A fAf ZONAL PAPER, PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS »" JOHN FENNO, No. 34, NORTH FrFTH-STRE£T, PHILADELPHIA ' No. i 5 i 'of Vol. IV.] h)R THE GdZErTB. ' * No. 11. THE do&rine which has been examined, is pregnant with inferences and consequen ces against which no ramparts in the tonftituti on could defend the public liberty, or scarcely the forms qf government. Were it once established that the powers of war and treaty are in their nature executive ; that so far as they are not by the lctfurc • f the rc&- d« r deflation« which the author having omit ted might not chufe to own, I proceed to the examination of one, with which that liberty cannot be taken. " However true it may be (fays he) that the right of the legiflatufe to declare war includes the right of judging whether the legiilatura be under obligations to make war or not, it will not follow that the executive is in any cafe exclu ded from a [miliar rigfjt of judging * n 'be execu tion of its own firo&icyis." A material error of the writer in this appli cation of his doctrine lies in his Ihrinking from its regular consequences. Had he'ftuck to his principle in its f'.ill cKtjent, and reasoned from it without reftriiint, he would only have had to defend himfelf against bn opponents. By yield fng the great point, that the right to declare war, tho to be taken includes the right to judge whether the nation be under obligation to make war or not, he is compelled to defend his argument not only against others but against himfelf also. ' Observe how he struggles in his •wn toils. He had before admitted that the right to de clare war i» vetted 'm rfre legislature. He here Admits that the right to declare war includes the right to judge whether the United States be obliged" to declare war or not. Can the infe rence be avoided, that the executive instead of having a similar right to judge, is as much ex cluded from the right to judge as from the right to declare ? If the right to declare war be an exception out of the general grant to the executive power; every thing included in the right mufl be includ ed in the exception ; and being included in the exception, is excluded from the -grant. Ke cannot diftntanglfc himfelf by consider ing the right of the executive to judge as con current with that of the legislature. For if the executive have a concurrent right to judge, and the right to judge be included in (it is in faave given the power to one de partment only ; and the doubt to be to which it has been given. The latter supposes it to be long to both ; and that it may be exercised by either or both, according to the course of exi- gencies. A concurrent authority in two independent departments to perform the fame lun&ion with refpeift to the fame-thing, would be as awkward in practice, as it is unnatural in theory. If the legillature and executive have both a right to judge of the obligations to make War or not, it mud sometimes happen, though not at present, that they will judge differently. — The executive may proceed to consider the ques tion to-day, may determine that the United States are not bound to take part in a war, and in the execution ./ it, function, proclaim that de termination to all the world. To-morrow, the leeiflature may follow in the confutation of the fame fubje