundred and forty-one, the house of commons shall be
composed of members elected from the counties in the following
manner, viz.:
- The counties of Lincoln and Orange shall elect four members
each.
- The counties of Burke, Chatham, Granville, Guilford, Halifax,
Iredell, Mecklenburg, Rowan, Rutherford, Surry, Stokes, and Wake
shall elect three members each.
- The counties of Anson, Beaufort, Bertie, Buncombe, Cumberland,
Craven, Caswell, Davidson, Duplin, Edgecombe, Franklin, Johnston,
Montgomery, New Hanover, Northampton, Person, Pitt, Randolph,
Robeson, Richmond, Rockingham, Sampson, Warren, Wayne, and Wilkes
shall elect two members each.
- The counties of Ashe, Bladen, Brunswick, Camden, Columbus,
Chowan, Currituck, Carteret, Cabarrus, Gates, Greene, Haywood,
Hertford, Hyde, Jones, Lenoir, Macon, Moore, Martin, Nash, Onslow,
Pasquotank, Perquimans, Tyrrell, Washington, and Yancey shall elect
one member each.
Section 3.
1. Each member of the
senate shall have usually resided in the district for which he
is chosen for one year immediately preceding his election, and for
the same time shall have possessed and continued to possess in the
district which he represents, not less than three hundred acres of
land in fee.
2. All free men
of the age of twenty-one years (except as is hereinafter declared),
who have been inhabitants of any one district within the State
twelve months immediately preceding the day of any election, and
possessed of a freehold within the same district of fifty acres of
land, for six months next before and at the day of election, shall
be entitled to vote for a member of the senate.
3. No free Negro, free mulatto, or free person of mixed blood,
descended from Negro ancestors to the fourth generation inclusive
(though one ancestor of each generation may have been a white
person) shall vote for members of the senate or house of
commons.
Section 4.
1. In the election of all officers, whose appointment is
conferred on the general assembly by the constitution, the vote
shall be viva voce.
2. The general assembly shall have power to pass laws regulating
the mode of appointing and removing militia officers.
3. The general assembly shall have power to pass general laws
regulating divorce and alimony, but shall not have power to grant a
divorce or secure alimony in any individual case.
4. The general assembly shall not have power to pass any private
law to alter the name of any person, or to legitimate any persons
not born in lawful wedlock, or to restore to the rights of
citizenship any person convicted of an infamous crime; but shall
have power to pass general laws regulating the same.
5. The general assembly shall not pass any private law, unless
it shall be made to appear that thirty days' notice of application
to pass such law shall have been given, under such directions and
in such manner as shall be provided by law.
6. If vacancies shall occur by death, resignation or otherwise,
before the meeting of the general assembly, writs may be issued by
the governor, under such regulations as may be prescribed by
law.
7. The general assembly shall meet biennially, and at each
biennial session shall elect, by joint vote of the two houses, a
secretary of state, treasurer and council of state, who shall
continue in office for the term of two years.
Article II.
1. The governor
shall be chosen by the qualified voters for the members of the
house of commons, at such time and places as members of the general
assembly are elected.
2. He shall hold his office for the term of two years from the
time of his installation, and until another shall be elected and
qualified; but he shall not be eligible more than four years in any
term of six years.
3. The returns of every election for governor shall be sealed up
and transmitted to the seat of government, by the returning
officers, directed to the speaker of the senate, who shall open and
publish them in the presence of a majority of the members of both
houses of the general assembly. The person having the highest
number of votes shall be governor; but if two or more shall be
equal and highest in votes, one of them shall be chosen governor by
joint vote of both houses of the general assembly.
4. Contested elections for governor shall be determined by both
houses of the general assembly, in such manner as shall be
prescribed by law.
5. The governor-elect shall enter on the duties of the office on
the first day of January next after his election, having previously
taken the oaths of office in the presence of the members of both
branches of the general assembly, or before the chief justice of
the supreme court, who, in case the governor-elect should be
prevented from attendance before the general assembly, by sickness
or other unavoidable cause, is authorized to administer the
same.
Article III.
Section 1.
1. The governor, judges of the supreme court, and judges of the
superior courts, and all other officers of this State (except
justices of the peace and militia officers), may be impeached for wilfully
violating any article of the constitution, maladministration, or
corruption.
2. Judgment, in cases of impeachment, shall not extend further
than to remove from office and disqualification to hold and enjoy
any office of honor, trust, or profit under this State; but the
party convicted may nevertheless be liable to indictment, trial,
judgment, and punishment, according to law.
3. The house of commons shall have the sole power of
impeachment. The senate shall have the sole power to try all
impeachments. No person shall be convicted upon any impeachment,
unless two-thirds of the senators present shall concur in such
conviction; and before the trial of any impeachment, the members of
the senate shall take an oath or affirmation truly and impartially
to try and determine the charge in question, according to
evidence.
Section 2.
1. Any judge of the supreme court, or of the superior courts,
may be removed from office for mental or physical inability, upon a
concurrent resolution of two-thirds of both branches of the general
assembly. The judge, against whom the legislature may be about to
proceed, shall receive notice thereof, accompanied by a copy of the
causes alleged for his removal, at least twenty days before the day
on which either branch of the general assembly shall act
thereon.
2. The salaries
of the judges of the supreme court, or of the superior courts,
shall not be diminished during their continuance in office.
Section 3.
Upon the conviction of any justice of the peace of any infamous
crime, or of corruption or malpractice in office, the commission of
such justice shall be thereby vacated, and he shall be forever
disqualified from holding such appointment.
Section 4.
The general assembly at its first session after the year one
thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine, and from time to time
thereafter, shall appoint an attorney-general, who shall be
commissioned by the governor, and shall hold his office for the
term of four years; but if the general assembly should hereafter
extend the term during which solicitors of the State shall hold
their offices, then they shall have power to extend the term of
office of the attorney-general to the same period.
Article IV
Section 1.
No convention of the people shall be called by the general
assembly, unless by the concurrence of two-thirds of all the
members of each house of the general assembly.
2. No part of the constitution of this State shall be altered,
unless a bill to alter the same shall have been read three times in
each house of the general assembly, and agreed to by three-fifths
of the whole number of members of each house respectively; nor
shall any alteration take place until the bill so agreed to shall
have been published six months previous to a new election of
members to the general assembly. If, after such publication, the
alteration proposed by the preceding general assembly shall be
agreed to in the first session thereafter, by two-thirds of the
whole representation in each house of the general assembly, after
the same shall have been read three times on three several days, in
each house, then the said general assembly shall prescribe a mode
by which the amendment or amendments may be submitted to the
qualified voters of the house of commons throughout the State; and
if, upon comparing the votes given in the whole State, it shall
appear that a majority of the voters have approved thereof, then,
and not otherwise, the same bill become a part of the
constitution.
Section 2.
The thirty-second section of the constitution shall be amended
to read as follows: No person who shall deny the being of God, or
the truth of the Christian religion, or
the divine authority of the Old or New Testament, or who shall hold
religious principles incompatible with the freedom or safety of the
State, shall be capable of holding any office or place of trust or
profit in the civil department within this State.
Section 3.
1. Capitation tax shall be equal throughout the State, upon all
individuals subject to the same.
2. All free males over the age of twenty-one years, and under
the age of forty-five years, and all slaves over the age of twelve
years, and under the age of fifty years, shall be subject to
capitation tax, and no other person shall be subject to such tax:
Provided, that nothing herein contained shall prevent exemptions of
taxable polls, as heretofore prescribed by law, in cases of bodily
infirmity.
Section 4.
No person who
shall hold any office or place of trust or profit under the United
States, or any department thereof, or under this State, or any
other State government, shall hold or exercise any other office or
place of trust or profit under the authority of this State, or be
eligible to a seat in either house of the general assembly:
Provided, that nothing herein contained shall extend to officers in
the militia or justices of the peace.
Ratified in convention, this eleventh day of July, in the year
of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-five.
Amendment of 1857
Every free white man of the age of twenty-one years, being a
native or naturalized citizen of the United States and who has been
an inhabitant of the State for twelve months immediately preceding
the day of any election, and shall have paid public taxes, shall be
entitled to vote for a member of the senate for the district in
which he resides.
|