NORTH CAROLINA CONSTITUTION
The Constitution or Form of Government, agreed to and
resolved upon by the Representatives of the Freemen of the
State of North Carolina, elected and Chosen for that particular
Purpose in Congress assembled, at Halifax, the Eighteenth Day
of December, in the year of our Lord One Thousand Seven Hundred
and Seventy Six.
Whereas Allegiance and Protection are in their Nature
reciprocal and the one should of Right be refused, when the
other is withdrawn; and whereas George the Third, King of Great
Britain, and late Sovereign of the British American Colonies,
hath not only withdrawn from them his Protection, but by an Act
of the British Legislature declared the Inhabitants of these
States out of the Protection of the British Crown, and all
their property found upon the High Seas liable to be seized and
confiscated to the Uses mentioned in the said Act. And the said
George the Third has also sent Fleets and Armies to prosecute a
cruel war against them, for the Purpose of reducing the
Inhabitants of the said Colonies to a State of abject Slavery,
in consequence whereof, all Government under the said King
within the said Colonies hath ceased, and a total Dissolution
of Government in many of them hath taken Place.
And whereas, the Continental Congress having considered the
Premises, and other previous Violations of the Rights of the
good People of America, have therefore declared, that the
Thirteen United Colonies are of Right wholly absolved from all
Allegiance to the British Crown, or any other foreign
jurisdiction whatsoever, and that the said Colonies are, and
forever shall be, free and independent States. Wherefore, in
our present State, in order to prevent Anarchy and confusion,
it becomes necessary that Government should be established in
this State; therefore, we, the Representatives of the Freemen
of North Carolina, chosen and assembled in Congress for the
express Purpose of framing a Constitution under the authority
of the People, most conducive to their Happiness and
Prosperity, do declare that a Government for this State shall
be established in manner and Form following, to wit:
I. That the legislative Authority shall be vested in two
distinct Branches, both dependent on the People, to wit, a
Senate and House of Commons.
II. That the Senate shall be composed of Representatives
annually chosen by Ballot, one from each County in the
State.
III. That the House of Commons shall be composed of
Representatives annually chosen by Ballot, two for each County,
and one for each of the Towns of Edenton, Newbern, Wilmington,
Salisbury, Hillsborough, and Halifax.
IV. That the Senate and House of Commons, assembled for the
Purpose of Legislation, shall be denominated the General
Assembly.
V. That each member of the Senate shall have usually resided
in the County in which he is chosen for one year immediately
preceding his Election, and for the same time shall have
possessed, and continue to possess, in the County which he
represents, not less than Three Hundred Acres of Land in
Fee.
VI. That each member of the House of Commons shall have
usually resided in the County in which he is chosen for one year
immediately preceding his Election, and for six months shall
have possessed, and continue to possess, in the County which he
represents, not less than One Hundred Acres of Land in Fee or
for the Term of his own Life.
VII. That all Freemen of the age of Twenty One Years, who
have been Inhabitants of any one County within the State twelve
months immediately preceding the Day of any Election and
possessed of a Freehold within the same County 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.
VIII. That all Freemen of the Age of Twenty One Years who
have been Inhabitants of any county within the State 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 House of Commons for the county in which he resides.
IX. That all Persons possessed of a Freehold in any Town in
this State, having a Right of Representation, and also all
Freemen who have been Inhabitants of any such Town twelve
months next before, and at the Day of Election, and shall have
paid Public Taxes, shall be intitled to vote for a member to
represent such Town in the House of Commons: Provided always,
That this Section shall not intitle any Inhabitant of such Town
to vote for members of the House of Commons for the County in
which he may reside, nor any Freeholder is such County who
resides without, or beyond the limits of such Town, to vote for
a member for said Town.
X. That the Senate and House of Commons, when met, shall each
have Power to choose a Speaker, and other their Officers, be
Judges of the Qualifications and Elections of their members,
sit upon their own Adjournments from Day to Day, and prepare
Bills to be passed in Laws. The two Houses shall direct Writs
of Election for supplying intermediate Vacancies, and shall
also jointly, by Ballot, adjourn themselves to any Future Day
and Place.
XI. That all Bills shall be read three Times in each House
before they pass into Laws, and be signed by the Speaker of
both Houses.
XII. That every Person who shall be chosen a member of the
Senate or House of Commons or appointed to any Office or Place
of Trust, before taking his Seat, or entering upon the
Execution of his Office, shall take an Oath to the State, and
all Officers shall also take an Oath of Office.
XIII. That the General Assembly shall, by joint ballot of
both Houses, appoint Judges of the Supreme Courts of Law and
Equity, Judges of Admiralty, and Attorney General, who shall be
commissioned by the Governor and hold their offices during good
behaviour.
XIV. That the Senate and House of Commons shall have power
to appoint the Generals and Field Officers of the Militia, and all officers of the
regular army of this State.
XV. That the Senate and House of Commons, jointly at their
first meeting after each annual election, shall by ballot elect
a Governor for one year, who shall not be eligible to that
office longer than three years in six successive years. That no
person under 30 years of age, and who has not been a resident
in this State above 5 years, and having in the State a freehold
in lands and tenements above the value of one thousand pounds,
shall be eligible as Governor.
XVI. That the Senate and House of Commons, jointly, at their
first meeting after each annual election, shall by ballot elect
seven persons to be a Council of State for one year, who shall
advise the Governor in the execution of his office, and that
four members shall be a quorum; their advice and proceedings,
shall be entered into a Journal to be kept for that purpose
only, and signed by the members present, to any part of which
any member present may enter his dissent. And such Journal
shall be laid before the General Assembly, when called for by
them.
XVII. That there shall be a Seal of this State, which shall
be kept by the Governor, and used by him as occasion may
require, and shall be called the Great Seal of the State of
North Carolina, and be affixed to all grants and
commissions.
XVIII. The Governor for the time being, shall be Captain
General and Commander in Chief of the Militia, and in the
recess of the General Assembly, shall have power, by and with
the advice of the Council of State, to embody the militia for
the public safety.
XIX. That the Governor, for the Time being, shall have power to
draw for and apply such sums of money as shall be voted by the
General Assembly for the Contingencies of Government, and be
accountable to them for the same. He also may, by and with the
Advice of the Council of State, lay Embargoes, or prohibit the
Exportation of any Commodity, for any Term not exceeding
thirty Days at any one Time, in the Recess of the General
Assembly; and shall have the Power of granting Pardons and
Reprieves, except where the Prosecution shall be carried on by
the General Assembly, or the Law shall otherwise direct, in
which case he may, in the Recess, grant a Reprieve until the
next sitting of he General Assembly; and may exercise all the
other executive Powers of Government, limited and restrained as
by this Constitution is mentioned, and according to the Laws of
the State. And on his Death, Inability or Absence from the
State, the Speaker of the State for the Time being, and in
Case of his Death, Inability or Absence from the State, the
Speaker of the House of Commons, shall exercise the Powers of
Governor after such death, or during such Absence or Inability
of the Governor or Speaker of the Senate, or until a new
nomination is made by the General Assembly.
XX. That in every case where any Officer, the Right of whose
appointment is by this Constitution vested in the General
Assembly, shall, during their Recess, die, or his Office by
other means become vacant, the Governor shall have Power, with
the Advice of the Council of State, to fill up such vacancy,
by granting a temporary Commission, which shall expire at the
end of the next Session of the General Assembly.
XXI. That the Governor, Judges of the Supreme Court of Law
and Equity, Judges of Admiralty, and Attorney General shall have
adequate Salaries during their Continuance in Office.
XXII. That the General Assembly shall, by joint Ballot of
both Houses, annually appoint a Treasurer or Treasurers for
this State.
XXIII. That the Governor and other Officers offending
against the State, by violating any Part of this Constitution,
Mal-Administration, or Corruption, may be prosecuted on the
Impeachment of the General Assembly, or Presentment of the
Grand Jury of any Court of Supreme Jurisdiction in this
State.
XXIV. That the General Assembly shall, by joint Ballot of
both Houses, triennially appoint a Secretary for this State.
XXV. That no Person who heretofore have been or hereafter
may be Receivers of Public Monies, shall have a Seat in either
House of General Assembly, or be eligible to any Office in this
State, until such Person shall have fully accounted for and
paid into the Treasury all Sums for which they may be
accountable and liable.
XXVI. That no Treasurer shall have a seat in either Senate,
House of Commons, or Council of State during his continuance in
that Office, or before he shall have finally settled his
Accounts with the Public for all Monies which may be in his
hands at the Expiration of his Office,
XXVII. That no Officer in the regular Army or Navy in the
Service and Pay of the United States of this or any other
State, nor any Contractor or Agent for supplying such Army or
Navy with Clothing or Provisions, shall have a seat in either
the Senate or House of Commons or Council of State, or be
eligible thereto; and any Member of the Senate, House of
Commons, or Council of State, being appointed to, and accepting
of such Office, shall thereby vacate his seat.
XXVIII. That no Member of the Council of State shall have a
seat either in the Senate or House of Commons.
XXIX. That no Judge of the Supreme Court of Law or Equity,
or Judge of Admiralty, shall have a seat in the Senate, House
of Commons, or Council of State.
XXX. That no Secretary of this State, Attorney General, or
Clerk of any Court of Record, shall have a seat in the Senate,
House of Commons, or Council of State.
XXXI. That no Clergyman or Preacher of the Gospel, of any
Denomination, shall be capable of being a member either of the
Senate, House of Commons or Council of State, while he
continues in the Exercise of the Pastoral Function.
XXXII. That no person who shall deny the Being of God, or
the Truth of the Protestant Religion, or the divine Authority
either of the Old or New Testament, or shall hold religious
Principles incompatible with the Freedom and Safety of the
State, shall be capable of holding any Office, or Place of
Trust or Profit, in the civil Department within this State.
XXXIII. That the Justices of the Peace within their
respective Counties in this State, shall in future be
recommended to the Governor, for the Time being, by the
Representatives in General Assembly, and the Governor shall
commission them accordingly; and the Justices, when so
commissioned, shall hold their Offices during good Behaviour,
and shall not be removed from Office by the General Assembly,
unless for Misbehaviour, Absence, or Inability.
XXXIV. That there shall be no Establishment of any one
religious Church or Denomination in this State in Preference to
any other, neither shall any person, on any pretence
whatsoever, be compelled to attend aty Place of worship
contrary to his own Faith or Judgment, or be obliged to pay for
the Purchase of any Glebe, or the building of any House of
Worship, or for the maintenance of any Minister or Ministry,
contrary to what he believes right, or has voluntarily and
personally engaged to perform, but all persons shall be at
Liberty to exercise their own mode of Worship. Provided, That
nothing herein contained shall be construed to exempt Preachers
of treasonable and seditious Discourses, from legal trial and
Punishment.
XXXV. That no Person in the State shall hold more than one
lucrative Office at any one Time. Provided, That no appointment
in the Militia, or the Office of a Justice of the Peace, shall
be considered as a lucrative Office.
XXXVI. That all Commissions and Grants shall run in the name
of the State of North Carolina and bear Test, and be signed by
the Governor. All writs shall run in the same manner, and bear
Test, and be signed by the Clerks of the respective Courts.
Indictments shall conclude, Against the Peace and Dignity of
the State.
XXXVII. That the Delegates from this State to the
Continental Congress, while necessary, shall be chosen annually
by the General Assembly, by Ballot, but may be superseded in
the mean time in the same manner, and no person shall be
elected to serve in that Capacity for more than three years
successively.
XXXVIII. That there shall be a Sheriff, Coroner, or
Coroners, and Constable, in each County in this State.
XXXIX. That the person of a Debtor, where there is not a
strong Presumption of Fraud, shall not be continued in Prison,
after delivering up, bona fide, all his Estate, real and
personal, in such manner as shall be hereafter regulated by
Law. All prisoners shall be bailable by sufficient sureties,
unless for Capital Offences, when the proof is evident, or
Presumption great.
XL. That every Foreigner who comes to settle in this State,
having first taken the Oath of Allegiance to the same, may
purchase, or by other just means acquire, hold and transfer,
Land, or other real Estate; and after one year's Residence,
shall be deemed a free citizen.
XLI. That a school or schools be established by the Legislature,
for the convenient Instruction of youth, with such Salaries to
the Masters, paid by the Public as may enable them to instruct
at low prices; and all useful Learning shall be duly encouraged
and promoted in one or more Universities.
XLII. That no purchase of lands shall be made of the Indian
natives, but on behalf of the public, by the authority of the
General Assembly.
XLIII. That the future Legislature of this State shall
regulate intails, in such a manner as to prevent
perpetuities.
XLIV. That the declaration of
rights is hereby declared to be part of the Constitution of
this State, and ought never to be violated on any pretence
whatsoever.
XLV. That any member of either House of the General Assembly
shall have liberty to dissent from, and protest against any act
or resolve which he may think injurious to the public, or any
individual, and have the reasons of his dissent entered on the
Journals.
XLVI. That neither House of the General Assembly shall proceed
upon public business, unless a majority of all the members of
such House are actually present, and that upon a motion made
and seconded, the yeas and nays upon any question shall be taken
and entered on the Journals; and that the Journals of the
proceedings of both Houses of the General Assembly shall be
printed and made public, immediately after their
adjournment.
This Constitution is not intended to preclude the present
Congress from making a temporary provision for the well
ordering of this State, until the General Assembly shall
establish Government agreeable to the mode herein before
described.
December the Eighteenth, One Thousand Seven Hundred and
Seventy Six, read the third time, and ratified in open
Congress.
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