183 A. 506 | Vt. | 1936
This is a petition for mandamus brought by the assistant judges of Washington county court to compel the auditor of accounts forthwith to issue a warrant to the order of the City of Montpelier for the sum of thirty-five dollars in payment of water furnished by it to the Washington county jail for the six months ending October 1, 1935, and to compel the State treasurer to pay such warrant. *119
Whether the petition should be granted depends upon the legality and effect of that part of P.L. 9066 which reads as follows: "The purchasing agent shall * * * purchase the fuel, water, lights, bedding and clothing for the several jails." Prior to the 1933 revision of the statutes, each county provided water for its jail, at its own expense. The defendants contend that this change was made by the commission created in 1931 to revise the statutes without "legislative authorization," and if not that, it is a mere "enabling act" that requires the purchasing agent, upon requisition of the assistant judges, to purchase water for the several jails at the expense of the county wherein such jail is located. The first claim is untenable. Section 4 of No. 172, Acts of 1931, the act which created the commission to revise the statutory law of the State, provided, that such commission should propose to the General Assembly such additions, repeals or amendments to the then existing statutes as it might deem proper and expedient. The commission prepared a complete and comprehensive revision of the entire statutory law of the State which it submitted to the General Assembly of 1933 in the form of a "Proposed Revision" of the Public Laws of Vermont. Section 8703 thereof contained the precise language found in P.L. 9066. With such proposed revision, the commission submitted a report of its doings in preparing the same, wherein it called attention to the fact that chapter 349, of which section 8703 was part, had been rewritten and rearranged, and that "The amendments have been written in and the section shortened." It is thus apparent that the commission acted well within its authority. But assuming that it were otherwise, the defendants would be no better off, since the proposed revision was presented to the General Assembly of 1933 in the form of a duly prepared bill, House Bill No. 1, and such proceedings were had thereon that the proposed laws, embodied therein, together with certain amendments not here material, became, and are the statutory law of this State, No. 157, Acts of 1933, and now constitute Public Laws of Vermont, 1933. The vital question is not what the commission had authority to do, but what the Legislature intended to do with the commission's work, and such intention can only be gathered from what the Legislature itself declared when it finally passed upon the work submitted to it by the commission. Central of Georgia *120 Railway Co. v. State,
Neither do we find support for the claim that this change was intended, simply, to authorize the purchasing agent to purchase water at the expense of the county. The State has long paid for heating the several jails (No. 155, Acts of 1884), and for lighting them (No. 129, Acts of 1902); it has furnished bedding and clothing for them since 1917 (P.L. 7275) and has furnished fuel, water and lights for the several court houses since 1912 (No. 253, Acts of 1912). It thus appears that the change under consideration is in line with the well-settled policy of the State to pay certain expenses incident to the maintenance of the court houses and jails, and we think it apparent that the Legislature intended water for the jails to stand in all respects like the other items enumerated in P.L. 9066. Nor is this conclusion affected by the fact that water is not mentioned in P.L. 3345. It is said in Old Saybrook v. Public UtilitiesCommission,
Judgment that a mandamus issue directed to the said BenjaminGates, as Auditor of Accounts, commanding him to allow the claimdescribed in the petition at the sum of thirty-five dollars, andto issue his order on the State Treasurer for that amount,payable to the order of the City of Montpelier, and deliver thesame to said city on demand; and that a mandamus issue directedto the said Thomas H. Cave, as State Treasurer, commanding him topay such order upon presentation of the same to him.