81 P. 748 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1905
Application for writ of habeas corpus.
Petitioner was indicted for the crime of bribery, convicted by a jury and sentenced by the court to imprisonment in the state prison at San Quentin for the term of five years, and is now in the custody of the sheriff of Sacramento County by *63 virtue of the judgment of conviction and an order of commitment indorsed thereon.
The indictment is as follows: —
"The said Harry Bunkers, on the _____ day of January, A.D. 1905, at the said county of Sacramento, in the said state of California, and before the finding of this indictment, the said Harry Bunkers being then and there a member of one of the houses, to wit: the senate, composing the legislature of the state of California, to wit: the senator of the state of California in and for the eighteenth senatorial district, and being then and there a member of a regularly constituted committee of the said senate of the state of California, to wit: the committee on commissions and retrenchment, and the said legislature of the state of California being then and there duly and regularly convened in its thirty-sixth session, did then and there willfully, unlawfully, feloniously and corruptly ask and receive from one Joseph Jordan a bribe, to wit: the sum of three hundred dollars in lawful money of the United States, upon the agreement and understanding that his, said Harry Bunkers', official vote, opinion, judgment and action as such senator and member of said house of said legislature, should be influenced thereby and should be given in a particular manner and upon a particular side of a question and matter upon which he might be required to act in his official capacity, to wit: the said bribe, to wit: the sum of three hundred dollars lawful money of the United States, was so given by said Joseph Jordan to the said Harry Bunkers, and was so received by the said Harry Bunkers from said Joseph Jordan upon the understanding and agreement that he, said Harry Bunkers, as such member of one of the houses of the legislature of the state of California, to wit: the senate, and as such member of said committee on commissions and retrenchment, would give his official vote to secure the Renters' Loan and Trust Company, a corporation, and the Phœnix Savings, Building and Loan Association, a corporation, immunity from investigation of their affairs and business by said senator of the state of California, and by said committee on commissions and retrenchment, and that he, said Harry Bunkers, would give his official vote as such senator and such member of said committee as aforesaid to secure the said Renters' Loan and Trust Company, *64 a corporation, and the said Phœnix Savings, Building and Loan Association, a corporation, immunity from any unfavorable comment or report by the said senate of the state of California, and by the said committee of the senate of the state of California, to wit: the committee on commissions and retrenchment, there being then and there pending before said committee on commissions and retrenchment an investigation of the affairs and business of said corporations, contrary to the form, force and effect of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the people of the state of California. A. M. SEYMOUR,
"District attorney of Sacramento County, in the state of California."
The points urged by defendant at the argument were: 1. That section
1. The argument of counsel, at the hearing of the return, was based on the assumption that section
Section 24 of article IV of the constitution provides, among other things, as follows: "No law shall be revised or amended *65
by reference to its title; but in such case the act revised or section amended shall be re-enacted and published at length as revised or amended." Section
It was said in Pennie v. Reis,
We have examined with much care section
The constitution does not either by its terms or by necessary implication forbid the legislature to pass such a statute as is found in section
In declaring the acts therein described to be a felony, and upon conviction thereof that the guilty party "shall be disfranchised and forever disqualified from holding any office or public trust," the provision is mandatory and self-executing, and as a penalty for the acts such guilty party must be so adjudged to suffer; but this is not the sole penalty, but is what the constitution declares a penalty"in addition to such punishment as may be provided by law." In re-enacting section
It is hardly necessary to point out the distinction between the constitutional powers of the United States and the like powers of the states. Suffice it to state briefly that the latter possess general powers of legislation while the former possesses such only as are granted. A state law is conclusively presumed to be within the powers of the legislature unless in the constitution of the United States or of the state we are unable to discover that it is prohibited. (Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., p. 126; Ex parte Mabry, 5 Tex. App. 93.)
Petitioner's contention, therefore, that there is now no law punishing legislative bribery except it be found in the provisions of the constitution, cannot be maintained.
2. It is further claimed that petitioner was not charged with any official duty in respect of the investigation mentioned in the indictment, and therefore bribery cannot be predicated of his alleged acts.
Stripped of its technical formalities, the indictment shows that petitioner was a member of the senate then in session, and was also a member of a regularly constituted senate committee, before which an investigation of the affairs and business of certain building and loan corporations of this state was then pending, and that he corruptly asked and received a bribe of three hundred dollars upon the agreement and understanding that his "official vote, opinion, judgment and action as such senator and member of said house of said legislature, should be influenced thereby and should be given in a particular manner upon a particular side of a question and matter upon which he might be required to act in his official capacity," and that such bribe was received with the *67 further understanding that as such senator and as a member of this committee he would give his official vote to secure these corporations immunity from investigation of their affairs by the senate and the committee and also give his official vote to secure them immunity from any unfavorable comment or report by the said committee.
The point made by petitioner was strongly urged at the argument, and reliance was especially placed upon theMatter of Pacific Railway Commission, 32 Fed. 241, 12 Saw. 559, and Kilbourn v. Thompson,
Respondent cities numerous cases holding that the legislature has the power to investigate the business and affairs of corporations; and that whether or not the legislature had such power is immaterial, as the matter of an investigation was pending and official action was called for. (Citing, as to the power, Burnham v. Morrisey, 14 Gray, 226;1 Crease v. Babcock, 23 Pick. 344;2 People v. Keeler,
As to the immateriality of the question of power, the investigation being in fact pending, the following citations are given: State v. Potts, 78 Iowa, 656, [43 N.W. 534]; Glover
v. State,
Section 1 of article XII of the constitution provides that corporations may be formed under general laws, and declares that "All laws now in force in this state concerning corporations, and all laws that may be hereafter passed pursuant to this section, may be altered from time to time or repealed."
Section 383 of the Civil Code, passed March 21, 1872, provides as follows: "The legislature, or either branch thereof, may examine into the affairs and condition of any corporation in this state at all times; and, for that purpose, any committee *68 appointed by the legislature, or either branch thereof, may administer all necessary oaths to the directors, officers, and stockholders of such corporation, and may examine them on oath in relation to the affairs and condition thereof; and may examine the safes, books, papers, and documents belonging to such corporation, or pertaining to its affairs and condition, and compel the production of keys, books, papers, and documents by summary process, to be issued on application to any court of record or any judge thereof, under such rules and regulations as the court may prescribe."
What the limit is of the powers which may be exercised under these provisions of the constitution and the statute is not necessary now to prescribe. But whatever that limit may be, we are clearly of the opinion that it was not reached by the committee of the legislature in entering upon an investigation of the affairs of the corporation mentioned in the indictment, which investigation we must presume was either within its regular and ordinary duties under standing rules of the senate or was specially devolved upon it by that body. If the legislature cannot exercise this power through a committee, it had not the power to create a board of commissioners of loan associations upon which, by the act of March 23, 1893 (Stats. 1893, p. 299), even greater powers are conferred than were alleged to have been assumed by the legislative committee of which petitioner was a member. Similar powers also are being exercised by the bank commissioners and other bodies created by the legislature. The argument which would destroy the power of the legislature, through its committees, to inquire into the affairs of corporations, with a view to correct corporate abuses, would also destroy the power of the commission created by it for that purpose. But such exercise of legislative power has been long exercised and universally acquiesced in, and is, we think, unquestionably intrenched in our system of government.
The learned trial judge, whose opinion is before us, well observed: "Corporations of the character of those under investigation by the committee on commissions and retrenchment of the senate are creatures of the law. While they are not, under our constitution, created by direct act of legislation, they are, nevertheless, just as much creatures of the legislative power as they were previous to the adoption of our *69 present organic law. Our legislators necessarily gather wisdom evidenced in our system of laws from experience, and it is therefore one of the duties of citizens elected to the legislative branch of the government to gather all information, facts, and data necessary to a proper performance of their duty, and thus place themselves in a position where they can give the state as nearly a perfect code of laws as human ingenuity is capable of. The legislature has passed general laws by virtue of which corporations of all kinds and classes may come into existence. It is true that if these corporations violate the laws by which they are formed and organized, and thereby deprive citizens of their rights, the remedy would be an appeal to the judicial arm of the government. But where there are manifest defects in the general laws authorizing the establishment of such corporations it is not only proper, but absolutely the duty of the legislative department to gather information upon the subject in all legitimate ways to enable it to make such reforms in those general laws as will prevent, or at least minimize, the wrongs which flow from such defects. . . . This may be called a visitorial or supervisorial power, but, whatever its proper designation, it is, nevertheless, a power that exists, and one which ought to exist, and without the existence of which the public would have no adequate protection from corporations which, legally established, are managed so as to perpetrate fraud upon the rights of the people with whom they do business."
Similar and equally pertinent views will be found expressed in People v. Keeler,
3. It is contended that the indictment "is defective in some matter of substance required by law," and petitioner should be discharged by virtue of subdivision 3 of section
4. Upon the petitioner's fourth point it need only be said that the court, in our opinion, had jurisdiction of the cause.
The writ is discharged and prisoner remanded.
Buckles, J., and McLaughlin, J., concurred.