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The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of Citizens: A Contribution to
Modern Constitutional History by Georg Jellinek, Dr. Phil. et Jur. , Professor
of Law in the University of Heidelberg. Authorized translation from the German
by Max Farrand, Ph.D.. Revised by the Author (New York: Henry Holt and Company,
1901). Chapter I. Its Significance.
CHAPTER I. THE FRENCH
DECLARATION OF RIGHTS OF AUGUST 26, 1789, AND ITS
SIGNIFICANCE.
THE declaration of "the rights of man and of
citizens" by the French Constituent Assembly on August 26, 1789, is one
of the most significant events of the French Revolution. It has been
criticised from different points of view with directly opposing
results. The political scientist and the historian, thoroughly
appreciating its importance, have repeatedly come to the conclusion
that the Declaration had no small part in the anarchy with which France
was visited soon after the storming of the Bastille. They point to its
abstract phrases as ambiguous and therefore dangerous, and as void of
all political reality and practical statesmanship. Its empty
pathos, they say, confused the mind, disturbed calm judgment, aroused
passions, and stifled the sense of duty,—for of duty there is not a
word.1
Others, on the contrary, and especially Frenchmen, have exalted it as a
revelation in the world's history, as a catechism of the "principles of
1789" which form the eternal foundation of the state's structure, and
they have glorified it as the most precious gift that France has given
to mankind.
Less regarded than its historical and political significance is the importance
of this document in the history of law, an importance which continues even to
the present day. Whatever may be the value or worthlessness of its general phrases,
it is under the influence of this document that the conception of the public
rights of the individual has developed in the positive law of the states of
the European continent. Until it appeared public
law literature recognized the rights of heads of states, the privileges of class,
and the privileges of individuals or special corporations, but the general rights
of subjects were to be found essentially only in the form of duties on the part
of the state, not in the form of definite legal claims of the individual. The
Declaration of the Rights of Man for the first time originated in all its vigor
in positive law the conception, which until then had been known only to natural
law, of the personal rights of the members of the state over against the state
as a whole. This was next seen in the first French constitution of September
3, 1791, which set forth, upon the basis of a preceding declaration of rights,
a list of droits naturels et civils as rights that were guaranteed by
the constitution.2
Together with the right of suffrage, the "droits garantis par la constitution",
which were enumerated for the last time in the constitution of November 4, 1848,3
form to-day the basis of French theory and practice respecting the personal
public rights of the individual.4
And under the influence of the French
declaration there have been introduced into almost all of the constitutions
of the other Continental states similar enumerations of rights, whose separate
phrases and formulas, however, are more or less adapted to the particular conditions
of their respective states, and therefore frequently exhibit wide differences
in content.
In Germany most of the constitutions of the period prior to 1848 contained
a section upon the rights of subjects, and in the year 1848 the National Constitutional
Convention at Frankfort adopted "the fundamental rights of the German people",
which were published on December 27, 1848, as Federal law. In spite of a resolution
of the Bund of August 23, 1851, declaring these rights null and void, they are
of lasting importance, because many of their specifications are to-day incorporated
almost word for word in the existing Federal law.5
These enumerations of rights appear in greater numbers in
the European constitutions of the period after 1848. Thus, first of all, in
the Prussian constitution of January 31, 1850, and in Austria's "Fundamental
Law of the State" of December 21, 1867, on the general rights of the state's
citizens. And more recently they have been incorporated in the constitutions
of the new states in the Balkan peninsula.
A noteworthy exception to this are the constitutions of the North German Confederation
of July 26, 1867, and of the German Empire of April 16, 1871, which lack entirely
any paragraph on fundamental rights. The constitution of the Empire, however,
could the better dispense with such a declaration as it was already contained
in most of the constitutions of the individual states, and, as above stated,
a series of Federal laws has enacted the most important principles of the Frankfort
fundamental rights. Besides, with the provisions of the Federal constitution
as to amendments, it was not necessary to make any special place for them in
that instrument, as the Reichstag, to whose especial care the guardianship of
the fundamental rights must be entrusted, has no difficult forms to observe
in amending the constitution.6
As a matter of fact the public rights of the individual
are much greater in the German Empire than in most of the states where the fundamental
rights are specifically set forth in the constitution. This may be seen, for
example, by a glance at the legislation and the judicial and administrative
practice in Austria.
But whatever may be one's opinion to-day upon the formulation of
abstract principles, which only become vitalized through the process of
detailed legislation, as affecting the legal position of the individual
in the state, the fact that the recognition of such principles is
historically bound up with that first declaration of rights makes it an
important task of constitutional history to ascertain the origin of the
French Declaration of Rights of 1789. The achievement of this task is
of great importance both in explaining the development of the modern
state and in understanding the position which this state assures to the
individual. Thus far in the works on
public law various precursors of the declaration of the Constituent
Assembly, from Magna Charta to the American Declaration of
Independence, have been enumerated and arranged in regular sequence,
yet any thorough investigation of the sources from which the French
drew is not to be found.
It is the prevailing opinion that the teachings of the Contrat Social
gave the impulse to the Declaration, and that its prototype was the
Declaration of Independence of the thirteen United States of North
America. Let us first of all inquire into the correctness of these
assumptions.
Footnotes for
Chapter I
1. First of all, as is well known, Burke and Bentham, and later Taine, Les origines de la France contemporaine: La révolution, I, pp. 273 et seq.; Oncken, Das Zeitalter der Revolution, des Kaiserreiches und der Befreiungskriege, I, pp. 229 et seq.; and Weiss, Geschichle der französischen Revolution, 1888, I, p. 263.
2. Titre premier: "Dispositions fondamentales garanties par la constitution."
3. Hélie, Les constitutions de la France, pp. 1103 et seq.
4. Cf. Jellinek, System der subjektiven öffentlichen Rechte, p. 3, n. I.
5. Binding, Der Versuch der Reichsgründung durch die Paulskirche, Leipzig, 1892, p. 23.
6.
When considering the constitution, the Reichstag rejected all proposals which
aimed to introduce fundamental rights. Cf. Bezold, Materialen der
deutschen Reichsverfassung, III, pp. 896–1010.
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