Black’s Law Dictionary 1st Edition, page 259:
In public law. The organic and fundamental law of a nation or state, which may be written of 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 difference departments, and prescribing the extent and manner of the exercise of sovereign powers.
In a more general sense any fundamental of important law or edict; as the Novel Constitutions of Justinian; the Constitution of Clarendon.
In American law. The written instrument agreed upon by the people of the Union or of a particular state, as the absolute rule of action and decision for all departments and officers of the government in respect to all the points covered by it, which must control until it shall be changed by the authority which established it, and in opposition to which any act or ordinance of any such department, or officer is null and void. Cooley, Const, Lim. 3.
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