Constitution


In public law, the organic and fundamental law of a nation or state, which may be written or unwritten, establishing the character and conception of its government, laying the basic principles to which its internal life is to be conformed, organizing the government, and regulating, distributing, and limiting the functions of its different departments, and prescribing the extent and manner of the exercise of sovereign powers. In a more general sense, any fundamental or important law or edict; as the Novel Constitutions of Justinian; the Constitutions of Clarendon.

TLD Example 1: The Constitution distributes power between the state and federal governments.

TLD Example 2: The Constitution is the supreme law of the land in the United States.

In the United States, the Constitution is the Supreme law of the land.

 

Case References:

“A Law repugnant to the Constitution is void.” Marbury v. Madison (1803)

 

Reading Material:

DEBATES IN THE SEVERAL STATE CONVE”\TIONS, ON THE ADOPTION OF THE FEDERAL COSTITUTION

THE CONSTITUTION of the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION