41 Md. 446 | Md. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a pro forma order of the Court below, refusing an injunction to the appellant, to restrain the execution of a judgment recovered against him by the appellee, for balance of subscription to the stock of that corporation; and the ground of the application is, that, under the Act of 1874, chapter 389, section 3, amendatory of the company’s charter, which was granted by the Act of 1868, chapter 364, the duration of the charter is limited to the first of January, 1875, the company not having finished or completed its road as provided it should have done.
The appellee, in its answer to the appellant’s bill, avers and insists that the third section of the amendatory Act of 1874, as it appears in the printed volume of the statutes of the last session, never in fact passed either House of the Legislature. That the third section of the Act, as it in truth and reality did pass the two Houses of the G-eneral Assembly, provided for an extension of time for the completion of the road for five years from the first of January eighteen hundred and seventy-five; and that the change was made in the section after tiie final passage of the Act, either by design or mistake, by some clerk or copyist, in
This change or alteration in the Act is of serious import to the Railroad Company; and the question now is, how is the matter to be dealt with by the Courts ? It is contended by the appellant that the law must be taken to be as we find it evidenced by the bill filed in the office of this Court, under the Great Seal, and the signature of the Governor ; while, on the other hand, it is insisted by the appellee that it is competent to this Court to examine the
In opposition to the right to examine the journals, and the engrossed bill with its endorsements, to ascertain what the particular Act was that received the assent of the Legislature, the appellant relies upon the cases of Fouke vs. Fleming & Douglass, 13 Md., 392, and The Mayor, &c. of Annapolis vs. Harwood, 32 Md., 471. But those cases were not in all respects similar to the one now under consideration. In those cases it was not made distinctly to appear that the particular provision of the statutes as published, did not receive the legislative assent; the evidence not being such as the Court,was willing to accept to overcome the strong presumption arising from the due authentication of the statutes there involved. It was assumed, from the fact that the bills, as published, corresponded in all respects with the bills as engrossed, that they did receive the assent of the Legislature. But in the case now before us, it is plainly shown by the most unquestionable evidence, that the third section of the bill as engrossed, before the third reading and the passage thereof, pursuant to the requirement of the Constitution, Art. 3, sec. 27, and as it actually passed, is essentially different from the corresponding section in the bill that was attested, sealed, signed by the Governor, and filed for record. There is therefore no ground for presumption in favor of the identity of the bill as recorded in the office of this Court, with that which passed the Legislature, unless we make the facts of the attestation, the imprint of the Great Seal, the signature of the Governor, and the filing for record, conclusive upon the question as to what is law, and exclude all other evidence upon the subject, no matter how plain and direct it may be.
Unquestionably, where an Act has been duly authenticated and published as law by authority, the presumption is, that all the constitutional solemnities and prerequisites necessary to its valid enactment have been complied with; and this presumption exists until the contrary is clearly made to appear. But when it can be made clearly to appear, as in this case it has been, that the particular bill or section of a bill, although it may have all the forms of authentication, has never in fact received the legislative assent, we think the Court is bound to look not only behind the printed statute book, but beyond the forms of authentication of the hill as recorded in the office .of this Court, and if the evidence he clear and entirely
This question has repeatedly arisen in several of the State Courts of the highest authority, and in all cases, with but few exceptions, it has been held, that neither the printed statute book, nor the ordinary authentication of the statute after its passage, would preclude the inquiry into the fact, whether the statute as published had in truth passed the Legislature ; and as evidence upon the question, the legislative journals, and the bills as acted upon by the legislative assemblies, have been consulted. Purdy vs. The People, 2 Hill, (N. Y.,) 33 ; S. C., 4 Hill, 384 ; De Bow vs. The People, 1 Denio, 11; Southwark Bank vs. Commonwealth, 2 Penn. St., 446; Spangler vs. Jacoby, 14 Ill., 297 ; Turley vs. Logan County, 17 Ill., 151; People vs. Stone, 35 Ill., 121, 141; People vs. Mahany, 13 Mich., 481; 35 N. H., 579; 52 N. H., 622; Cooley on Const. Lim., 135 ; Smith on Const. & Stat. Law, secs. 949, 50 ; Sedgw. on Const. & Stat. Law, 69 ; Cushing on the Law of Legislative Assemblies, secs. 2211-12-19-22 and 2405.
But while the authorities just cited maintain that it is the right and duty of the Court to go behind the authentication of the statute, and to receive evidence, such as that furnished by the engrossed bills, with the indorsements thereon, and the journal of proceedings of the two Houses of the Legislature, upon the question of the Constitutional enactment of what purports to be a statute, they all seem to concur in maintaining that no statute, having the proper forms of authentication, can be impeached or questioned upon mere parol evidence. Eor do we decide in this case, that the journals of the two Houses, though required by the Constitution to be kept as records of their proceedings, would be evidence per se upon which the validity of a statute, having the required authentication, could be successfully questioned as to the manner of its enactment. But we think the journals, in connection with other com
And having thus declared the third section of the Act' a nullity, the next question is, how does that affect the remainder of the statute ? Upon examination it is found that the third section is entirely separate and disconnected from the other sections of the Act, and that the operation and effect of those sections in no manner depend upon the co-existence of the third section. As applicable to such case, Judge Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, p. 177, says: ”It will sometimes be found that an Act of the Legislature is opposed in some of its provisions to the Constitution, while others, standing by themselves, would be unobjectionable. So the forms observed in pass
It follows from what we have said, that the 19th section of the appellee’s charter is left unaffected by the Act of 1874, and that that section still prescribes the limitation for the commencement and completion of the road. And, as in this view of the case the appellant’s bill presents no ground for an injunction, the order appealed from will be affirmed, and the bill dismissed.
Order affirmed, and bill dismissed.