CALIFORNIA.
The name of one of the states of the United States. It was admitted
into the Union, by-an Act of Congress, passed the 9th September, 1850,
entitled "An act for the admission of the state of California into the
Union."
1.
This section enacts and declares that the state of California shall be
one of the United States, and admitted into the Union on an equal
footing with the original states, in all respects whatever.
2.
Enacts that the state of California shall be entitled to two
representatives, until the representatives in Congress shall be
apportioned according to the actual enumeration of the inhabitants, of
the United States.
3.
By this section a condition is expressly imposed on the said state that
the people thereof shall never interfere with the primary disposal of
the public lands within its limits, nor pass any law, nor do any act,
whereby the title of the United States to, and right to dispose of the
same, shall be impaired or questioned. It also provides that they shall
never lay any tax, or assessment of any description whatever, upon the
public domain of the United States; and that in no case shall
non-resident proprietors, who are citizens of the United States, be
taxed higher than residents; that all navigable waters within the said
state shall be common highways, forever free, as well to the inhabitants
of said state, as to citizens of the United States, without any tax,
impost or duty therefor; with this proviso, viz., that nothing contained
in the act shall be construed as recognizing or rejecting the
propositions tendered by the people of California, as articles of
compact in the ordinance adopted by the convention whicb formed the
constitution of that state.
2.
The principal features of the constitution, of California, are similar
to those of most, of the recently formed state constitutions. It
establishes an elective judiciary, and: confers on the executive a
qualified veto. It prohibits the creation of a state debt exceeding
$300,000. It provides for the protection of the homestead from
execution, and secures the property of married females separate from
that of their husbands. It makes a liberal provision for the support of
schools, prohibits the legislature from granting divorces, autborizing
lotteries, and creating corporations, except by general laws, and from
establishing any bank's of issue or circulation. It provides also that
every stockholder of a corporation or joint-stock association, shall be
individually and personally liable for his proportion of all its, debts
or liabilities. There is also a clause prohibiting slavery, which, it is
said, was inserted by the unanimous vote of the delegates.
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