147 N.E. 34 | Ill. | 1925
The board of education of school district No. 41 of DuPage county filed a petition in the circuit court for a writ ofmandamus commanding the county superintendent of schools to prepare and certify to the Superintendent of Public Instruction the county budget in connection with the distribution of the State school fund, as required by law. The county superintendent demurred to the petition, and upon his demurrer being overruled elected to stand by it, whereupon the court ordered the writ issued, and the defendant appealed.
Before 1923 the amount of the State common school fund, which was distributed directly to the counties, was apportioned with reference to the number of persons resident in the county under twenty-one years of age. In 1923 *145 the legislature passed, and the Governor approved, an act amending section 211 of the School law and other sections and adding a new section, 211a. The amendatory act made a change in the method of apportionment of the fund to the various counties by establishing as one basis for the apportionment the teacher-school-day, which was defined in the act, and directed the payment of seventy cents to each county for each teacher-school-day or major fraction thereof, and in addition directed the payment of certain amounts based upon the number of teacher-school-days, the assessed valuation of the property of the district, its population, the number of full-time elementary teachers, the amount of normal school training, or its equivalent, of each teacher, the number of days' attendance of each pupil enrolled in grades from I to 8, inclusive, and the number of one-room rural school districts employing a normal school graduate teaching nine school months. Section 211a requires the board of education or board of directors of each school district to prepare and certify to the county superintendent of each county, not later than July 15 of each year, its school district budget on blanks to be provided by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, and requires the county superintendent of schools to prepare and certify to the Superintendent of Public Instruction, not later than the first day of October of each year, the county budget on blanks furnished by the Superintendent of Public Instruction. It was this duty which the appellant refused to perform, and it is contended that no such duty is imposed on him, for the reason that the amendatory act of 1923 is invalid because the act became effective on July 2, 1923; that some of the provisions essential to the operation of the act were impossible of performance in that year; that it was a practical impossibility to furnish the Auditor of Public Accounts with the data upon which he was required by the act to make the distribution of the common school fund in January, 1924, and that since the act could not be executed *146 during the first year it was in force because of the conflicting and inconsistent provisions of the act, it was wholly invalid.
The act was passed by the General Assembly on June 19, 1923. It was approved by the Governor on July 2. The contention of the appellant is that it became effective immediately, and the contention of the appellee that it did not become effective until July I, 1924, Section 13 of article 4 of the constitution provides that no act of the General Assembly shall take effect until the first day of July next after its passage, unless in case of emergency the General Assembly shall by a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house otherwise direct. Section 16 of article 5 provides that every bill passed by the General Assembly shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the Governor, and if he approve he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become a law. The appellee contends that the "passage" referred to in the provision that no act of the General Assembly shall take effect until the first day of July next after its passage refers to the time when the bill has passed through the various stages of legislation necessary to make it a valid statute and been approved and signed by the Governor; that the approval of the Governor is the final legislative act, and not until the first day of July after such approval does the act take effect. The contention of the appellant is that "passage" in the clause in question refers to the time when the bill has passed both houses of the legislature. The word is appropriately used in either sense. Webster's New International Dictionary, in defining passage, says: "Of a measure or law, ordinarily passage refers to the final affirmative action by which the assembly enacts the law, but it has been also sometimes used to designate the time of taking effect of the act, (
In interpreting statutes words are presumed to be used in their ordinary meaning, and it is proper, in case of ambiguity, to consider the context to determine the meaning in which they are used. It is a rule of interpretation that where a word has been used more than once in a statute or instrument it will be presumed to have been used with the same meaning throughout unless there is something to show a different meaning was intended. Sections 12 and 13 of article 4 of the constitution concern the manner of passing laws by the legislature, and by section 12 it is provided that on the final passage of all bills the votes shall be by yeas and nays upon each bill separately and shall be entered upon the journal. By section 13 it is provided that every bill, and all amendments thereto, shall be printed before the vote is taken on its final passage, and every bill, having passed both houses, shall be signed by the speaker thereof. Later in the same section 13 occurs the provision that no act of the General Assembly shall take effect until the first day of July next after its passage. The words "passage" and "passed," as used in the three places mentioned in sections 12 and 13, other than in the phrase in question, and as used in section 16, clearly refer only to the passage of bills by the General Assembly. No reason appears for giving to the term a different meaning when used in the phrase in question from that which it bears in the other places. The subject matter of the provision is the time when an act of the General Assembly shall take effect. That time is declared to be the first day of July next after its passage, and the obviously natural meaning of the words, in the absence of anything showing the contrary, is, after its passage *148
by the General Assembly. It is true that what is said in the previous instances mentioned refers to the passage of bills while the later reference is to an act of the General Assembly, but each refers to the same thing in different stages. A proposed act of the General Assembly, upon its introduction in either house, is called a bill, and during its progress through the two houses, with its various readings, references and amendments, it remains a bill, — a house bill or a senate bill, as the case may be, — but when it has finally passed both houses it has become an act of the General Assembly, though before it becomes a law it requires the approval of the Governor, who may by his veto require its reconsideration lay the General Assembly, and it cannot take effect until the first day of July next after its passage except in case of emergency, as provided in section 13. It may, however, become a law before the first day of July, for section 16 of article 5 provides that every bill passed by the General Assembly shall, before it becomes law, be presented to the Governor, and if he approve he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become a law. A bill as soon as signed by the Governor becomes a law, but it does not become effective until the first day of July following its passage. (People v. Inglis,
The briefs have discussed the question whether the act of the Governor in approving or vetoing is executive or legislative in its character. The question is of no importance *149 in this case, but it may be observed that the Governor, under our constitution, is not a part of the General Assembly. The constitution declares that the legislative power shall be vested in a General Assembly, consisting of a senate and house of representatives. The division of the powers of the government by article 3 of the constitution into legislative, executive and judicial, prohibits any person or collection of persons, being one of these departments, from exercising any power properly belonging to either of the others except as expressly directed or permitted by the constitution. The supreme executive power is vested in the Governor, and by section 16 of article 5, as has been seen, it is expressly directed that a bill passed by the General Assembly must be presented to him before it becomes a law, and by his veto he may require the General Assembly to reconsider it, but he cannot prevent its becoming a law if each house of the legislature again passes it by a two-thirds vote. The law is the act of the General Assembly. The Governor cannot originate or amend a bill. The only constitutional influence which he has over legislation is the qualified veto which the constitution gives him. He may veto separate items of a bill appropriating money but he cannot amend any item. It is the act of the General Assembly which becomes a law, whether the act takes effect with the approval of the Governor or without his approval or over his veto.
The cases cited by the appellee as to the meaning of the word "passage" are of little assistance. They involve the construction of the words "the time of the passage of this act," and similar terms used in statutes, having reference to things done or to be done, or conditions existing, or which may exist before, at or after the passage of the act, and furnish no guide to the meaning of the language of the constitution. The language of the emergency clause designed to put an act into immediate effect is frequently, "This act shall take effect from and after its passage." Of *150
necessity it can refer only to the final act necessary to make the act a valid law, for the General Assembly has not the power to declare the law in effect before the final act required by the constitution is done. Where there is no necessity for such meaning of the term it is given such construction as the circumstances require to declare the intention, and it is said in State v. Williams,
The only case which has come to our attention which considers the constitutional question involved here is State v. Mounts,
The appellant contends that an act so conflicting and inconsistent in its provisions that it cannot be executed is inoperative and void. The case of People v. Sweitzer,
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *155