WE THE PEOPLE, HEREBY ORDAIN AND ESTABLISH THIS
CONSTITUTION OF GOVERNMENT FOR THE STATE OF DELAWARE.
Through Divine goodness, all men have by nature the rights of worshiping
and serving their Creator according to the dictates of their consciences, of
enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring and protecting reputation
and property, and in general of obtaining objects suitable to their condition,
without injury by one to another; and as these rights are essential to their
welfare, for due exercise thereof, power is inherent in them; and therefore all
just authority in the institutions of political society is derived from the
people, and established with their consent, to advance their happiness; and they
may for this end, as circumstances require, from time to time, alter their
Constitution of government.
§1. Freedom of religion.
Section 1. Although it is the duty of all men
frequently to assemble together for the public worship of Almighty God; and
piety and morality, on which the prosperity of communities depends, are hereby
promoted; yet no man shall or ought to be compelled to attend any religious
worship, to contribute to the erection or support of any place of worship, or to
the maintenance of any ministry, against his own free will and consent; and no
power shall or ought to be vested in or assumed by any magistrate that shall in
any case interfere with, or in any manner control the rights of conscience, in
the free exercise of religious worship, nor a preference given by law to any
religious societies, denominations, or modes of worship.
§2. Religious test for office not
required.
Section 2. No religious test shall be required as a
qualification to any office, or public trust, under this State.
§3. Free and equal elections.
Section 3. All elections shall be free and
equal.
§4. Trial by jury; composition of grand
juries; concurrence in indictment.
Section 4. Trial by jury shall be as
heretofore.
§5. Freedom of press; evidence in libel
prosecutions; jury questions.
Section 5. The press shall be free to every citizen
who undertakes to examine the official conduct of men acting in a public
capacity; and any citizen may print on any subject, being responsible for the
abuse of that liberty. In prosecutions for publications, investigating the
proceedings of officers, or where the matter published is proper for public
information, the truth thereof may be given in evidence; and in all indictments
for libels the jury may determine the facts and the law, as in other
cases.
§6. Searches and seizures.
Section 6. The people shall be secure in their
persons, houses, papers and possessions, from unreasonable searches and
seizures; and no warrant to search any place, or to seize any person or thing,
shall issue without describing them as particularly as may be; nor then, unless
there be probable cause supported by oath or affirmation.
§7. Procedural rights in criminal
prosecutions; jury trial; self-incrimination; deprivation of life, liberty or
property.
Section 7. In all criminal prosecutions, the accused
hath a right to be heard by himself and his counsel, to be plainly and fully
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation against him, to meet the
witnesses in their examination face to face, to have compulsory process in due
time, on application by himself, his friends or council, for obtaining witnesses
in his favor, and a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury; he shall not
be compelled to give evidence against himself, nor shall he be deprived of life,
liberty or property, unless by the judgment of his peers or by the law of the
land.
§8. Prosecution by indictment or
information; double jeopardy; just compensation for property.
Section 8. No person shall for any indictable offense
be proceeded against criminally by information, except in cases arising in the
land or naval forces, or in the militia when in actual service in time of war or
public danger; and no person shall be for the same offense twice put in jeopardy
of life or limb; nor shall any man's property be taken or applied to public use
without the consent of his representatives, and without compensation being
made.
§9. Courts shall be open; remedy for
injury; venue; suits against State.
Section 9. All courts shall be open; and every man for
an injury done him in his reputation, person, movable or immovable possessions,
shall have remedy by the due course of law, and justice administered according
to the very right of the cause and the law of the land, without sale, denial, or
unreasonable delay or expense. Suits may be brought against the State, according
to such regulations as shall be made by law.
§10. Suspension of laws by General
Assembly.
Section 10. No power of suspending laws shall be
exercised but by authority of the General Assembly.
§11. Excessive bail or fines; cruel
punishments; health of prisoners.
Section 11. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor
excessive fines imposed, nor cruel punishments inflicted; and in the
construction of jails a proper regard shall be had to the health of
prisoners.
§12. Right to bail; access to
accused.
Section 12. All prisoners shall be bailable by
sufficient sureties, unless for capital offenses when the proof is positive or
the presumption great; and when persons are confined on accusation for such
offenses their friends and counsel may at proper seasons have access to
them.
§13. Suspension of habeas corpus.
Section 13. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus
shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public
safety may require it.
§14. Commission of oyer and terminer, or
jail delivery.
Section 14. No commission of oyer and terminer, or
jail delivery, shall be issued.
§15. Corruption of blood; forfeiture;
descent of suicide's estate.
Section 15. No attainder shall work corruption of
blood, nor except during the life of the offender forfeiture of estate. The
estates of those who destroy their own lives shall descend or vest as in case of
natural death, and if any person be killed by accident no forfeiture shall
thereby be incurred.
§16. Right of assembly; petition for
redress of grievances.
Section 16. Although disobedience to laws by a part of
the people, upon suggestions of impolicy or injustice in them, tends by
immediate effect and the influence of example not only to endanger the public
welfare and safety, but also in governments of a republican form contravenes the
social principles of such governments, founded on common consent for common
good; yet the citizens have a right in an orderly manner to meet together, and
to apply to persons entrusted with the powers of government, for redress of
grievances or other proper purposes, by petition, remonstrance or
address.
§17. Standing army; necessity for
legislative consent; subordination of military.
Section 17. No standing army shall be kept without the
consent of the General Assembly, and the military shall in all cases and at all
times be in strict subordination to the civil power.
§18. Prohibition against quartering
soldiers in home.
Section 18. No soldier shall in time of peace be
quartered in any house without the consent of the owner; nor in time of war but
by a civil magistrate, in manner to be prescribed by law.
§19. Hereditary distinctions; holding
office during good behavior; offices and titles from foreign
states.
Section 19. No hereditary distinction shall be
granted, nor any office created or exercised, the appointment to which shall be
for a longer term than during good behavior; and no person holding any office
under this State shall accept of any office or title of any kind whatever from
any king, prince, or foreign State.
§20. Right to keep and bear arms.
Section 20. A person has the right to keep and bear
arms for the defense of self, family, home and State, and for hunting and
recreational use. (4-16-87)
WE DECLARE THAT EVERYTHING IN THIS ARTICLE IS RESERVED
OUT OF THE GENERAL POWERS OF GOVERNMENT HEREINAFTER MENTIONED.
§1. General Assembly to hold legislative
power; composition.
Section 1. The legislative power of this State shall
be vested in a General Assembly, which shall consist of a Senate and a House of
Representatives.
§2. Composition of House and Senate; terms
of office; districts; election.
Sections 2 and 2A, Article II of the Constitution
relating to the composition of the House and Senate was declared
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 15, 1964.
Roman et all. v. Sincock et al. 377 U.S. 395. The composition of the General
Assembly is now regulated by statute.
§2A. Additional representative
districts.
See the Note under Section 2, Article II,
above.
§2B. Delegates to Constitutional
Convention.
Section 2B. The number of delegates and the method of
electing delegates to the Constitutional Convention as provided in Section 2,
Article 16, shall not be affected by the addition of Representatives or
Representative Districts, pursuant to Section 2A of this Article. The
Representative Districts which shall elect delegates to the Constitutional
Convention are as set forth in Section 2 of this Article.
§3. Qualifications of members.
Section 3. No person shall be a Senator who shall not
have attained the age of twenty-seven years and have been a citizen and
inhabitant of the State three years next preceding the day of his election and
the last year of that term an inhabitant of the Senatorial District in which he
shall be chosen, unless he shall have been absent on the public business of the
United States or of this State. No person shall be a Representative who shall
not have attained the age of twenty-four years, and have been a citizen and
inhabitant of the State three years next preceding the day of his election, and
the last year of that term an inhabitant of the Representative District in which
he shall be chosen, unless he shall have been absent on the public business of
the United States or of this State.
§4. Time and frequency of sessions.
Section 4. The General Assembly shall convene on the
second Tuesday of January of each calendar year unless otherwise convened by the
Governor, or by mutual call of the presiding officers of both
Houses.
The General Assembly may continue in session each
calendar year so long as, in its judgment, the public interest may require;
however, each session shall not extend beyond the last day of June unless the
session is recalled by the Governor or the mutual call of the presiding officers
of both Houses.
§5. Place of meeting.
Section 5. The General Assembly shall meet and sit in
Dover, the capital of the State; provided, however, that in case of
insurrection, conflagration or epidemic disease the General Assembly may
temporarily meet and sit elsewhere.
§6. Vacancies; tenure of office of persons
elected to fill.
Section 6. Whenever there shall be a vacancy in either
House of the General Assembly, by reason of failure to elect, ineligibility,
death, resignation or otherwise, a writ of election shall be issued by the
presiding officer of the House in which the vacancy exists, or in case of
necessity in such other manner as shall be provided by law; and the person
thereupon chosen to fill such vacancy shall hold office for the residue of the
term. And whenever there shall be such vacancy in either House, and the General
Assembly is not in session, the Governor shall have power to issue a writ of
election to fill such vacancy, which writ shall be executed as a writ issued by
the presiding officer of either House in case of vacancy, and the person
thereupon chosen to fill such vacancy shall hold office for the residue of the
term.
§7. President pro tempore, Speaker and
other officers; absence of presiding officers.
Section 7. The Senate at the first annual session of
every new General Assembly shall choose one of its members president pro
tempore, who shall preside in the absence of the Lieutenant-Governor, or in case
the latter shall become Governor or while he continues in the exercise of the
office of Governor by reason of disability of the Governor. The Senate shall
also choose its other officers and in the absence of the Lieutenant-Governor and
its president pro tempore may, from time to time, as occasion may require,
appoint one of its members to preside. The House of Representatives at such
first annual session shall choose one of its members speaker and also choose its
other officers, and in the absence of the speaker may from time to time, as
occasion may require, appoint one of its members to preside.
§8. Each House as judge of elections and
qualifications of its members; quorum; adjournments; compelling
attendance.
Section 8. Each House shall be the judge of the
elections, returns and qualifications of its own members; and a majority of all
the members elected to each House shall constitute a quorum to do business; but
a smaller number may adjourn from day to day, and shall have power to compel the
attendance of absent members, in such manner and under such penalties, as shall
be deemed expedient.
§9. Rules; punishment and expulsion of
members; scope of powers.
Section 9. Each House may determine the rules of its
proceedings, punish any of its members for disorderly behavior, and with the
concurrence of two-thirds of all the members elected thereto expel a member, and
shall have all other powers necessary for a branch of the Legislature of a free
and independent State.
§10. Journals; publication; entry of yeas
and nays; passage of bills and resolutions.
Section 10. Each House shall keep a journal of its
proceedings, and publish the same immediately after every session, except such
parts as may require secrecy. The names of the members voting for and against
any bill or joint resolution, except in relation to adjournment, shall on the
final vote be entered on the journal; and the yeas and nays of the members on
any question shall, at the desire of any member, be entered on the journal. No
bill or joint resolution, except in relation to adjournment, shall pass either
House unless the final vote shall have been taken by yeas and nays, nor without
the concurrence of a majority of all the members elected to each House.
§11. Accessibility to each House and
Committees of the Whole.
Section 11. The doors of each House, and of Committees
of the Whole, shall be open unless when the business is such as ought to be kept
secret.
§12. Consent of each House to
adjournment.
Section 12. Neither House shall, without the consent
of the other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other place than that
in which the two Houses shall be sitting.
§13. Immunity from arrest and questioning
of speeches.
Section 13. The Senators and Representatives shall, in
all cases, except treason, felony or breach of the peace, be privileged from
arrest during their attendance at the session of their respective Houses, and in
going to and returning from the same; and for any speech or debate in either
House they shall not be questioned in any other place.
§14. Holding dual office or having interest
in army or navy contract.
Section 14. No Senator or Representative shall, during
the time for which he shall have been elected, be appointed to any civil office
under this State which shall have been created, or the emoluments of which shall
have been increased during such time. No member of Congress, nor any person
holding any office under this State, or the United States, except officers
usually appointed by the courts of Justice respectively, attorneys-at-law and
officers of the militia, holding no disqualifying office, shall during his
continuance in Congress or in office be a Senator or Representative; nor shall
any person while concerned in any army or navy contract be a Senator or
Representative.
§15. Compensation, Expenses and Allowances
of Members
Section 15. The President of the Senate and members of
the General Assembly shall receive an annual salary and an annual expense
allowance for transportation and such other necessary and proper purposes as the
General Assembly shall by law provide. Funds appropriated hereunder shall be
paid out of the Treasury of the State.
§16. Restriction of bills and resolutions
to one subject; expression in title; exception.
Section 16. No bill or joint resolution, except bills
appropriating money for public purposes, shall embrace more than one subject,
which shall be expressed in its title.
§17. Lotteries and other
gambling.
Section 17. All forms of gambling are prohibited in
this State except the following:
(a) Lotteries under State control for the purpose of
raising funds,
(b) Lotteries (other than slot machines, roulette,
craps, and baccarat games) provided that each is sponsored and conducted under
the limitations of Section 17B by companies, organizations, or societies which
have been in existence for at least two years; provided, however, that no person
who shall not have attained the age of 18 years shall participate in any lottery
(where money is the prize) otherwise authorized by the Article.
(6-2-83)
(c) Wagering or betting by the use of pari-mutuel
machines or totalizators on horse races conducted at racetracks within or
without the State, provided that such wagering or betting may be conducted only
either:
(1) within the enclosure of any racetrack licensed
under the laws of the State to conduct a race meeting, or
(2) within the enclosure of any racetrack licensed
under the laws of the State to receive and accept wagers or bets on
electronically televised simulcasts of horse races. (1/24/91)
(d) Bingo games as conducted under the limitations of
Section 17A.
The General Assembly shall enforce this Section by
appropriate legislation.
§17A. Bingo games; organizations authorized
to conduct; submission to referendum; districts; regulation;
penalties.
Section 17A. The game of Bingo shall be lawful when
sponsored and conducted by Volunteer Fire Companies, Veteran's Organizations,
Religious or Charitable Organizations, or by Fraternal Societies provided the
net receipts or profits arising from the conducting or operating of such Bingo
games by the aforementioned Companies, Organizations, or Societies are used
solely for the promotion or achievement of the purposes of such Companies,
Organization, or Societies, and provided further that the aforementioned
Companies, Organizations or Societies are operated in a manner so as to come
within the provisions of Section 170 of the U.S. Revenue Code and Regulations
promulgated thereunder by the U. S. Secretary of the Treasury.
1. The General Assembly shall provide by law for the
submission to the vote of the qualified electors of the several districts of the
State, or any of them, mentioned in subparagraph 2 of Section 17A of this
article at the General Election held in 1958, the question whether the playing
of the game of "Bingo" shall be licensed or prohibited within the limits
thereof; and in every district in which there is a majority against license, no
organization, mentioned in Section 17A, shall thereafter sponsor or permit the
playing of "Bingo", within said district, until at a subsequent submission of
such question a majority of votes shall be cast in said district for license.
Whenever a majority of all the members elected to each House of the General
Assembly by the qualified electors in any district named in subparagraph 2 of
Section 17A of this Article shall request the submission of the question of
license or no license to a vote of the qualified electors in said district, the
General Assembly shall provide for the submission of such question to the
qualified electors in such district at the next general election
thereafter.
2. Under the provisions of this Article, Sussex County
shall comprise one district, Kent County shall comprise one district, the City
of Wilmington, as its corporate limits now are or may hereafter be extended, one
district, and the remaining part of New Castle County, one
district.
3. The General Assembly shall provide necessary laws to carry out and enforce the provisions of this Article, enact laws governing the game of "Bingo" under the limitations of this Article, and may provide such penalties as may be necessary to enforce same.
§17B. Lotteries not under State control; organizations
to conduct; submission to referendum; districts; regulation;
penalties.
Lotteries not under State control shall be lawful when
sponsored and conducted by Volunteer Fire Companies, Veterans Organizations,
Religious or Charitable Organizations, or by Fraternal Societies provided that
said Company, Organization or Society has been in existence a minimum of two
years and provided the net receipts or profits arising from the conducting or
operating of such lotteries by the aforementioned Companies, Organizations, or
Societies are used solely for the promotion or achievement of the purposes of
such Companies, Organizations, or Societies, and provided further that the
aforementioned Companies, Organizations, or Societies are operated in a manner
so as to come within the provisions of Section 170 of the U.S. Revenue Code and
Regulations promulgated thereunder by the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.
1. The General Assembly shall provide by law for the
submission to the vote of the qualified electors of the several districts of the
State, or any of them, mentioned in subparagraph 2 of Section 17B of this
Article at the General Election held in 1984, the question whether the playing
of lotteries not under State control shall be licensed or prohibited within the
limits thereof; and in every district in which there is a majority against
license, no organization, mentioned in Section 17B, shall thereafter sponsor or
permit lotteries not under State control, within said district, until at a
subsequent submission of such question a majority of votes shall be cast in said
district for license. Whenever a majority of all the members elected to each
House of the General Assembly by the qualified electors in any district named in
subparagraph 2 of Section 17B of this Article shall request the submission of
the question of license or no license to a vote of the qualified electors in
said district, the General Assembly shall provide for the submission of such
question to the qualified electors in such district at the next general election
thereafter.
2. Under the provisions of this Article, Sussex County
shall comprise one district, Kent County shall comprise one district, the City
of Wilmington, as its corporate limits now are or may hereafter be extended, one
district, and the remaining part of New Castle County, one
district.
3. The General Assembly shall enact comprehensive
legislation providing for licensing for all organizations conducting and
regulating the conduct of lotteries under the provisions of this section and may
provide such penalties as may be necessary to enforce such legislation.
(6-2-83)
§18. Divorce or alimony.
Section 18. No divorce shall be granted, nor alimony
allowed, except by the judgment of a court, as shall be prescribed by general
and uniform law.
§19. Local or special laws relating to
fences, live stock, ditches, school districts, and roads, highways, streets,
etc.
Section 19. The General Assembly shall not pass any
local or special law relating to fences; the straying of live stock; ditches;
the creation or changing the boundaries of school districts; or the laying out,
opening, alteration, maintenance or vacation, in whole or in part of any road,
highway, street, lane or alley; provided, however, that the General Assembly may
by a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each House pass laws
relating to the laying out, opening, alteration or maintenance of any road or
highway which forms a continuous road or highway extending through at least a
portion of the three counties of the State.
No road, highway or street, intended to be dedicated
to public use and maintained at public expense, shall be constructed except in
conformance with standards adopted by the agency charged with construction,
reconstruction or maintenance of such road, highway, or street. Any road or
street, constructed solely for private use, shall only be maintained at State
expense after it has been constructed or reconstructed according to the
standards established by the agency charged with the duty of maintaining such
roads or streets.
§20. Disclosure of personal or private
interest of legislator in any pending measure.
Section 20. Any member of the General Assembly who has
a personal or private interest in any measure or bill pending in the General
Assembly shall disclose the fact to the House of which he is a member and shall
not vote thereon.
§21. Conviction of crime as ban to public
office.
Section 21. No person who shall be convicted of
embezzlement of the public money, bribery, perjury or other infamous crime,
shall be eligible to a seat in either House of the General Assembly, or capable
of holding any office of trust, honor or profit under this
State.
§22. Bribery of executive, judicial or
legislative officers.
Section 22. Every person who shall give, offer or
promise, directly or indirectly, any money, testimonial, privilege, personal
advantage or thing of value to any executive or judicial officer of this State
or to any member of either House of the General Assembly for the purpose of
influencing him in the performance of any of his official or public duties shall
be deemed guilty of bribery, and shall be punished in such manner as shall be
provided by law.
§23. Statutes as public laws unless
otherwise declared.
Section 23. Every statute shall be a public law unless
otherwise declared in the statute itself.
§24. Settlement of accounts of State
Treasurer; ineligibility for legislative office until
settlement.
Section 24. The State Treasurer shall settle his
accounts annually with the General Assembly or a joint committee thereof, which
shall be appointed at every ninety legislative day session. No person who has
served in the office of State Treasurer shall be eligible to a seat in either
House of the General Assembly until he shall have made a final settlement of his
accounts as treasurer and discharged the balance, if any, due
thereon.
§25. Laws permitting zoning ordinances and
use of land.
Section 25. The General Assembly may enact laws under
which municipalities and the County of Sussex and the County of Kent and the
County of New Castle may adopt zoning ordinances, laws or rules limiting and
restricting to specified districts and regulating therein buildings and
structures according to their construction and the nature and extent of their
use, as well as the use to be made of land in such districts for other than
agricultural purposes; and the exercise of such authority shall be deemed to be
within the police power of the State.
§1. Governor to be supreme
executive.
Section 1. The Supreme executive powers of the State
shall be vested in a Governor.
§2. Election of Governor.
Section 2. The Governor shall be chosen by the
qualified electors of the State, once in every four years, at the general
election.
§3. Election returns, publications;
election by General Assembly.
Section 3. The returns of every election for Governor
shall be sealed up and immediately transmitted to the President of the Senate,
or in case of a vacancy in the Office of President of the Senate, or his absence
from the State to the Secretary of State, who shall keep the same until a
President of the Senate shall be chosen, to whom they shall be immediately
transmitted after his election, who shall open and publish the same in the
presence of the members of both Houses of the General Assembly. Duplicates of
the said returns shall also be immediately lodged with the Prothonotary of each
county. The person having the highest number of votes shall be Governor; but if
two or more shall be equal in the highest number of votes, the members of the
two Houses shall, by joint ballot, choose one of them to be Governor; and if,
upon such ballot, two or more of them shall still be equal and highest in votes,
the President of the Senate shall have the casting vote.
§4. Contested elections of Governor or
Lieutenant Governor.
Section 4. Contested elections of the Governor or
Lieutenant-Governor shall be determined by a joint committee, consisting of
one-third of all the members elected to each House of the General Assembly, to
be selected by ballot of the Houses respectively. Every member of the committee
shall take an oath or affirmation that in determining the said election he will
faithfully discharge the trust reposed in him; and the committee shall always
sit with open doors.
The Chief Justice, or, in case of his absence or
disability, the Chancellor shall preside at the trial of any contested election
of Governor or Lieutenant-Governor, and shall decide questions regarding the
admissibility of evidence, and shall, upon request of the committee, pronounce
his opinion upon other questions of law involved in the trial.
§5. Term of office.
Section 5. The Governor shall hold his office during
four years from the third Tuesday in January next ensuing his election; and
shall not be elected a third time to said office.
§6. Qualifications.
Section 6. The Governor shall be at least thirty years
of age, and have been a citizen and inhabitant of the United States twelve years
next before the day of his election, and the last six years of that term an
inhabitant of this State, unless he shall have been absent on public business of
the United States or of this State.
§7. Compensation.
Section 7. The Governor shall, at stated times,
receive for his services an adequate salary to be fixed by law, which shall be
neither increased nor diminished during the period for which he shall have been
elected.
§8. Governor as commander-in-chief of State
armed forces.
Section 8. He shall be commander-in-chief of the army
and navy of this State, and of the militia, except when they shall be called
into the service of the United States.
§9. Appointing power; recess appointments;
confirmation.
Section 9. He shall have power, unless herein
otherwise provided, to appoint, by and with the consent of a majority of all the
members elected to the Senate, such officers as he is or may be authorized by
this Constitution or by law to appoint. He shall have power to fill all
vacancies that may happen during the recess of the Senate, in offices to which
he may appoint, except in the offices of Chancellor, Chief Justice and Associate
Judges, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the end of the next
session of the Senate.
He shall have power to fill all vacancies that may
happen in elective offices, except in the offices of Lieutenant-Governor and
members of the General Assembly, by granting Commissions which shall expire when
their successors shall be duly qualified.
In case of vacancy in an elective office, except as
aforesaid, a person shall be chosen to said office for the full term at the next
general election, unless the vacancy shall happen within two months next before
such election, in which case the election for said office shall be held at the
second succeeding general election. Unless herein otherwise provided,
confirmation by the Senate of officers appointed by the Governor shall be
required only where the salary, fees and emoluments of office shall exceed the
sum of five hundred dollars annually.
§10. Secretary of State; appointment, term,
duties and compensation.
Section 10. The Governor shall appoint, by and with
the consent of a majority of all the members elected to the Senate, a Secretary
of State, who shall hold office during the pleasure of the Governor. He shall
keep a fair register of all the official acts and proceedings of the Governor,
and shall, when required by either House of the General Assembly lay the same,
and all papers, minutes and vouchers, relative thereto, before such House, and
shall perform such other duties as shall be enjoined upon him by law. He shall
have a compensation for his service to be fixed by law.
§11. County officers; qualifications;
Members of Congress, federal employees and other officers holding dual
office.
Section 11. No person shall be elected or appointed to
an office within a County who shall not have a right to vote for a
Representative in the General Assembly, and have been a resident therein one
year next before his election or appointment, nor hold the office longer than he
continues to reside in the County, unless herein otherwise
provided.
No member of Congress, nor any person holding or
exercising any office under the United States, except officers usually appointed
by the courts of Justice respectively and attorneys-at-law, shall at the same
time hold or exercise any office of profit under this State, unless herein
otherwise provided.
No person shall hold more than one of the following
offices at the same time, to wit: Secretary of State, Attorney-General,
Insurance Commissioner, State Treasurer, Auditor of Accounts, Prothonotary,
Clerk of the Peace, Register of Wills, Recorder, or Sheriff.
§12. Commissions.
Section 12. All Commissions shall be in the name of
the State, and shall be sealed with the great seal and signed by the
Governor.
§13. Removal of officers by Governor;
procedure.
Section 13. The Governor may for any reasonable cause
remove any officer, except the Lieutenant-Governor and members of the General
Assembly, upon the address of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
House of the General Assembly. Whenever the General Assembly shall so address
the Governor, the cause of removal shall be entered on the journals of each
House. The person against whom the General Assembly may be about to proceed
shall receive notice thereof, accompanied with the cause alleged for his
removal, at least ten days before the day on which either House of the General
Assembly shall act thereon.
§14. Reports from executive
departments.
Section 14. The Governor may require information in
writing from the officers in the executive department, upon any subject relating
to the duties of their respective offices.
§15. Messages to General
Assembly.
Section 15. He shall, from time to time, give to the
General Assembly information of affairs concerning the State and recommend to
its consideration such measures as he shall judge expedient.
§16. Special sessions of General Assembly;
adjournment; special session of Senate.
Section 16. He may on extraordinary occasions convene
the General Assembly by proclamation; and in case of disagreement between the
two Houses with respect to the time of adjournment, adjourn them to such time as
he shall think proper, not exceeding three months. He shall have power to
convene the Senate in extraordinary session by proclamation, for the transaction
of executive business.
§17. Execution of laws.
Section 17. He shall take care that the laws be
faithfully executed.
§18. Approval or veto of bills, orders,
resolutions or votes; repassage over veto.
Section 18. Every bill which shall have passed both
Houses of the General Assembly shall, before it becomes law, be presented to the
Governor; if he approves, he shall sign it; but if he shall not approve, he
shall return it with his objections to the House in which it shall have
originated, which House shall enter the objections at large on the journal and
proceed to reconsider it. If, after such reconsideration, three-fifths of all
the members elected to that House shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be sent
together with the objections to the other House, by which it shall likewise be
reconsidered, and if approved by three-fifths of all the members elected to that
House, it shall become a law; but in neither House shall the vote be taken on
the day on which the bill shall be returned to it. In all such cases the votes
of both Houses shall be determined by yeas and nays, and the names of the
members voting for and against the bill shall be entered on the journal of each
House respectively. If any bill shall not be returned by the Governor within ten
days, Sundays excepted, after it shall have been presented to him, the same
shall be a law in like manner as if he had signed it, unless the General
Assembly shall, by final adjournment, prevent its return, in which case it shall
not become a law without the approval of the Governor.
For purposes of return of Bills not approved by the
Governor the General Assembly shall be considered to be continuously in Session
until final adjournment and the Clerk of the House of Representatives and the
Secretary of the Senate shall be deemed proper recipients of such returned bills
during recess or adjournment of the General Assembly other than final
adjournment.
No bill shall become a law after the final adjournment
of the General Assembly, unless approved by the Governor within thirty days
after such adjournment. The Governor shall have power to disapprove of any item
or items of any bill making appropriations of money, embracing distinct items,
and the part or parts of the bill approved shall be the law, and the item or
items of appropriation disapproved shall be void, unless repassed according to
the rules and limitations prescribed for the passage of other bills, over the
Executive veto. Every order, resolution, or vote to which the concurrence of
both Houses of the General Assembly may be necessary, except on a question of
adjournment, shall be presented to the Governor, and before the same shall take
effect be approved by him, or being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by
three-fifths of all the members elected to each House of the General Assembly,
according to the rules and limitations prescribed in the case of a bill. Every
order and resolution to which the concurrence of both Houses of the General
Assembly may be necessary, except on a question of adjournment and those matters
dealing solely with the internal or administrative affairs of the General
Assembly, shall be presented to the Governor, and before the same shall take
effect be approved by him, or being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by
three-fifths of all the members elected to each House of the General Assembly,
according to the rules and limitations prescribed in the case of a bill.
§19. Lieutenant-Governor; election, term
and qualifications; President of the Senate; Compensation.
Section 19. A Lieutenant-Governor shall be chosen at
the same time, in the same manner, for the same term, and subject to the same
provisions as the Governor; he shall possess the same qualifications of
eligibility for office as the Governor; he shall be President of the Senate, but
shall have no vote unless the Senate be equally divided.
The Lieutenant-Governor, for his services as President
of the Senate, shall receive the same compensation as the Speaker of the House
of Representatives, the Lieutenant-Governor, for his services as a member of the
Board of Pardons and for all other duties of the said office which may be
provided by law, shall receive such compensation as shall be fixed by the
General Assembly.
§20. Vacancy in offices of both Governor
and Lieutenant-Governor; officers eligible to act; disability of
Governor.
Section 20. (a) In case the person elected Governor
shall die or become disqualified before the commencement of his term of office,
or shall refuse to take the same, or in case of the removal of the Governor from
office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and
duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Lieutenant-Governor;
and in case of removal, death, resignation, or inability of both the Governor
and Lieutenant-Governor, the Secretary of State, or if there be none, or in case
of his removal, death, resignation, or inability, then the Attorney General, or
if there be none, or in case of his removal, death, resignation, or inability,
then the President pro tempore of the Senate or if there be none, or in case of
his removal, death, resignation, or inability, then the Speaker of the House of
Representatives shall act as Governor until the disability of the Governor or
Lieutenant-Governor is removed, or a Governor shall be duly elected and
qualified.
The foregoing provisions of this section shall apply
only to such persons as are eligible to the office of Governor under this
Constitution at the time the powers and duties of the office of Governor shall
devolve upon them respectively.
Whenever the powers and duties of the office of
Governor shall devolve upon the Lieutenant-Governor, Secretary of State, or
Attorney General, his office shall become vacant; and whenever the powers and
duties of the office of Governor shall devolve upon the President pro tempore of
the Senate, or the Speaker of the House of Representatives, his seat as a member
of the General Assembly shall become vacant; and any such vacancy shall be
filled as directed by this Constitution; provided, however, that such vacancy
shall not be created in case either of the said persons shall be acting as
Governor during a temporary disability of the Governor.
(b) Whenever the Governor transmits to the President
pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives his
written declaration that he is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his
office, and until he transmits to them a written declaration to the contrary,
such powers and duties shall be discharged by the Lieutenant-Governor as Acting
Governor.
Whenever the Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme
Court, the President of the Medical Society of Delaware and the Commissioner of
the Department of Mental Health, acting unanimously, transmit to the President
pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, their
written declaration that the Governor is unable to discharge the powers and
duties of his office because of mental or physical disability, the
Lieutenant-Governor shall immediately assume the powers and duties of the office
as Acting Governor.
Thereafter, when the Governor transmits to the
President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives his written declaration that no disability exists, he shall
resume the powers and duties of his office unless the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of Delaware, the President of the Medical Society of Delaware and
the Commissioner of the Department of Mental Health, acting unanimously,
transmit within five days to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the
Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the
Governor is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office because of
mental or physical disability. Thereupon the General Assembly shall decide the
issue, assembling within seventy-two hours for that purpose if not then in
session. If the General Assembly within ten days after receipt of the latter
written declaration determines by two-thirds vote of all the members elected to
each house that the Governor is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his
office because of mental or physical disability, the Lieutenant-Governor shall
continue to discharge same as Acting Governor; otherwise, the Governor shall
resume the powers and duties of his office.
§21. Election and Term of Office for
Certain State Officers.
Section 21. The terms of the office of the Attorney
General, the Insurance Commissioner, the Auditor of Accounts and the State
Treasurer shall be four years. These officers shall be chosen by the qualified
electors of the State at general elections, and be commissioned by the Governor.
(The four-year term for the offices of Auditor of Accounts and State Treasurer
shall be effective commencing with the elections to be held in the year 1982.)
(Amended 1980)
§22. Election and term of office of certain
county officers; commission; successive terms of sheriff.
Section 22. The terms of office of Prothonotaries,
Clerks of the Peace, Registers of Wills, Recorders, Registers in Chancery,
Clerks of the Orphans' Court and Sheriff shall be four years. These officers
shall be chosen by the qualified electors of the respective counties at general
elections, and be commissioned by the Governor. (1-30-86)
§23. Place of office of certain county
officers.
Section 23. Prothonotaries, Clerks of the Peace,
Registers of Wills, Recorders, Registers in Chancery, Clerks of the Orphans'
Court and Sheriffs shall keep their offices in the town or place in each county
in which the Superior Court is usually held.
§24. Abolition of office of Clerk of
Orphans' Court; transfer of functions.
Section 24. The General Assembly shall have power to
transfer all or any part of the powers, functions and records of the Clerk of
the Orphans' Court for any county to such other office or offices as it deems
appropriate, and to abolish the office of Clerk of the Orphans' Court for any
county.
§1. Creation of courts.
Section 1. The judicial power of this State shall be
vested in a Supreme Court, a Superior Court, a Court of Chancery, an Orphans'
Court, a Register's Court, Justices of the Peace, and such other courts as the
General Assembly, with the concurrence of two-thirds of all the Members elected
to each House, shall have by law established prior to the time this amended
Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective or shall from time to time by
law establish after such time.
§2. Justices of Supreme Court and other
state Judges; qualifications; residence; precedence; retiree sitting
temporarily.
Section 2. There shall be five Justices of the Supreme
Court who shall be citizens of the State and learned in the law. One of them
shall be the Chief Justice who shall be designated as such by his appointment
and who when present shall preside at all sittings of the Court. In the absence
of the Chief Justice the Justice present who is senior in length of service
shall preside. If it is otherwise impossible to determine seniority among the
Justices, they shall determine it by lot and certify accordingly to the
Governor.
There shall be seven other State Judges who shall be
citizens of the State and learned in the law. One of them shall be Chancellor,
one of them Vice-Chancellor, one of them President Judge of the Superior Court
and of the Orphans' Court, and the remainder of them Associate Judges of the
Superior Court and of the Orphans' Court. Three of said Associate Judges shall
be Resident Associate Judges and one of them shall after appointment reside in
each county of the State.
There shall also be such number of additional
Vice-Chancellors and Associate Judges as may hereinafter be provided for by Act
of the General Assembly. Each of such Vice-Chancellors and Associate Judges
shall be citizens of the State and learned in the law. If it is otherwise
impossible to determine seniority of service among the Vice-Chancellors or among
the said Associate Judges, they shall determine it by lot respectively and
certify accordingly to the Governor.
The tenure and status of the Justices of the Supreme
Court and State Judges as shall have been appointed as provided for by the
Constitution or by Act of the General Assembly prior to the time this amended
Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective shall in no wise be affected.
A former State Judge or a former Justice of the
Supreme Court, who is retired and is receiving a state judicial pension and who
assents to active judicial duty and who is not engaged in the practice of law,
upon designation of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, shall be authorized
to sit temporarily in the court from which he retired or in any other court to
which he could be designated under the Constitution and statues of the State if
he still held the judicial position from which he retired. Any person so
designated shall receive compensation as the General Assembly shall provide.
Nothing herein shall authorize the designation of any former State Judge or a
former Justice of the Supreme Court to sit in the Supreme Court except
temporarily to fill up the number of that Court to the required quorum. The term
"State Judge" as used in this paragraph means a Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor of
the Chancery Court or a President Judge or Associate Judge of the Superior
Court.
§3. Appointment of judges; terms of office;
vacancies; political representation; confirmation of
appointment.
Section 3. The Justices of the Supreme Court, the
Chancellor and the Vice-Chancellor or Vice-Chancellors, and the President Judge
and Associate Judges of the Superior Court shall be appointed by the Governor,
by and with the consent of a majority of all the members elected to the Senate,
for the term of twelve years each, and the persons so appointed shall enter upon
the discharge of the duties of their respective offices upon taking the oath of
office prescribed by this Constitution. The Governor shall submit his
appointment within sixty (60) days after the occurrence of a vacancy however
caused. If a vacancy shall occur, by expiration of term or otherwise, at a time
when the Senate shall not be in session, the Governor shall within (60) days
after the happening of any such vacancy convene the Senate for the purpose of
confirming his appointment to fill said vacancy and the transaction of such
other executive business as may come before it. Such vacancy shall be filled as
aforesaid for the full term. Notwithstanding a vacancy, whether occurring when
the Senate is or is not in session, an incumbent whose term has expired shall
hold over in office until the incumbent, or a new appointee, is confirmed and
takes the oath of office for the next term, but in no event shall an incumbent
whose term has expired hold over in office for more than sixty (60) days after
the expiration of the term. In all instances the term of a new or reappointed
Justice of the Supreme Court, Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor, President Judge or
Associate Judge of the Superior Court shall begin on the date that the oath of
office is taken, thus qualifying the individual to serve, but the appointment
shall be forfeit if such oath is not taken within thirty (30) days of
confirmation. (6-28-83)
Appointments to the offices of the State Judiciary
shall at all times be subject to all of the following
limitations:
First, three of the five Justices of the Supreme Court
in office at the same time, shall be of one major political party, and two of
said Justices shall be of the other major political party.
Second, at any time when the total number of Judges of
the Superior Court and Orphans' Court shall be an even number not more than
one-half of the members of all such offices shall be of the same political
party; and at any time when the number of such offices shall be an odd number,
then not more than a bare majority of the members of all such offices shall be
of the same major political party, the remaining members of such offices shall
be of the other major political party.
Third, at any time when the total number of the
offices of the Justices of the Supreme Court, the Judges of the Superior Court
and Orphans' Court, the Chancellor and all the Vice-Chancellors shall be an even
number, not more than one-half of the members of all such offices shall be of
the same major political party; and at any time when the total number of such
offices shall be an odd number, then not more than a bare majority of the
members of all such offices shall be of the same major political party; the
remaining members of the Courts above enumerated shall be of the other major
political party.
Fourth, before sending the name of any person to the
Senate for confirmation as the appointment of the Governor to a vacancy in any
Judicial Office as aforesaid, the Governor shall, not less than ten (10) days
before sending the name of such person to the Senate for confirmation, address a
public letter to the President of the Senate informing him that he intends to
submit to the Senate for confirmation as an appointment to such vacancy the name
of the person he intends to appoint.
§4. Compensation of judges; method of
payment; receipt of other fees or holding other office.
Section 4. The Justices of the Supreme Court, the
Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor or Vice-Chancellors, and the President Judge and
Associate Judges of the Superior Court and of the Orphans' Court shall
respectively receive from the State for their services compensations which shall
be fixed by law and paid monthly and they shall not receive any fees or
perquisites in addition to their salaries for business done by them except as
provided by law. They shall hold no other office of profit.
§5. Composition of Superior Court and
Orphans' Court; presiding judge; quorum.
Section 5. The President Judge of the Superior Court
and the Orphans' Court and the Associate Judges thereof shall compose the
Superior Court and the Orphans' Court, as hereinafter prescribed. In each of the
said courts the President Judge when present shall preside, and in his absence
the senior Associate Judge present shall preside.
One judge shall constitute a quorum of the said
courts, respectively, except in the Superior Court sitting to try cases of
prosecution under Section 8 of Article V of this Constitution, when two Judges
shall constitute a quorum. One Judge may open and adjourn any of said
courts.
§6. Sections of Superior Court and Orphans'
Courts.
Section 6. Subject to the provisions of Section 5 of
this Article two or more sessions of the Superior Court and of the Orphans'
Court may at the same time be held in the same County or in different
counties.
§7. Jurisdiction of Superior
Court.
Section 7. The Superior Court shall have jurisdiction
of all causes of a civil nature, real, personal and mixed, at common law and all
other the jurisdiction and powers vested by the laws of this State in the
formerly existing Superior Court; and also shall have all the jurisdiction and
powers vested by the laws of this State in the formerly existing Court of
General Sessions of the Peace and Jail Delivery; and also shall have all the
jurisdiction and powers vested by the laws of this State in the formerly
existing Court of General Sessions; and also shall have all the jurisdiction and
powers vested by the laws of this State in the formerly existing Court of Oyer
and Terminer.
§8. Definitions of particular
terms.
Section 8. The phrase "Supreme Court" as used in
Section 4 of Article V of this Constitution and the phrases "Superior Court,"
"Court of General Sessions of the Peace and jail Delivery," "Court of Oyer and
Terminer" and "Court of General Sessions" wherever found in the law of this
State, elsewhere than in this amended Article IV of this Constitution, shall be
read as and taken to mean, and hereafter printed as, the Superior Court provided
for in this amended Article IV of this Constitution; and the phrase "Chief
Justice" wherever found in the law of this State existing at the time this
amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective, elsewhere than in
this amended Article IV of this Constitution, shall be read as and taken to
mean, and hereafter printed as President Judge of the Superior Court and of the
Orphans' Court, as provided for in this amended Article IV of this Constitution.
§9. Jurisdiction of Orphans'
Court.
Section 9. The Orphans' Court shall have all the
jurisdiction and powers vested by the laws of this State in the Orphans'
Court.
§10. Composition and jurisdiction of Court
of Chancery; initiation and decisions in causes and proceedings.
Section 10. The Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor or
Vice-Chancellors shall hold the Court of Chancery. One of them, respectively,
shall sit alone in that court. This court shall have all the jurisdiction and
powers vested by the laws of this State in the Court of Chancery. In any cause
or matter in the Court of Chancery that is initiated by an application to a
Judge of that Court, the application may be made directly to the Chancellor or a
Vice-Chancellor. Causes or proceedings in the Court of Chancery shall be
decided, and orders or decrees therein shall be made by the Chancellor or
Vice-Chancellors who hears them, respectively.
§11. Jurisdiction of Supreme
Court.
Section 11. The Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction
as follows:
(1) (a) To receive appeals from the Superior Court in
civil causes and to determine finally all matters of appeal in the interlocutory
or final judgments and other proceedings of said Superior Court in civil causes:
Provided that on appeal from a verdict of a jury, the findings of the jury, if
supported by evidence, shall be conclusive.
(1) (b) To receive appeals from the Superior Court in
criminal causes, upon application of the accused in all cases in which the
sentence shall be death, imprisonment exceeding one month, or fine exceeding One
Hundred Dollars, and in such other cases as shall be provided by law; and to
determine finally all matters of appeal on the judgments and proceedings of said
Superior Court in criminal causes: Provided, however, that appeals from the
Superior Court in cases of prosecution under Section 8 of Article V of this
Constitution shall be governed by the provisions of that
Section.
(2) Wherever in this Constitution reference is made to
a writ of error or a proceeding in error to the Superior Court, such reference
shall be construed as referring to the appeal provided for in Section (1) (a)
and Section (1) (b) of this Article.
(3) To receive appeals from the Superior Court in
cases of prosecution under Section 8 of Article V of this Constitution and to
determine finally all matters of appeal in such cases.
(4) To receive appeals from the Court of Chancery and
to determine finally all matters of appeal in the interlocutory or final decrees
and other proceedings in chancery.
(5) To receive appeals from the Orphans' Court and to
determine finally all matters of appeal in the interlocutory or final decrees
and judgments and other proceedings in the Orphans' Court.
(6) To issue writs of prohibition, quo warranto,
certiorari and mandamus to the Superior Court, the Court of Chancery and the
Orphans' court, or any of the Judges of the said courts and also to any inferior
court or courts established or to be established by law and to any of the Judges
thereof and to issue all orders, rules and processes proper to give effect to
the same. The General Assembly shall have power to provide by law in what manner
the jurisdiction and power hereby conferred may be exercised in vacation and
whether by one or more Justices of the Supreme Court.
(7) To issue such temporary writs or orders in causes
pending on appeal, or on writ of error, as may be necessary to protect the
rights of parties and any Justice of the Supreme Court may exercise this power
when the court is not in session.
(8) To exercise such other jurisdiction by way of
appeal, writ of error or of certiorari as the General Assembly may from time to
time confer upon it. (9) To hear and determine questions of law certified to it
by other Delaware courts, the Supreme Court of the United States, a Court of
Appeals of the United States, a United States District Court, or the highest
appellate court of any other state, where it appears to the Supreme Court that
there are important and urgent reasons for an immediate determination of such
questions by it. The Supreme Court may, by rules, define generally the
conditions under which questions may be certified to it and prescribe methods of
certification. (1-28-93)
§l2. Composition of Supreme Court;
designation of temporary Justices; quorum; opening and adjourning
court.
Section 12. A quorum of the Supreme Court shall
consist of not less than three Justices. The entire Court shall sit in any
criminal case in which the accused has been sentenced to death and in such other
civil and criminal cases as the Court, by rule, or the General Assembly, upon
the concurrence of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, shall
determine. In case of a lack of quorum by reason of vacancies in their number,
incapacity, or disqualification to sit by reason of interest, or to constitute a
three-member panel of the Court, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, or in
case of his absence from the State, disqualification, incapacity, or if there be
a vacancy in that office, the next qualified and available Justice, who by
seniority is next in rank to the Chief Justice, shall have the power to
designate judges from among the judges of the constitutional courts to sit in
the Supreme Court temporarily to satisfy the number of Justices required by law.
It shall be the duty of the judges of the constitutional courts so designated to
sit accordingly. No judge shall be so designated to sit in the Supreme Court in
any cause in which he sat below. Any one of the Justices of the Supreme Court
may open and adjourn court. (1/13/94)
§l3. Administrative head of courts;
supervisory powers; designation of judges to sit in Court of Chancery, the
Superior Court or the Orphans' Court.
Section 13. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, or
in case of his absence from the State, disqualification, incapacity, or if there
be a vacancy in that office, the next qualified and available Justice who by
seniority is next in rank to the Chief Justice shall be administrative head of
all the courts in the State, and shall have general administrative and
supervisory powers over all the courts. Such powers shall include but shall not
be limited to the following:
(l) Upon the approval of a majority of the Justices of
the Supreme Court to adopt rules for the administration of justice and the
conduct of the business of any or all the courts in this State: Provided,
however, that any other of the courts in this State may from time to time,
subject to the exercise of the power in this paragraph (l) conferred upon the
Justices of the Supreme Court, adopt rules of pleading practice and procedure
applicable to such Court.
(2) Upon written request made by the Chancellor, or in
his absence or incapacity by the next qualified and available Vice-Chancellor
who by seniority is next in rank to the Chancellor, or upon the written request
made by the President Judge of the Superior Court, or in his absence or
incapacity by the next qualified and available Associate Judge who by seniority
is next in rank to the President Judge, to designate one or more of the State
Judges (including the Justices of the Supreme Court) to sit in the Court of
Chancery or the Superior Court, as the case may be, and to hear and decide such
causes in such Court and for such period of time as shall be designated. It
shall be the duty of the State Judge so designated to serve according to such
designation as a Judge of the Court designated. The provisions of this paragraph
shall not be deemed to limit in any manner the powers conferred upon the judges
of the Superior Court under Section l4 of this Article.
(1/13/94)
§14. Power of law judges to grant
restraining orders and preliminary injunction.
Section 14. The President Judge of the Superior Court
and of the Orphans' Court or any associate Judge shall have power, in the
absence of the Chancellor and all the Vice-Chancellors from the county where any
suit in
equity may be instituted or during the temporary
disability of the Chancellor and all the Vice-Chancellors, to grant restraining
orders, and the said President Judge or any Associate Judge shall have power,
during the absence of the chancellor and all the Vice-Chancellors from the State
or his and their temporary disability, to grant preliminary injunctions pursuant
to the rules and practice of the Court of Chancery; provided that nothing herein
contained shall be construed to confer general jurisdiction over the
case.
§15. Judges ad litem; limitation and
expiration of commission; compensation; persons not
disqualified.
Section 15. The Governor shall have power to
commission a judge or judges ad litem to sit in any cause in any of said Courts
when by reason by legal exception to the Judges authorized to sit therein, or
for other cause, there are not a sufficient number of Judges available to hold
such Court. The commission in such case shall confine the office to the cause
and it shall expire on the determination of the cause. The judge so appointed
shall receive reasonable compensation to be fixed by the General Assembly. A
member of Congress, or any person holding or exercising an office under the
United States, shall not be disqualified from being appointed a judge ad
litem.
§16. Scope of jurisdiction and process;
costs.
Section 16. The jurisdiction of each of the aforesaid
courts shall be co-extensive with the State. Process may be issued out of each
court, in any county, into every county. No costs shall be awarded against any
party to a cause by reason of the fact that suit is brought in a county other
than that in which the defendant or defendants may reside at the time of
bringing suit.
§17. Jurisdictional changes by General
Assembly; appeals to Supreme Court.
Section 17. The General Assembly, notwithstanding
anything contained in this Article, shall have power to repeal or alter any Act
of the General Assembly giving jurisdiction to the former Court of Oyer and
Terminer, the former Superior Court, the Former Court of General Sessions of the
Peace and Jail Delivery, the former Court of General Sessions, the Superior
Court hereby established, the Orphans' Court or the Court of Chancery, in any
matter, or giving any power to either of the said courts. The General Assembly
shall also have power to confer upon the Superior Court, the Orphans' Court and
the Court of Chancery jurisdiction and powers in addition to those hereinbefore
mentioned. Until the General Assembly shall otherwise direct, there shall be an
appeal to the Supreme Court in all cases in which there is an appeal, according
to any Act of the General Assembly, to the former Court of Errors and Appeals or
to the former Supreme Court of this State.
§18. Powers of Chancellor,
Vice-Chancellors, and Judges.
Section 18. Until the General Assembly shall otherwise
provide, the Chancellor and the Vice-Chancellor or Vice-Chancellors,
respectively, shall exercise all the powers which any law of this State vests in
the Chancellor, besides the general powers of the Court of Chancery, and the
President Judge of the Superior Court and of the Orphans' Court and the
Associate Judges of said Courts shall each singly exercise all the powers which
any law of this State vests in the Judges singly of the former Superior Court,
whether as members of the Court or otherwise.
§19. Instructions to jury.
Section 19. Judges shall not charge juries with
respect to matters of fact, but may state the questions of fact in issue and
declare the law.
§20. Trial by court of issues of fact in
civil causes.
Section 20. In civil causes where matters of fact are
at issue, if the parties agree, such matters of fact shall be tried by the
court, and judgement rendered upon their decision thereon as upon a verdict by a
jury.
§21. Amendments in civil pleadings and
proceedings by Superior Court; examination of witnesses and
parties.
Section 21. In civil causes, when pending, the
Superior Court shall have the power, before judgement, of directing, upon such
terms as it shall deem reasonable, amendments in pleadings and legal
proceedings, so that by error in any of them, the determination of causes,
according to their real merits, shall not be hindered; and also of directing the
examination of witnesses and parties litigant.
§22. Payment into court pending action for
debt or damages; costs.
Section 22. At any time pending an action for debt or
damages, the defendant may bring into court a sum of money for discharging the
same, together with the costs then accrued and the plaintiff not accepting the
same, if upon the final decision of the cause, he shall not recover a greater
sum than that so paid into court for him, he shall not recover any costs
accruing after such payment, except where the plaintiff is an executor or
administrator.
§23. Survival of action; executor or
administrator as party; continuance.
Section 23. By the death of any party, no suit in
chancery or at law, where the cause of action survives, shall abate, but, until
the General Assembly shall otherwise provide, suggestion of such death being
entered of record, the executor or administrator of a deceased petitioner or
plaintiff may prosecute the said suit; and if a respondent or defendant dies,
the executor or administrator being duly serviced with a scire facias thirty
(30) days before the return thereof shall be considered as a party to the suit,
in the same manner as if he had voluntarily made himself a party; and in any of
those cases, the court shall pass a decree, or render judgment for or against
executors or administrators as to right appertains. But where an executor or
administrator of a deceased respondent or defendant becomes a party, the court
upon motion shall grant such a continuance of the cause as to the judges shall
appear proper.
§24. Security for stay of proceedings on
appeal or writ of error.
Section 24. Whenever a person, not being an executor
or administrator, appeals or applies to the Supreme Court for a writ of error,
such appeal or writ shall be no stay of proceedings in the court below unless
the appellant or plaintiff in error shall give sufficient security to be
approved by the court below or by a Judge of the Supreme Court that the
appellant or plaintiff in error shall prosecute respectively his appeal or writ
to effect, and pay the condemnation money and all costs, or otherwise abide the
decree in appeal or the judgment in error, if he fails to make his plea
good.
§25. Time for writ of error on confession of judgement; exceptions.
Repealed, 51, Del. Laws, c. 78.
§26. Prothonotary as Clerk of Superior
Court; powers and duties; entry of testatum fieri facias.
Section 26. The Prothonotary of each county shall be
the Clerk of the Superior Court in and for the county in which he holds office.
He may issue process, take recognizance of bail and enter judgements, according
to law and the practice of the Court. No judgement in one county shall bind
lands or tenements in another until a testatum fieri facias being issued shall
be entered of record in the office of the Prothonotary of the County wherein the
lands or tenements are situated. Such Prothonotary shall perform all duties
heretofore performed by the Clerk of the Peace as Clerk of the former Court of
General Sessions and the former Court of Oyer and Terminer.
§27. Clerk of Supreme Court; term of office
and compensation.
Section 27. The Supreme Court shall have the power to
appoint a Clerk to hold office at the pleasure of the said Court. He shall
receive from the State for his services a compensation which shall be fixed from
time to time by the said Court and paid monthly.
§28. Criminal jurisdiction of interior
courts and justices of the peace; regulation of jurisdiction; indictment; jury
trial; appeals.
Section 28. The General Assembly may by law give to
any inferior courts by it established or to be established, or to one or more
Justices of the Peace, jurisdiction of the criminal matters following, that is
to say--assaults and batteries, carrying concealed a deadly weapon disturbing
meetings held for the purpose of religious worship, nuisances, and such other
misdemeanors as the General Assembly may from time to time, with the concurrence
of two-thirds of all the members elected to each House,
prescribe.
The General Assembly may by law regulate this
jurisdiction, and provide that the proceedings shall be with or without
indictment by grand jury, or trial by petit jury, and may grant or deny the
privilege of appeal to the Superior Court; provided, however, that there shall
be an appeal to this Superior Court in all cases in which the sentence shall be
imprisonment exceeding one (1) month, or a fine exceeding One Hundred Dollars
($100.00).
§29. Justices of the peace; term of
office.
Section 29. There shall be appointed, as hereinafter
provided, such number of persons to the office of Justice of the Peace as shall
be directed by law, who shall be commissioned for four (4)
years.
§30. Justices of the Peace and Judges of
Legislative Courts; appointment by Governor; terms of
office.
Section 30. Justices of the Peace and the Judges of
such Courts as the General Assembly may establish, or shall have established
prior to the time this amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes
effective, pursuant to the provisions of Section 1 or Section 28 of this
Article, shall be appointed by the Governor, by and with the consent of a
majority of all the members elected to the Senate, for such terms as shall be
fixed by this Constitution or by law.
§31. Registers of Wills; depositions of
witnesses; process; appeals to Orphans' Court; disqualification of Register for
interest.
Section 31. The Registers of Wills of the several
counties shall respectively hold the Register's Court in each county. Upon the
litigation of a cause the depositions of the witnesses examined shall be taken
at large in writing and made part of the proceedings in the cause. This court
may issue process throughout the State. Appeals may be taken from a Register's
Court to the Orphans' Court. In cases where a Register of Wills is interested in
questions concerning the probate of wills, the granting of letters of
administration, or executors' or administrators' accounts, the cognizance
thereof shall belong to the Orphans' Court.
§32. Adjustment and settlement of
executors' and administrators' accounts; notice; hearing of exceptions in
Orphans' Court; transfer of jurisdiction; appeals.
Section 32. An executor or administrator shall file every account with the Register of Wills for the County, who shall, as soon as conveniently may be, carefully examine the particulars with the proofs thereof, in the presence of such executor or administrator, and shall adjust and settle the same according to the right of the matter and the law of the land; which account so settled shall remain in his office for inspection; and the executor, or administrator, shall within three (3) months after such settlement give notice in writing to all persons entitled to shares of the estate, or to their guardians, respectively, if residing within the State, that the account is lodged in the said office for inspection.
Exceptions may be made by persons concerned to both sides of every such account, either denying the justice of the allowances made to the accountant or alleging further charges against him; and the exceptions shall be heard in the Orphans' Court for the county; and thereupon the account shall be adjusted and settled according to the right of the matter and the law of the land.
The General Assembly shall have the power to transfer
to the Orphans' Court all or part of the jurisdiction by this Constitution
vested in the Register of Wills and to vest in the Orphans' Court all or a part
of such jurisdiction and to provide for appeals from that Court exercising such
jurisdiction.
§33. Style of process and public acts;
prosecutions in name of State.
Section 33. The style in all process and public acts
shall be THE STATE OF DELAWARE. Prosections shall be carried on in the name of
the State.
§34. Continuation in office and designation
of certain judicial officers.
Section 34. The Chancellor, Chief Justice and
Associate Judges in office at and immediately before the time this amended
Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective shall hold their respective
offices until the expiration of their terms respectively and shall receive the
compensation provided by law. They shall, however, be hereafter designated as
follows:
The Chancellor shall continue to be designated as Chancellor;
The Chief Justice shall hereafter be designated as President Judge of the Superior Court and of the Orphans' Court;
The Associate Judges shall hereafter be designated as
Associate Judges of the Superior Court and of the Orphans'
Court.
The Vice-Chancellor in office at and immediately
before the time this amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective
shall hold his office until the expiration of the period of twelve years from
the date of the commission for the office of Vice-Chancellor held by him at the
time this amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective and shall
receive the compensation provided by law. He shall continue to be designated as
Vice-Chancellor.
§35. Proceedings pending at time of 1951
amendment; books, records and papers; effect of amended article on Court of
Chancery.
Section 35. All writs of error and appeals and proceedings pending, at the time this amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective, in the Supreme Court as heretofore constituted shall be proceeded within the Supreme Court hereby established, and all the books, records and papers of the said Supreme Court as heretofore constituted shall be the books, records and papers of the Supreme Court hereby established.
All suits, proceedings and matters pending, at the time this amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective, in the Superior Court as heretofore constituted shall be proceeded within the Superior Court hereby established and all the books, records and papers of the said Superior Court as heretofore constituted shall be the books, records and papers of the Superior Court hereby established.
All indictments, proceedings and matters of a criminal nature pending in the former Court of General Sessions and in the former Court of Oyer and Terminer, at the time this amended Article IV of this Constitution becomes effective, and all books, records and papers of said former Court of General Sessions and former Court of Oyer and Terminer shall be transferred to the Superior Court hereby established, and the said indictments, proceedings and matters pending shall be proceeded with to final judgment and determination in the said Superior Court hereby established.
The Court of Chancery is not affected by this amended
Article IV of this Constitution otherwise than by the provisions with respect to
a Vice-Chancellor or Vice-Chancellors.
§36. Abolition of Orphans' Court; transfer
of jurisdiction and powers.
Section 36. The General Assembly shall have power to
transfer to such court or courts as it deems appropriate all or any part of the
jurisdiction, powers and junctions of the Orphans' Court and all or any part of
the matters pending before the Orphans' Court, and to abolish the Orphans'
Court. (July 1, 1970.)
§37. Court on the Judiciary.
Section 37. A Court on the Judiciary is hereby created consisting of the Chief Justice and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, the Chancellor, and the President Judge of the Superior Court.
Any judicial officer appointed by the Governor may be
censured or removed or retired by the Court on the Judiciary as herein
provided.
A judicial officer may be censured or removed by virtue of this section for willful misconduct in office, willful and persistent failure to perform his duties, the commission after appointment of an offense involving moral turpitude, or other persistent misconduct in violation of the Canons of Judicial Ethics as adopted by the Delaware Supreme Court from time to time.
A judicial officer may be retired by virtue of this section for permanent mental or physical disability interfering with the proper performance of the duties of his office.
No judicial officer shall be censured or removed or retired under this section unless he has been served with a written statement of the charges against him, or of the grounds of his retirement, and shall have had an opportunity to be heard in accordance with due process of law. The affirmative concurrence of not less than two-thirds of the members of the Court on the Judiciary shall be necessary for the censure or removal or retirement of a judicial officer. The Court on the Judiciary shall be convened for appropriate action upon the order of the Chief Justice, or upon the order of any other three members of the court on the Judiciary. All hearings and other proceedings of the Court on the Judiciary shall be private, and all records except a final order of removal or retirement shall be confidential, unless the judicial officer involved shall otherwise request.
Upon an order of removal, the judicial officer shall thereby be removed from office, all of his authority, rights and privileges as a judicial officer shall cease from the date of the order, and a vacancy shall be deemed to exist as of that date. Upon an order of retirement, the judicial officer shall thereby be retired with such rights and privileges as may be provided by law for the disability retirement of a judicial officer, and a vacancy shall be deemed to exist as of the date of retirement.
In the absence or disqualification of a member of the
Court on the Judiciary, the Chief Justice, or in his absence or disqualification
the Senior Associate Justice, shall appoint a substitute member pro
tempore.
The Court on the Judiciary shall have:
(a) the power to summon witnesses to appear and testify under oath and to compel the production of books, papers and documents, and
(b) the power to adopt rules establishing procedures
for the investigation and trial of a judicial officer hereunder.
§38. Retired Judges and Justices; Temporary
Assignment.
Section 38. A former State Judge or a former Justice
of the Supreme Court, who is retired and is receiving a state judicial pension
and who assents to active judicial duty and who is not engaged in the practice
of law, upon designation of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, or in case
of his absence from the State, disqualification, incapacity, or if there be a
vacancy in that office, upon designation of the next qualified and available
Justice, who by seniority is next in rank to the Chief Justice, shall be
authorized to sit temporarily in the court from which he retired or in any other
court to which he could be designated under the Constitution and statutes of the
State if he still held the judicial position from which he retired. Any person
so designated shall receive compensation as the General Assembly shall provide.
Nothing herein shall authorize the designation of any former State Judge or a
former Justice of the Supreme Court to sit in the Supreme Court except
temporarily to fill up the number of that Court to the required quorum. The term
"State Judge" as used in this section means a Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor of
the Chancery Court or a President Judge or Associate Judge of the Superior
Court. (1/13/94)
§1. Time and manner of holding general
election.
Section 1. The general election shall be held
biennially on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in the month of November,
and shall be by ballot; but the General Assembly may by law prescribe the means,
methods and instruments of voting so as best to secure secrecy and the
independence of the voter, preserve the freedom and purity of elections and
prevent fraud, corruption and intimidation thereat.
§2. Qualifications for voting; members of
the Armed Services of the United States stationed within State; persons
disqualified; forfeiture of right.
Section 2. Every citizen of this State of the Age of
twenty-one years who shall have been a resident thereof one year next preceding
an election, and for the last three months a resident of the county, and for the
last thirty days a resident of the hundred or election district in which he may
offer to vote, and in which he shall have been duly registered as hereinafter
provided for, shall be entitled to vote at such election in the hundred or
election district of which he shall at the time be a resident, and in which he
shall be registered, for all officers that now are or hereafter may be elected
by the people and upon all questions which may be submitted to the vote of the
people; provided, however, that no person who shall attain the age of twenty-one
years after the first day of January in the year of our Lord, Nineteen Hundred,
or after that date shall become a citizen of the United States, shall have the
right to vote unless he shall be able to read this Constitution in the English
language and write his name; but these requirements shall not apply to any
person who by reason of physical disability shall be unable to comply therewith;
and provided also, that no person in the military, naval, or marine service of
the United States shall be considered as acquiring a residence in this State, by
being stationed in any garrison, barrack, or military or naval place or station
within this State; and no idiot or insane person, pauper, or person convicted of
a crime deemed by law a felony, or incapacitated under the provisions of this
Constitution from voting, shall enjoy the right of an elector; and the General
Assembly may impose the forfeiture of the right of suffrage as a punishment for
crime.
§2A. Residence requirements in case of
intrastate removal; election of President and Vice-President of the United
States; qualifications.
Section 2A. The General Assembly shall extend to any
elector in the State who shall have changed his residence from one county,
hundred, or election district to another, but who has not resided therein for a
sufficient time so as to be eligible to vote in the county, hundred or election
district to which he has removed, the right to vote for the choice of electors
for President and Vice-President of the United States in any other place and
provided further that such citizen would be an otherwise qualified voter under
this Constitution except that he has not resided in his county, hundred or
election district for a sufficient length of time.
§2B. Residence requirements of persons from
other states; election of President and Vice-President of United States;
qualifications.
Section 2B. The General Assembly shall extend to a
citizen of the United States who has resided in this State for at least three
months next preceding an election but who does not meet the residence
requirements established in Article V, Section 2 of this Constitution, the right
to vote for the choice of electors for President and Vice-President of the
United States, but for no other offices, provided such citizen was either a
qualified voter in another state immediately prior to his removal to this State,
or would have been eligible to vote in such other state had he remained there
until such election, and provided that he is not entitled to vote for the choice
of electors for President or Vice-President of the United States in any other
state and provided further that such citizen would be an otherwise qualified
voter under this Constitution except that he had not resided in this State for
one year.
§3. Influencing voter; loss of vote;
challenge; oath and affirmation; perjury.
Section 3. No person who shall receive or accept, or offer to receive or accept, or shall pay, transfer, or deliver, or offer or promise to pay, transfer or deliver, or shall contribute, or offer or promise to contribute to another, to be paid or used, any money or other valuable thing as a compensation, inducement or reward for the registering or abstaining from registering of any one qualified to register, or for the giving or withholding, or in any manner influencing the giving or withholding, a vote at any general or special or muncipal election in this State, shall vote at such election; and upon challenge for any of said causes the person so challenged before the officers authorized for that purpose shall receive his vote, shall swear or affirm before such officers that he has not received or accepted, or offered to receive or accept, or paid, transferred or delivered, or offered or promised to pay, transfer or deliver, or contributed, or offered or promised to contribute to another, to be paid or used, any money or other valuable thing as a compensation, inducement or reward for the registering or abstaining from registering of any one qualified to register, or for the giving or withholding, or in any manner influencing the giving or withholding, a vote at such election.
Such oath or affirmation shall be conclusive evidence
to the election officers of the truth of such oath or affirmation; but if any
such oath or affirmation shall be false, the person making the same shall be
guilty of perjury, and no conviction thereof shall bar any prosecution under
Section 8 of this Article.
§4. Registration of voters; days for
registration; application to strike name from list; appeals; registration as
prerequisite for voting.
Section 4. The General Assembly shall enact uniform laws for the registration of voters in this State entitled to vote under this Article, which registration shall be conclusive evidence to the election officers of the right of every person so registered to vote at any General Election while his or her name shall remain on the list of registered voters, and who is not at the time disqualified under the provisions of Section 3 of this Article; and no person shall vote at such General Election whose name does not at that time appear in said list of registered voters.
There shall be at least two registration days in a period commencing not more than one hundred and twenty days, nor less than sixty days before, and ending not more than twenty days, nor less than ten days before, each General Election, on which registration days persons whose names are not on the list of registered voters established by law for such election, may apply for registration, and on which registration days applications may be made to strike from the said registration lists names of persons on said list who are not eligible to vote at such election; provided, however, that such registration may be corrected as hereinafter provided at any time prior to the day of holding the election.
From the decision of the registration officers granting or refusing registration, or striking or refusing to strike a name or names from the registration list, any person interested, or any registration officer, may appeal to the resident Associate Judge of the County, or in case of his disability or absence from the County, to any Judge entitled to sit in the Supreme Court, whose determination shall be final; and he shall have power to order any name improperly omitted from the said registry to be placed thereon, and any name improperly appearing on the said registry to be stricken therefrom, and any name improperly appearing on the said registry, in any manner incorrect, to be corrected, and to make and enforce all necessary orders in the premises for the correction of the said registry. Registration shall be a prerequisite for voting only at general elections, at which Representatives to the General Assembly shall be chosen, unless the General Assembly shall otherwise provide by law.
The existing laws in reference to the registration of
voters, so far as consistent with the provision to this Article, shall continue
in force until the General Assembly shall otherwise provide.
§4A. General laws for absentee
voting.
Section 4A. The General Assembly shall enact general
laws providing that any qualified elector of this State, duly registered, who
shall be unable to appear to cast his or her ballot at any general election at
the regular polling place of the Election District in which he or she is
registered, either because of being in the public service of the United States
or of this State, or his or her spouse or dependents when residing with or
accompanying him or her, because of the nature of his or her business or
occupation, because of his or her sickness or physical disability, because of
his or her absence from the district while on vacation, or because of the tenets
or teachings of his or her religion, may cast a ballot at such general election
to be counted in such election district.
§4B. Uniform laws for absentee
registration.
Section 4B. The General Assembly shall enact uniform
laws for the registration of voters of this State entitled to vote under this
Article who are temporarily absent therefrom and in the Armed Forces or Merchant
Marine of the United States, or retainers or his or her spouse or dependents
when residing with or accompanying him or her, or who are absent from the State
because of illness or injury received while serving in any such capacity, upon
application in person or in writing.
§5. Electors privileged from arrest;
exceptions.
Section 5. Electors shall in all cases, except
treason, felony, or breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest, during their
attendance at elections, and in going to and returning from
them.
§6. Certificate of election and ballots;
delivery to Prothonotary; duties and composition of court;
quorum.
Section 6. The presiding election officer of each hundred or election district, on the day next after the general election, shall deliver one of the certificates of the election, made and certified as required by law, together with the ballot box or ballot boxes, containing the ballots, and other papers required by law to be placed therein, to the Prothonotary of the Superior Court of the county, who shall at twelve o'clock noon on the second day after the election present the same to the said Court, and the election officer or officers having charge of any other certificate or certificates of the election shall at the same time present the same to the said Court, and the said Court shall at the same time convene for the performance of the duties hereby imposed upon it; and thereupon the said Court, with the aid of such of its officers and such sworn assistance as it shall appoint, shall publicly ascertain the state of the election throughout the county, by calculating the aggregate amount of all the votes for each office that shall be given in all the hundreds and election districts of the county for every person voted for such office.
In case the certificates of election of any Hundred or Election District shall not be produced, or in case the certificates produced do not agree, or in case of complaint under oath of fraud or mistake in any such certificate, or in case fraud or mistake is apparent on the face of any such certificate, the Court shall have power to issue summary process against the election officers or any other persons to bring them forthwith into Court with the election papers in their possession or control, and to open the ballot boxes and take therefrom any paper contained therein, and to make a recount of the ballots contained therein, and to correct any fraud or mistake in any certificate or paper relating to such election.
The said Court shall have all the other jurisdiction and powers now vested by law in the boards of canvass, and such other powers as shall be provided by law.
After the state of the election shall have been ascertained as aforesaid, the said Court shall make certificates thereof, under the seal of said Court in the form required by law, and transmit, deliver and lodge the same as required by this Constitution or by law, and deliver the ballot boxes to the sheriff of the county, to be by him kept and delivered as required by law.
No act or determination of the Court in the discharge of the duties imposed upon it by this Section shall be conclusive in the trial of any contested election.
For the purposes of this Section the Superior Court shall consist in New Castle County of the President Judge and resident Associate Judge; in Kent County of the resident Associate Judge and an Associate Judge designated by the President Judge; and in Sussex County of the resident Associate Judge and an Associate Judge designated by the President Judge. (6/28/91)
Two shall constitute a quorum. The Governor shall have
power to commission a Judge for the purpose of constituting a quorum when by
reason of legal exception to any Judge, or for any other cause, a quorum could
not otherwise be had.
§7. Election offenses; penalties;
self-incrimination.
Section 7. Every person who either in or out of the
State shall receive or accept, or offer to receive or accept, or shall pay,
transfer or deliver, or offer or promise to pay, transfer or deliver, or shall
contribute, or offer or promise to contribute, to another to be paid or used,
any money or other valuable thing as a compensation, inducement or reward for
the giving or withholding, or in any manner influencing the giving or
withholding, a vote at any general, special municipal election in this State, or
at any primary election, convention or meeting held for the purpose of
nominating any candidate or candidates to be voted for at such general, special
or municipal election; or who either in or out of the State shall make or become
directly or indirectly a party to any bet or wager depending upon the result of
any such general, special, municipal, or primary election or convention or
meeting, or upon a vote thereat by any person; or who either in or out of the
State shall, by the use or promise of money or other valuable thing, or
otherwise, cause or attempt to cause any officer of election or registration
officer to violate his official duty; or who either in or out of the State shall
by the use or promise of money or other valuable thing influence or attempt to
influence any person to be registered or abstain from being registered; or who
being an officer of election or registration officer, shall knowingly and
willfully violate his official duty; or who shall by force, threat, menace or
intimidation, prevent or hinder, or attempt to prevent or hinder, any person
qualified for registration from being registered or any person qualified to vote
from voting according to his choice at any such general, special or municipal
election, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be fined not less
than One Hundred Dollars nor more than Five Thousand Dollars, or shall be
imprisoned for a term not less than one month nor more than three years, or
shall suffer both fine and imprisonment within said limits, at the discretion of
the court; and, if a male, shall further for a term of ten years next following
his sentence, be incapable of voting at any such general, special, municipal or
primary election or convention or meeting; but the penalty of disfranchisement
shall not apply to any person making or being a party to any bet or wager,
depending upon the result of any such general, special, municipal or primary
election or convention or meeting. Every person charged with the commission
while out of the State of any of the offenses enumerated in this section, and by
this section made punishable, whether committed in or out of the State, may be
prosecuted under Section 8 of this Article in any County in which he shall be
arrested on such charge. No person, other than the accused, shall, in the
prosecution for any offense mentioned in this section, be permitted to withhold
his testimony on the ground that it may criminate himself or subject him to
public infamy; but such testimony shall not afterwards be used against him in
any judicial proceeding, except for perjury in giving such
testimony.
§8. Prosecution for election offenses;
procedure; appeal; bond.
Section 8. Every prosecution for any of the offenses
mentioned in Section 7 of this Article shall be on information filed by the
Attorney General, after examination and commitment or holding to bail by a judge
or Justice of the Peace, and the cause shall be heard, tried and determined by
the court without the intervention of either a grand jury or petit jury. The
accused if adjudged guilty of the offense charged against him, shall have the
right at any time within the space of three calendar months next after sentence
is pronounced to an appeal to the Supreme Court. The court below, or any judge
thereof, in term time or vacation shall upon application by the accused allow
such appeal; but such appeal shall not operate as a supersedeas unless the
appellant shall at the time of the allowance thereof give an appeal bond to the
State of Delaware in such amount and with such surety as shall be approved by
such court or judge. On such appeal the Supreme Court shall, with all convenient
speed, review the evidence adduced in the cause in the court below, as well as
the other proceedings therein, and the law applicable thereto, and give final
judgment accordingly, either affirming or reversing the judgment below. If the
appellant shall fail to prosecute his appeal pursuant to the rules and practice
hereinafter provided for, the Supreme Court shall affirm the judgment of the
court below. Where the sentence in the court below includes a term of
imprisonment and an appeal bonds is given and approved in manner aforesaid, the
Supreme Court, if it affirm the judgment below, shall sentence the appellant to
a term of imprisonment equal to that imposed by the court below, after deducting
therefrom a period equal to the time of imprisonment, if any, already suffered
by him under the sentence of the court below. The surety or sureties in any
appeal bond given under the provisions of this section shall have the right at
any time after its approval and until final judgment shall be rendered by the
Supreme Court, and, in case the judgment of the court below shall be affirmed,
until the expiration of the space of thirty days next following such affirmance,
to take, wherever found, and render the appellant to the sheriff of the County
in which he was sentenced; and a certified copy of the appeal bond shall be the
sufficient warrant for such surety or sureties for such taking and rendering. If
the Supreme court shall reverse any judgment of the court below imposing a fine,
and if the accused shall have fully paid such fine and the costs of prosecution,
the amount thereof shall be refunded to the appellant through a warrant drawn by
the court below on the treasurer of the County in which the accused was
sentenced. All the judges entitled to sit in the Supreme Court shall, as soon as
conveniently may be, meet at the usual place of sitting of said court, and they,
or a majority of them, shall adopt rules prescribing the forms and conditions of
appeal bonds to be used under the provisions of this section, and the manner of
certifying copies thereof, providing for the printing or reduction to writing of
all oral evidence in the cause in the court below and of the opinion of said
court, for the certification of the same when so printed or reduced to writing,
and of copies thereof; for the copying and certification of all documentary or
other written or printed evidence in the cause in the court below and of the
record therein; for the transmission to the Supreme Court of such certified
copies of such record, and of all the evidence adduced in the court below and of
the opinion of said court for the transmission to the court below of a certified
copy of the final judgment of the Supreme Court and of any additional sentence
pronounced by said court, for the discharge of securities in appeal bonds, and
for the framing, issuance, service and enforcement of all process and rules
necessary to give full effect to the provisions of this section; and regulating
generally the practice and procedure of the Supreme Court and the court below in
cases of appeal under this section. The said judges, or a majority of them, met
as aforesaid, may also provide that when complaint shall be made in due form,
prescribed by them, to any judge entitled to sit in the Supreme Court, that any
offense mentioned in Section 7 of this Article has been committed in the County
in which such judge shall reside, or out of the State, such judge shall have
power to cause the person charged with such offense to be arrested within any
county of this State and brought before him, and to bind him with sufficient
surety, or, for want of bail, commit him for his appearance and answer at the
next term of the Court of General Sessions in such manner and under and pursuant
to such rules and regulations as the said judges, or a majority of them, shall
prescribe. From time to time hereafter, whenever a majority of all the judges
entitled to sit in the Supreme Court shall so request, all of the judges so
entitled shall, as soon as conveniently may be, meet at the usual place of
sitting of said court; and they, or a majority of them, shall have power to
revise, amend add to or annul, any rule or rules theretofore adopted touching
forms, practice or procedure in cases of appeal under this section, or arrest
and binding or commitment for appearance and answer, in such manner and to such
extent as in their judgment shall best serve to effectuate the purposes hereof.
No person shall be adjudged guilty of an offense mentioned in Section 7 of this
Article without the concurrence of all the judges trying the case; and upon
appeal no judgment of the court below shall be affirmed without the concurrence
of all of the judges of the Supreme Court sitting in the case, and their failure
to concur as aforesaid shall operate as a reversal of the judgment of the court
below; provided, however, that such concurrence of the judges sitting in the
Supreme Court shall not be necessary for the affirmance of the judgment of the
court below where the appellant shall fail to prosecute his appeal pursuant to
the rules and practices herein provided for.
§9. Enumeration of election offenses as
limitation on power of General Assembly.
Section 9. The enumeration of the offenses mentioned
in Section 7 of this Article shall not preclude the General Assembly from
defining and providing for the punishment of other offenses against the freedom
and purity of the ballot, or touching the conduct, returns or ascertainment of
the result of general, special or municipal elections, or of primary elections,
conventions or meetings held for the nomination of candidates to be voted for at
general, special or municipal elections. No prosecution under any act of the
General Assembly passed pursuant to this section shall be subject to the
provisions of Section 8 of this Article.
§1. Impeachment power of House; trial by
Senate; oath of Senators; vote; presiding Officers.
Section 1. The House of Representatives shall have the
sole power of impeaching; but two-thirds of all the members must concur in an
impeachment. All impeachments shall be tried by the Senate, and when sitting for
that purpose, the Senators shall be upon oath or affirmation to do justice
according to the evidence. No person shall be convicted without the concurrence
of two-thirds of all the Senators.
On the trial of an impeachment against the Governor or
Lieutenant Governor, the Chief Justice, or, in case of his absence or
disability, the Chancellor shall preside; and on the trial of all other
impeachments the President of the Senate shall preside.
§2.Grounds for impeachment.
Section 2. The Governor and all other civil officers
under this State shall be liable to impeachment for treason, bribery, or any
high crime or misdemeanor in office. Judgment in such cases shall not extend
further than to removal from office, and disqualification to hold any office of
honor, trust or profit, under this State; but the party convicted shall,
nevertheless, be subject to indictment, trial, judgement and punishment
according to law.
§3.Treason.
Section 3. Treason against this State shall consist
only in levying war against it, or in adhering to the enemies of the Government,
giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason unless on
the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act or on confession in open
court.
§1. Power of Governor; recommendation of
Board of Pardons; entry in register and submission to General
Assembly.
Section 1. The Governor shall have power to remit fines and forfeitures and to grant reprieves, commutations of sentence and pardons, except in cases of impeachment; but no pardon, or reprieve for more than six months, shall be granted, nor sentence commuted, except upon the recommendation in writing of a majority of the Board of Pardons after full hearing; and such recommendation, with the reasons therefore at length, shall be filed and recorded in the office of the Secretary of State, who shall forthwith notify the Governor thereof.
He shall fully set forth in writing the grounds of all
reprieves, pardons and remissions, to be entered in the register of his official
acts and laid before the General Assembly at its next session.
§2. Composition of Board of
Pardons.
Section 2. The Board of Pardons shall be composed of
the Chancellor, Lieutenant-Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer and
Auditor of Accounts.
§3. Information from Attorney General on
Board's duties.
Section 3. The said board may require information from
the Attorney General upon any subject relating to the duties of said
board.
§1. Uniformity of taxes; assessment and
taxation of land devoted to agriculture and forest use; collection under general
laws; exemption for public welfare purposes.
Section 1. All taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, except as otherwise permitted herein, and shall be levied and collected under general laws passed by the General Assembly. County Councils of New Castle and Sussex counties and the Levy Court of Kent County are hereby authorized to exempt from county taxation such property in their respective counties as in their opinion will best promote the public welfare. The county property tax exemption power created by this section shall be exclusive as to such property as is located within the respective counties with respect to real property located within the boundaries of any incorporated municipality; the authority to exempt such property from municipal property tax shall be exercised by the respective incorporated municipality; then in the opinion of the said municipality it will best promote the public welfare.
The legislature shall enact laws to provide that the value of land which is determined by the assessing officer of the taxing jurisdiction to be actively devoted to agriculture use and to have been so devoted for at least the two successive years immediately preceding the tax year in issue, shall, for local tax purposes, on application of the owner, be that value which such land has for agricultural use.
Any such laws shall provide that when land which has been valued in this manner for local tax purposes is applied to a use other than for agriculture, it shall be subject to additional taxes in an amount equal to the difference, if any, between the taxes paid or payable on the basis of the valuation and the assessment authorized hereunder and the taxes that would have been paid or payable had the land been valued and assessed as otherwise provided in this Constitution, in the current year and in such of the tax years immediately preceding, not less than two such years in which the land was valued as herein authorized.
Such laws shall also provide for the assessment and
collection of any additional taxes levied thereupon and shall include such other
provisions as shall be necessary to carry out the provisions of this
amendment.
§2. Revenue bills to originate in House;
amendments by Senate; restriction on definition; exclusion of unrelated
matter.
Section 2. All bills for raising revenue shall
originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose
alterations as on other bills; and no bill from the operation of which, when
passed into laws, revenue may incidentally arise shall be accounted a bill
raising revenue; nor shall any matter or cause whatever not immediately relating
to and necessary for raising revenue be in any matter blended with or annexed to
a bill for raising revenue.
§3. Borrowing money; specification of
purpose; surplus borrowed money.
Section 3. No money shall be borrowed or debt created
by or on behalf of the State but pursuant to an Act of the General Assembly,
passed with the concurrence of three-fourths of all members elected to each
house, except to supply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel invasion, suppress
insurrection, defend the State in war, or pay existing debts; and any law
authorizing the borrowing of money by or on behalf of the State shall specify
the purpose for which the money by or on behalf of the State shall specify the
purpose for which the money is to be borrowed, and the money so borrowed shall
be used exclusively for such purpose; but should the money so borrowed or any
part thereof be left after the abandonment of such purpose or the accomplishment
thereof, such money, or the surplus thereof, may be disposed of according to
law.
§4. Restrictions on loan of public money or
bonds and credit of State.
Section 4. No appropriation of the public money shall
be made to, nor the bonds of this State be issued or loaned to any county,
municipality or corporation, nor shall the credit of the State, by the guarantee
or the endorsement of the bonds or other undertakings of any county,
municipality or corporation, be pledged otherwise than pursuant to an Act of the
General Assembly, passed with the concurrence of three-fourths of all the
members elected to each house.
§5. Capitation tax; uniformity;
use.
Section 5. The General Assembly shall provide for
levying and collecting a capitation tax from every citizen of the State of the
age of twenty-one years or upwards; but such tax to be collected in any County
shall be uniform throughout that County, and such capitation tax shall be used
exclusively in the County in which it is collected.
§6. Procedure in withdrawal and payment of
public moneys; annual publication of receipts and
expenditures.
Section 6. (a) No money shall be drawn from the
treasury but pursuant to an appropriation made by Act of the General Assembly;
provided, however, that the compensation of the members of the General Assembly
and all expenses connected with the session thereof may be paid out of the
treasury pursuant to resolution in that behalf; a regular account of the
receipts and expenditures of all public money shall be published
annually.
(b) No appropriation, supplemental appropriation, or
Budget Act shall cause the aggregate State general fund appropriations enacted
for any given fiscal year to exceed 98 percent of the estimated State general
fund revenue for such fiscal year from all sources, including estimated
unencumbered funds remaining at the end of the previous fiscal year. An Act
approved pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 of this Article shall not be
considered an appropriation for the purpose of this Section. Estimated
unencumbered funds are calculated by taking the estimated general fund cash
balance at the end of the fiscal year less estimated revenue anticipation bonds
or notes, estimated encumbrances, estimated continuing appropriations and the
amount of the Budget Reserve Account as established in subsection (d) of this
Section at the end of said fiscal year. The amount of said revenue estimate and
estimated unencumbered funds remaining shall be determined by the most recent
Joint Resolution approved from time to time by a majority of the members elected
to each House of the General Assembly and signed by the Governor.
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (b) of this Section,
any portion of the amount between 98 and 100 percent of the estimated State
general fund revenue for any fiscal year as estimated in accordance with
subsection (b) of this Section may be appropriated in any given fiscal year in
the event of emergencies involving the health, safety or welfare of the citizens
of the State of Delaware, such appropriations to be approved by three-fifths of
the members elected to each House of the General Assembly.
(d) There is hereby established a Budget Reserve
Account within the General Fund. Within forty-five (45) days after the end of
any fiscal year, the excess of any unencumbered funds remaining from the said
fiscal year shall be paid into the Budget Reserve Account, provided, however,
that no such payment will be made which would increase the total of the Budget
Reserve Account to more than five percent (5%) of only the estimated State
General Fund Revenues as set by the provisions of subsection (b) of this
Section. The excess of any unencumbered funds shall be determined by subtracting
from the actual unencumbered funds at the end of any fiscal year an amount which
together with the latest estimated revenues is necessary to fund the ensuing
fiscal year's General Fund Budget including the required estimated General fund
supplemental and automatic appropriations for said ensuing fiscal year less
estimated reversions. The General Assembly by a three-fifths vote of the members
elected to each House, may appropriate from the Budget Reserve Account such
additional sums as may be necessary to fund any unanticipated deficit in any
given fiscal year or to provide funds required as a result of any revenue
reduction enacted by the General Assembly. (Paragraphs (b), (c), (d) added in
1980).
§7. Real estate assessments; inclusion of
values.
Section 7. In all assessments of the value of real
estate for taxation, the value of the land and the value of the buildings and
improvements thereon shall be included. And in all assessments of the rental
value of real estate for taxation, the rental value of the land and the rental
value of the buildings and the improvements thereon shall be included. The
foregoing provisions of this section shall apply to all assessments of the value
of real estate or of the rental value thereof for the taxation for State,
county, hundred, school, municipal or other public purposes.
§8. Lending credit, appropriating money to
or becoming interested in any private corporation, person or company by county
or municipality.
Section 8. No county, city, town or other municipality
shall lend its credit or appropriate money to, or assume the debt of, or become
a shareholder or joint owner in or with any private corporation or any person or
company whatever.
§9. Retroactive increase of taxation of
personal income.
Any law which shall have the effect of increasing the
rates of taxation on personal income for any year or part thereof prior to the
date of the enactment thereof, of for any year or years prior to the year in
which the law is enacted, shall be void.
§10. Limitation on increase of rate of
taxes and license fees; exception to meet obligation under faith and credit
pledge; allocation of public moneys to meet such obligation if revenues are not
sufficient to meet such pledge.
(a) The effective rate of any tax levied or license
fee imposed by the State may not be increased except pursuant to an Act of the
General Assembly adopted with the concurrence of three-fifths of all members of
each House.
(b) Prior to the beginning of each fiscal year of the
State, the General Assembly shall appropriate revenues of the State to pay
interest on its debt to which it has pledged its faith and credit and which
interest is payable in the year for which such appropriation is made and to pay
the principal of such debt, payable in such year, whether at maturity or
otherwise. To the extent that insufficient revenues of the State are available
to pay principal of and interest on such debt when due and payable, the first
public moneys of the State thereafter received shall be set aside and applied to
the payment of the principal of and interest of such debt. To make up for such
insufficient revenues, the General Assembly may increase the rate of taxes and
fees without regard to the limitation of Paragraph (a) hereof after the failure
to pay when due the principal of and interest on such debt. (Section 10 added in
1980)
§11. Imposition or levy of new taxes or
license fee.
(a) No tax or license fee may be imposed or levied
except pursuant to an act of the General Assembly adopted with the concurrence
of three-fifths of all members of each House.
(b) Prior to the beginning of each fiscal year of the
State, the General Assembly shall appropriate revenues of the State to pay
interest on its debt to which it has pledged its faith and credit and which
interest is payable in the year for which such appropriation is made and to pay
the principal of such debt, payable in such year, whether at maturity or
otherwise. To the extent that insufficient revenues of the State are available
to pay principal of and interest on such debt when due and payable, the first
public moneys of the State thereafter received shall be set aside and applied to
the payment of the principal of and interest on such debt. To make up for such
insufficient revenues, the General Assembly may increase the rate of taxes and
fees without regard to the limitations of Paragraph (a) hereof after the failure
to pay when due the principal of and interest on such debt. (5-28-81)
§l. Creation, amendment, renewal or revival
by general law; exceptions; revocation or forfeitures of charters; requisites
for enactment of corporation laws.
Section l. No corporation shall hereafter be created,
amended, renewed or revived by special act, but only by or under general law,
nor shall any existing corporate charter be amended, renewed or revived by
special act, but only by or under general law; but the foregoing provisions
shall not apply to municipal corporations, banks or corporations for charitable,
penal, reformatory, or educational purposes, sustained in whole or in part by
the State. The General Assembly shall, by general law, provide for the
revocation or forfeiture of the charters of all corporations for the abuse,
misuse, or non-user of their corporate powers, privileges or franchises. Any
proceeding for such revocation or forfeiture, shall be taken by the Attorney
General, as may be provided by law. No general incorporation law, nor any
special act of incorporation, shall be enacted without the concurrence of
two-thirds of all the members elected to each House of the General
Assembly.
§2. Acceptance of Constitution by existing
corporations as prerequisite for amendment or renewal of
charter.
Section 2. No corporation in existence at the adoption
of this Constitution shall have its charter amended or renewed without first
filing, under the corporate seal of said corporation, and duly attested, in the
office of the Secretary of State, an acceptance of the provisions of this
Constitution.
§3. Issuance of stock.
Section 3. No corporation shall issue stock except for
money paid, labor done or personal property, or real estate or leases thereof
actually acquired by such corporation.
§4. Rights, privileges, immunities and
estates.
Section 4. The rights, privileges, immunities and
estates of religious societies and corporate bodies, except as herein otherwise
provided, shall remain as if the Constitution of this State had not been
altered.
§5. Designation, by foreign corporation, of
agent for service of process.
Section 5. No foreign corporation shall do any
business in this State through or by branch offices, agents or representatives
located in this State, without having an authorized agent or agents in the State
upon whom legal process may be served.
§6. Taxation of stock owned by persons or
corporations without the State.
Section 6. Shares of the capital stock of corporations
created under the laws of this State, when owned by persons or corporations
without this State, shall not be subject to taxation by any law now existing or
hereafter to be made.
§l. Establishment and maintenance of free
public schools, attendance.
Section l. The General Assembly shall provide for the
establishment and maintenance of a general and efficient system of free public
schools, and may require by law that every child, not physically or mentally
disabled, shall attend the public school, unless educated by other
means.
§2. Annual appropriations; apportionment;
use of funds; separation of schools; other expenses.
Section 2. In addition to the income of the
investments of the Public School Fund, the General Assembly shall make provision
for the annual payment of not less than one hundred thousand dollars for the
benefit of the free public schools which, with the income of the investments of
the Public School Fund, shall be equitably apportioned among the school
districts of the State as the General Assembly shall provide; and the money so
apportioned shall be used exclusively for the payment of teachers salaries and
for furnishing free text books; provided, however, that in such apportionment,
no distinction shall be made on account of race or color. All other expenses
connected with the maintenance of free public schools, and all expenses
connected with the erection or repair of free public school buildings shall be
defrayed in such manner as shall be provided by law. (70 Del. L. C.
277)
§3. Use of educational funds by religious
schools; exemption of school property from taxation.
Section 3. No portion of any fund now existing, or
which may hereafter be appropriated, or raised by tax, for educational purposes,
shall be appropriated to, or used by, or in aid of any sectarian, church or
denominational school; provided, that all real or personal property used for
school purposes, where the tuition is free, shall be exempt from taxation and
assessment for public purposes.
§4. Use of Public School
Fund.
Section 4. No part of the principal or income of the
Public School Fund, now or hereafter existing, shall be used for any other
purpose than the support of free public schools.
§5. Transportation of nonpublic school
students.
Section 5. The General Assembly, notwithstanding any
other provision of this Constitution, may provide by an Act of the General
Assembly, passed with the concurrence of a majority of all the members elected
to each House, for the transportation of students of nonpublic, nonprofit
Elementary and High Schools.
§6. Property Tax; use
Limitations.
Section 6. No property tax receipts received by a
public school district as a result of a property tax levied for a particular
purpose shall be used for any other purpose except upon the favorable vote of a
majority of the eligible voters in the district voting on the question. (Section
6 added l980).
§l. State Board of Agriculture.
Section l. There shall be a department established and
maintained, known as the State Board of Agriculture.
§2. Composition of Board; residence of
Commissioners; quorum.
Section 2. The said board shall be composed of three
Commissioners of Agriculture, one of whom shall reside in each county in the
State. Any two of them shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of
business.
§3. Appointment of Commissioners by
Governor; tenure; vacancies.
Section 3. The said Commissioners of Agriculture shall
be appointed by the Governor, by and with the consent of a majority of all the
members elected to the Senate, one for the term of one year, one for the term of
two years, and one for the term of three years; and thereafter all appointments
of Commissioners of Agriculture shall be made as aforesaid for the term of three
years, and they shall hold office until their successors are duly qualified;
provided, that any vacancy occurring in the office of Commissioner of
Agriculture before the expiration of a term shall be filled by appointment as
aforesaid for the remainder of the term; and provided further, that in case such
vacancy shall occur when the Senate is not in session, such vacancy may be
filled by the Governor without confirmation by the Senate until the end of the
next session of the Senate.
§4. Abatement and prevention of diseases of
fruit trees, plants, vegetables, cereals, and live stock.
Section 4. The said board shall have power to abate
and prevent, by such means as the General Assembly shall prescribe, all
contagious and infectious diseases of fruit trees, plants, vegetables, cereals,
horses, cattle and other farm animals.
§5. Plans for securing immigration of
industrious and useful settlers.
Section 5. The said Commissioners may devise such
plans for securing immigration to this State of industrious and useful settlers
as they may deem expedient, and such plans may be executed as prescribed by the
General Assembly.
§6. Compensation of Board
members.
Section 6. The General Assembly shall provide by law
for the compensation of the members of said board.
§7. Duration of Board.
Section 7. The Board of Agriculture hereby established
shall continue for eight years from the date of the qualification of the first
member thereof, after which it may be abolished by the General
Assembly.
§l. Submission of liquor question to district electors; election.
Section l. The General Assembly may from time to time
provide by law for the submission to the vote of the qualified electors of the
several districts of the State, or any of them, mentioned in Section 2 of this
Article, the question whether the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors
shall be licensed or prohibited within the limits thereof; and in every district
in which there is a majority against license, no person, firm or corporation
shall thereafter manufacture or sell spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, except
for medicinal or sacramental purposes, within said district, until at a
subsequent submission of such question a majority of votes shall be cast in said
district for license. Whenever a majority of all the members elected to each
House of the General Assembly by the qualified electors in any district named in
Section 2 of this Article shall request the submission of the question of
license or no license to a vote of the qualified electors in said district, the
General Assembly shall provide for the submission of such question to the
qualified electors in such district at the next general election thereafter.
§2. Designation of districts for purposes
of article.
Section 2. Under the provisions of this Article,
Sussex County shall comprise one district, Kent County one district, the City of
Wilmington, as its corporate limits now are or may hereafter be extended, one
district, and the remaining part of New Castle County one
district.
§3. Laws for enforcement, manufacture and
sale, and penalties.
Section 3. The General Assembly shall provide
necessary laws to carry out and enforce the provisions of this Article, enact
laws governing the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors under the
limitation of this Article, and provide such penalties as may be necessary to
enforce the same.
§l. Form of oath for members of General
Assembly and public officers.
Members of the General Assembly and all public
officers executive and judicial, except such inferior officers as shall be by
law exempted, shall, before they enter upon the duties of their respected
offices, take and subscribe the following oath or affirmation:
"I, ____(name),______________.do proudly swear
( or affirm) to carry out the responsibilities of the office of __(name of
office)_____________ to the best of my ability, freely acknowledging that
the powers of this office flow from the people I am privileged to represent. I
further swear (or affirm) always to place the public interest above any special
or personal interests, and to respect the right of future generations to share
the rich historic and natural heritage of Delaware. In doing so I will always
uphold and defend the Constitutions of my Country and my State, so help me
God."
No other oath, declaration or test shall be required
as a qualification for any office of public trust.
§l. Conservators of the
peace.
Section l. The Chancellor, Judges and Attorney General
shall be conservators of the peace throughout the State; and the Sheriffs shall
be conservators of the peace within the counties respectively in which they
reside.
§2. Receipt for fees.
Section 2. No public officer shall receive any fees
without giving to the person paying the same a receipt therefore, if required,
therein specifying every item and charge.
§3. Costs on bill returned ignoramus, or on
acquittal.
Section 3. No costs shall be paid by a person accused,
on a bill returned ignoramus, nor on acquittal.
§4. Extension of term of public officer;
diminution of salary or emoluments.
Section 4. No law shall extend the term of any public
officer or diminish his salary or emoluments after his election or appointment.
The term "salary or emoluments" as used herein refers to the actual salary or
emoluments being provided an officer at any time during his tenure in office and
shall not be construed to mean increases in salary or emoluments scheduled by
statute for a future date and not yet received by the officer. (Amended
l979)
§5. Officers to hold office until
successors qualify.
Section 5. All public officers shall hold their
respective offices until their successors shall be duly qualified, except in
cases herein otherwise provided.
§6. Behavior of officers; removal for
misbehavior or infamous crime.
Section 6. All public officers shall hold their
offices on condition that they behave themselves well. The Governor shall remove
from office any public officer convicted of misbehavior in office or of any
infamous crime.
§7. Offenses excepted from prohibition
against prosecuting by information, and jury trial.
Section 7. The matters within Section 30 of Article IV
and Sections 7 and 8 of Article V are excepted from the provision of the
Constitution that "No person shall for any indictable offense be proceeded
against criminally by information," and also from the provisions of the
Constitution concerning trial by jury.
§8. Contracts for supplies or services for
Government departments; interest of member or officer of
department.
Section 8. No member or officer of any department of
the government shall be in any way interested in any contract for the furnishing
of stationery, printing, paper and fuel used in the Legislative and other
departments of government; or for the printing, binding and distributing of the
laws, journals, official reports, and all other printing and binding, and the
repairing and furnishing the halls and rooms used for the meetings of the
General Assembly and its committees, when such contract is awarded to or by any
such member, officer or department. (3-24-82)
§9. Prefixing Constitution to codification
of laws.
Section 9. This Constitution shall be prefixed to
every codification of the Laws of this State.
§10. Disqualification to hold office by
reason of sex.
Section l0. No citizen of the State of Delaware shall
be disqualified to hold and enjoy any office, or public trust, under the laws of
this State, by reason of sex.
§l. Proposal of Constitutional amendments
in General Assembly; procedure.
Section l. Any amendment or amendments to this
Constitution may be proposed in the Senate or House of Representatives; and if
the same shall be agreed to by two-thirds of all the members elected to each
House, such proposed amendment or amendments shall be entered on their journals,
with the yeas and nays taken thereon, and the Secretary of State shall cause
such proposed amendment or amendments to be published three months before the
next General Election in at least three newspapers in each county in which such
newspapers shall be published; and if in the General Assembly next after the
said election such proposed amendment or amendments shall upon yea and nay vote
be agreed to by two-thirds of all the members elected to each House, the same
shall thereupon become part of the Constitution.
§2. Constitutional conventions; procedure;
compensation of delegates; quorum; powers and duties;
vacancies.
Section 2. The General Assembly by a two-thirds vote
of all the members elected to each House may from time to time provide for the
submission to the qualified electors of the State at the general election next
thereafter the question, "Shall there be a Convention to revise the Constitution
and amend the same?"; and upon such submission, if a majority of those voting on
said question shall decide in favor of a Convention for such purpose, the
General Assembly at its next session shall provide for the election of delegates
to such convention at the next general election.
Such Convention shall be composed of forty-one
delegates, one of whom shall be chosen from each Representative District by the
qualified electors thereof, and two of whom shall be chosen from New Castle
County, two from Kent County and two from Sussex County by the qualified
electors thereof respectively. The delegates so chosen shall convene at the
Capital of the State on the first Tuesday in September next after their
election. Every delegate shall receive for his services such compensation as
shall be provided by law. A majority of the Convention shall constitute a quorum
for the transaction of business. The Convention shall have power to appoint such
officers, employees and assistants as it may deem necessary, and fix their
compensation, and provide for the printing of its documents, journals, debates
and proceedings. The Convention shall determine the rules of its proceedings,
and be the judge of the elections, returns and qualification of its members.
Whenever there shall be a vacancy in the office of delegate from any district or
county by reason of failure to elect, ineligibility, death, resignation or
otherwise, a writ of election to fill such vacancy shall be issued by the
Governor, and such vacancy shall be filled by the qualified electors of such
district or county.
§3. Receiving, tallying and counting votes
for or against Convention; return of vote; enabling
legislation.
Section 3. The General Assembly shall provide for
receiving, tallying and counting the votes for or against a Convention, and for
returning to the General Assembly at its next session the state of such vote;
and shall also enact all provisions necessary for giving effect to this
Article.
§4. Approval of bills or resolutions under
this article; exemption from Article III, Section l8.
Section 4. No bill or resolution passed by the General
Assembly under or pursuant to the provisions of this Article, shall require for
its validity the approval of the Governor, and the same shall be exempt from the
provisions of Section l8 of Article III, of this Constitution.
§5. Separate ballots on question of
Convention.
Section 5. In voting at any general election, upon the question, shall there be a Convention to revise the Constitution and amend the name?", the ballots shall be separate from those cast for any person voted for at such election, and shall be kept distinct and apart from all other ballots.
§1. Continuity of state and local
governmental operations in periods of emergency resulting from disasters caused
by enemy attack.
Section l. The General Assembly, in order to insure
continuity of State and local governmental operations in periods of emergency
resulting from disasters caused by enemy attack, shall have the power and the
immediate duty (l) to provide for prompt and temporary succession to the powers
and duties of public offices whose succession is not otherwise provided for in
this Constitution, of whatever nature and whether filled by election or
appointment, the incumbents of which may become unavailable for carrying on the
powers and duties of such offices, and (2) to adopt such other measures as may
be necessary and proper for insuring the continuity of governmental operations.
In the exercise of the powers hereby conferred the General Assembly shall in all
respects conform to the requirements of this Constitution except to the extent
that in the judgement of the General Assembly so to do would be impracticable or
would admit of undue delay.
§l. Delivery, filing and publication of
enrolled copy of amended Constitution and Schedule.
Section l. The President of this Convention,
immediately on its adjournment, shall deliver the enrolled copy of this amended
Constitution and Schedule to the Secretary of State, who shall file the same in
his office, and the Secretary of this Convention shall cause the same to be
published three times in two newspapers in each County of the
State.
§2. Effective date of amended
Constitution.
Section 2. This amended Constitution shall take effect
on the tenth day of June in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and
Ninety-Seven.
§3. Effect on offices of Senators and
Representatives; election.
Section 3. The offices of the present Senators and
Representatives shall not be vacated or otherwise affected by this amended
Constitution, except that the Senators whose terms do not expire on the day of
the next general election shall thereafter represent the districts in which they
now reside until the end of the terms for which they were
elected.
At the general election to be held in the year One
Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Eight, there shall be elected from each of the
even numbered Senatorial Districts in the State, except District Number Two in
New Castle County, District Number Four in Kent County, and District Number Two
in Sussex County, a Senator for the term of two years, and from each of the odd
numbered Senatorial Districts in the State a Senator for the term of four years.
And thereafter, as the said terms shall from time to time expire, a Senator
shall be elected from each of the said Senatorial Districts for the full term of
four years.
At the general election to be held in the year One
Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Eight, there shall be elected in each
Representative District in the State one Representative for the term of two
years.
§4. Commencement of terms of members of
General Assembly.
Section 4. The terms of Senators and Representatives
shall begin on the day next after their election.
§5. Date of first general
election.
Section 5. The first general election under this
amended Constitution shall be held on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in
the month of November in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and
Ninety-Eight.
§6. Effect on Governor's
term.
Section 6. The term of office of the present Governor
shall not be vacated, or in any wise affected by this amended
Constitution.
§7. Continuation of elective and appointive
offices; election of successors; renewal of official
obligations.
Section 7. Unless otherwise provided by this amended
Constitution or Schedule, all persons elected or appointed before this amended
Constitution shall take effect, to State or County offices made elective by this
amended Constitution, whose terms will expire before the first Tuesday in
January in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Nine, shall hold their
respective offices until the said last mentioned day; and all persons elected or
appointed as aforesaid to such offices, whose terms will expire between the said
first Tuesday in January in the Year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Nine
and the first Tuesday in Janury in the year One Thousand Nine Hundred and One,
shall hold their respective offices until the said last mentioned day; and all
persons elected or appointed as aforesaid to such offices, whose terms will
expire between the said first Tuesday in January in the year One Thousand Nine
Hundred and One and the first Tuesday in January in the year One Thousand Nine
Hundred and Three, shall hold their respective offices until the said last
mentioned day; and the successors of such persons shall be elected at the
general election next before the expiration of the terms as hereby extended;
provided, however, that the successors of the present Auditor of Acccounts,
State Treasurer and Insurance Commissioner shall be elected at the general
election next preceding the expiration of their several terms of office, and the
persons so elected shall enter upon the duties of their respective offices on
the first Tuesday in January following their election. The officers whose terms
of office are extended by this section shall renew their official obligations
upon the expiration of their present terms.
§8. Date of commencement of terms of
elective officers.
Section 8. The terms of office of all State and County
officers made elective by this amended Constitution shall commence on the first
Tuesday in January next after their election, unless otherwise provided in this
amended Constitution or Schedule.
§9. Date of abolition of courts and
judicial offices; transfer of pending proceedings and books, records and
papers.
Section 9. All the courts of justice now existing
shall continue with their present jurisdiction, and the Chancellor and judges
shall continue in office until the tenth day of June in the year One Thousand
Eight Hundred and Ninety-Seven; upon which day the said courts shall be
abolished, and the offices of the said Chancellor and judges shall
expire.
All writs of error, and appeals and proceedings which,
on the said Tenth day of June in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and
Ninety-Seven shall be depending in the Court of Errors and Appeals, and all the
books, records and papers of said court, shall be transferred to the Supreme
Court established by this amended Constitution; and the said writs of error
appeals and proceedings shall be proceeded in the said Supreme Court to final
judgment, decree or other determination.
All suits, proceedings, and matters which, on the said
Tenth day of June in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-seven, shall
be depending in the Superior Court, and all books, records and papers of the
said court, shall be transferred to the Superior Court established by this
amended Constitution, and the said suits, proceedings and matters shall be
proceeded in to final judgment, or determination, in the said Superior Court
established by this amended Constitution.
All indictments, proceedings and matters which, on the
said Tenth day of June in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Seven,
shall be depending in the Court of General Sessions of the Peace and Jail
Delivery shall be transferred to and proceeded in to final judgment and
determination in the Court of General Sessions established by this amended
Constitution, or be otherwise disposed of by the Court of General Sessions, and
all books, records and papers of said Court of General Sessions of the Peace and
Jail Delivery shall be transferred to the said Court of General
Sessions.
All indictments, proceedings and matters which, on the
said Tenth day of June in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Seven,
shall be depending in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, shall be transferred to
and proceeded in to final judgment and determination in the Court of Oyer and
Terminer, established by this amended Constitution, and all books, records and
papers of said Court of Oyer and Terminer shall be transferred to said Court of
Oyer and Terminer established by this amended Constitution.
All suits, proceedings and matters which, on the said
Tenth day of June in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Seven, shall
be depending in the Court of Chancery, or in the Orphans' Court, and all
records, books and papers of said courts respectively, shall be transferred to
Court of Chancery or Orphans' Court respectively, established by this amended
Constitution; and the suits, proceedings and matters, shall be proceeded in to
final decree, order or other determination.
§l0. Registers' Court and jurisdiction of
justice of the peace unaffected.
Section l0. Unless otherwise provided, the Registers'
Courts and the jurisdiction of Justice of the Peace shall not be affected by
this amended Constitution.
§ll. Payments to certain incumbent judges
not reappointed.
Section ll. If the Chancellor, Chief Justice or any
Associate Judge in office at the time this amended Constitution shall take
effect shall not be appointed Chancellor, Chief Justice or Associate Judge under
this amended Constitution, he shall be entitled to receive the sum of Fifteen
Hundred Dollars per annum, payable quarterly, for five years, after the
expiration of his office, if he shall so long live.
§12. First biennial session of General
Assembly under Constitution.
Section l2. The first biennial session of the General
Assembly under this amended Constitution shall commence on the first Tuesday in
January in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Nine.
§l3. Exceptions to limitations on amount of
compensation payable to members of General Assembly and presiding
officers.
Section l3. The provisions of Section l5 of Article II
of this amended Constitution limiting the amount of the compensation of the
members of the General Assembly and the presiding officers of the respective
Houses shall not apply to any adjourned, special or extra session of the General
Assembly held prior to the first Tuesday in January in the year One Thousand
Eight Hundred and Ninety-Nine.
§l4. Renewal of existing corporations until
enactment of general incorporation law.
Section l4. Until the General Assembly shall enact a
general incorporation law as provided for in Section l of Article IX of this
amended Constitution, existing corporations may be renewed for a period not
exceeding four years, without change or enlargement of their corporate powers or
duties, in the manner lawful before this amended Constitution shall take
effect.
§l5. Guardians' accounts.
Section l5. Until the General Assembly shall otherwise
provide, guardians' accounts shall be filed with and be adjusted and settled by
the Register of Wills for the County, and be subject to exception, hearing,
adjustment and settlement in the Orphans' Court for the County as before this
amended Constitution took effect.
§l6. Terms of office of persons holding
office on effective date of Constitution.
Section l6. Unless otherwise provided by this amended
Constitution or Schedule, the terms of persons holding public offices to which
they have been elected or appointed at the time this amended Constitution and
Schedule shall take effect, shall not be vacated or otherwise affected
thereby.
§l7. Vacancies in Board of
Pardons.
Section l7. One or more vacancies in the Board of
Pardons shall not invalidate any act of the remaining members of said Board not
less than three in number.
§l8. Laws consistent with Constitution not
affected.
Section l8. All the laws of this State existing at the
time this Constitution shall take effect, and not inconsistent with it shall
remain in force, except so far as they shall be altered by future
laws.
§l9. Enabling legislation.
Section l9. The General Assembly, as soon as
conveniently may be after this Constitution shall take effect, shall enact all
laws necessary or proper for carrying out the provisions
thereof.
DONE IN CONVENTION, the Fourth day of June in the year
of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-Seven and of the Independence
of the United States of America the One Hundred and
Twenty-First.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we have hereunto subscribed our
names.
John Biggs, President.
Edward G. Bradford, Charles B. Evans, George H.
Murray, Martin B. Burris, James B. Gilchrist, William P. Orr, Jr., William A.
Cannon, Robert G. Harman, Nathan Pratt, Paris T. Carlisle, Jr., Edward D.
Hearne, Charles F. Richards, Wilson T. Cavender, Andrew J. Horsey, Lowder L.
Sapp, David S. Clark, John W. Hering, William Saulsbury, J. Wilkins Cooch,
Andrew L. Johnson, William T. Smithers, Ezekiel W. Cooper, Woodburn Martin, W.
C. Spruance, Robert W. Dasey, Elias N. Moore, Isaac K. Wright, Joshua A.
Ellegood.
Attest: Charles R. Jones, Secretary of C.
C.
N. B. - John P. Donahoe, a member of the Convention
from New Castle County, refused to sign.