No. 852. | Tex. | Feb 5, 1900
This is a suit instituted in this court by plaintiff, a foreign corporation, to compel, by mandamus, the Secretary of State to issue to it a permit to do business in this State, which the Secretary refuses to do, on the ground that plaintiff has not shown that 50 per cent of its authorized capital stock has been subscribed, as required by the Act of the Legislature of 1897. Laws 25th Leg., p. 192, subdiv. 56.
The fact thus relied upon by respondent is admitted, and it is conceded also that proof of such fact is, by the statute referred to, made *295 a condition precedent to the issuance of the permit; but plaintiff contends (1) that the provision of the statute in question is unconstitutional and void because it is not embraced in the title of the act stating the subject thereof; and (2) that such provision can not be held applicable to the plaintiff, because its effect would be to impair the obligation of a contract between plaintiff and the State and to destroy plaintiff's vested rights of property. The second contention is based upon the facts that, in 1889, under the laws then existing, which made no such requirement as that contained in the Act of 1897, plaintiff obtained a permit to do business in this State for the period of ten years from its date, and, thereafter and before the passage of the Act of 1897, made loans and acquired large property rights in the State; that, although it has made no loans since the passage of that statute and has acquired no property except by foreclosure of liens made before it took effect, and has, since its enactment, used its utmost efforts to wind up its business in the State and sell all lands owned by it, it has not been able to dispose of all of such property; and plaintiff claims that without a further permit, it can not, under the laws, make enforceable contracts for renting and sale of such lands.
As to this, we think it is sufficient to say that these facts present no ground for compelling the respondent to issue a new permit to do business, if the statute does not make it his duty to do so. Whether or not such is his duty must depend upon the question, whether or not plaintiff has complied with the conditions imposed by law to entitle it to demand of the officer the action which it seeks to compel him to take. The proposition involved in this contention is that plaintiff has acquired rights of property which are protected by the Constitution, notwithstanding the expiration of its permit. If so, there is no need for the issuance of another permit to enforce such rights. All the rights of property claimed by plaintiff, as arising from the transaction of its business under the expired permit, might be conceded, and still it would not follow that it is the respondent's duty to issue a new permit. Such a duty must be imposed by the law under which respondent is required to act before the court can compel him to perform it. The case must therefore depend upon the decision of plaintiff's first contention.
The general subject of the issuance of permits to foreign corporations is treated in articles 745-749 of the Revised Statutes of 1895, as amended, as to article 745, by chapter 119, Acts of 1897, page 167.
All of the requirements of these articles were complied with by plaintiff, and under their provisions, it became the duty of respondent to issue the permit, unless an additional condition precedent to its issuance is imposed by article 642 of the Revised Statutes, as amended by chapter 130 of the Acts of 1897, page 188-192, before referred to. It is conceded that such is the effect of the last named statute, if it is a valid law, and thus the contention first stated is raised. To a right understanding of the objection to the statute, a history of the legislation ending in the provisions of the Act of 1897 last referred to, is essential. *296 In the Revised Statutes of 1879, the purposes for which corporations might be created in this State were defined in article 566, and to that subject alone the article related. It was amended from time to time by the substitution of new articles with the same number, all of which, down to and including that of 1891, treated solely of the same subject as the original. The amendment of 1891 stood as article 566 when the codifiers came to revise the statutes, and in their codification they embodied it as article 642. No action was taken by the Legislature upon their revision and the bill reported for adopting it, until the session of 1895, when the bill was adopted, but with the provision, in section 26, "that no laws * * * enacted by the Twenty-third Legislature (1893) or by the present session of the Twenty-fourth Legislature (1895) shall be in any way affected by the repealing clause of this title, but any and all such laws shall continue to be the laws of this State, this act of revision to the contrary notwithstanding."
In the meantime, the Legislature, in 1893, had adopted another amendment of article 566 of the Revised Statutes of 1879, as amended in 1891, which amendment was still confined to the original subject of that article, — the purposes for which corporations might be created. But in 1895, at the same session at which the Revised Statutes were adopted, an amendment of the Act of 1893 was passed substituting a new article 566 for that contained in the last named act. The amendatory Act of 1895 gave this title: "An Act to amend article 566, chapter 2, title 20, of the Revised Civil Statutes of the State of Texas, as amended by the Twenty-third Legislature, chapter 83, page 109, relating to the purposes for which private corporations may be formed." The article as set forth in the body of the act contained fifty-four subdivisions giving the purposes for which corporations might be formed, of which subdivision 50 was as follows:
"For the organization of mutual fire associations without an authorized or subscribed capital stock. The stockholders of all private corporations created under the provisions of this act shall be required to subscribe at least fifty per cent and pay in at least ten per cent of its authorized capital before it shall be authorized to do business in this State; and whenever the stockholders of any such company shall furnish satisfactory evidence to the Secretary of State that at least fifty per cent of its authorized capital has been subscribed and ten per cent paid in, it shall be the duty of said officer to receive, file, and record the charter of such company in the office of the Secretary of State upon application and the payment of all fees therefor, and to give his certificate showing the record of such charter and authority to do business thereunder; provided, that foreign corporations obtaining permits to do business in this State shall show to the satisfaction of the Secretary of State that fifty per cent of their authorized capital stock has been subscribed and that at least ten per cent of the authorized capital has been paid in before such permit is issued." Laws 24th Leg. (1895), p. 193.
The last proviso contains the first reference made in any of the statutes *297 amending article 566 to foreign corporations or permits. That subject had been regulated by other statutes which were codified by the revisers in articles 745-749 before referred to.
At the same session of the Legislature which adopted the new Revised Statutes and the amendment just stated, an act for their publication and distribution was passed which provided that the "Revised Civil Statutes, the Penal Code, and the Code of Criminal Procedure" should be published and distributed in a volume to be entitled "The Revised Statutes of Texas of 1895," and contained the following:
"Sec. 4. Where any article in said Revised Statutes or Codes shall have been amended and re-enacted by either of said Legislatures, said articles shall be omitted, and the article as amended and re-enacted shall be inserted in lieu thereof, with marginal notes or references showing the date of the statute by which said article was amended, and the page of the session acts in which said statute appears." Laws 24th Leg., p. 110.
In pursuance of this direction, the volume was published, containing, as article 642, the amendment adopted in 1895 of article 566 of the old revision, instead of that of 1891, as reported by the codifiers.
In 1897, the act relied on by respondent was passed. It was entitled "An act to amend articles 641 and 642, chapter 2, title 21, of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas relating to the creation of corporations." Like the article amended, this statute again defines the purposes for which corporations may be formed, adding several subdivisions, one of which is as follows:
"The stockholders of all private corporations created for profit and with an authorized capital stock under the provisions of this chapter shall be required to subscribe at least fifty per cent and pay in at least ten per cent of its authorized capital before it shall be authorized to do business in this State, and whenever the stockholders of any such company shall furnish satisfactory evidence to the Secretary of State that at least fifty per cent of its authorized capital has been subscribed, and ten per cent paid in, it shall be the duty of said officer to receive, file, and record the charter of such company in the office of the Secretary of State upon application and the payment of all fees therefor, and to give his certificate showing the record of said charter, and authority to do business thereunder; provided, that foreign corporations obtaining permits to do business in this State shall show to the satisfaction of the Secretary of State that fifty per cent of their authorized capital stock has been subscribed, and that at least ten per cent of the authorized capital has been paid in, before such permit is issued." Laws 25th Leg. (1897), pp. 188-192.
The contention of plaintiff is that the last proviso, relating to permits to foreign corporations, is not embraced within the subject named in the title to the act. If we could disregard the reference in the title to the number of the article of the Revised Statutes to be amended, and look alone to the words, "relating to the creation of private corporations," *298
as expressing the whole subject of the act, it may be true that such expression would not be broad enough to admit provisions concerning the issuance of permits to foreign corporations. This it is unnecessary to decide, since, in view of the previous decisions in this and other courts and of the course of legislation based upon their authority, it must be held that such a reference to the number of an article in a code, such as our Revised Statutes, is sufficient in the title of an act amendatory thereof to allow any amendment germane to the subject treated in the article referred to. Gunter v. Texas Land Mortgage Co.,
The effect of the reference to the article to be amended is not restricted by the other language of the title to the act in question. Such other language is, as far as it goes, properly descriptive of the subject of the amended, as well as of the amendatory, act. It simply does not cover the whole of the subject; but the reference to the number of the article to be amended does include, as the subject of the amendatory act, the whole subject embraced by the provisions of the former. It is that article which the title proposes to amend, and not merely such parts of it as relate to the creation of corporations.
It seems to be contended, however, that the reference to the article of the Revised Statutes to be amended should be treated as meaning the article of that number as embraced in the Code adopted by the Legislature, and not that published in the volume, the assumption being that the Legislature adopted the article 642 in the Code reported by the revisers, which contained no reference to permits to foreign corporations. The answer is that the article, as reported, never became a part of the adopted revision. By the operation of section 26 of the act adopting the Revised Statutes, and of section 4 of the act providing for the publication and distribution thereof, before stated, article 642, as reported, was displaced and the amendment of 1895 substituted in its stead, and the latter became the provision really adopted as article 642, and was therefore properly published as such. The Act of 1897 must therefore be regarded as an amendment of article 642, as contained in the published volume.
It is further urged that the Act of 1895 before stated as amending article 566, as enacted by the amendment of 1893, was itself void as to the proviso concerning the issuance of permits to foreign corporations, because there was nothing upon that subject in the law amended and *299 no title to the amending act sufficient to embrace it. We shall assume, without definitely so deciding, that this proposition is true. Its correctness may depend, however, upon the effect to be given to section 43, article 3, of the Constitution, which provides: "The first session of the Legislature under this Constitution shall provide for revising, digesting, and publishing the laws, civil and criminal; and a like revision, digest, and publication may be made every ten years thereafter; provided, that in the adoption of and giving effect to any such digest or revision, the Legislature shall not be limited by sections 35 and 36 of this article."
By this provision, the Legislature, in adopting and "giving effect to" the revision, is exempted from the requirement as to titles to bills. Whether this exemption exists only in the enactment of the bill directly adopting and putting in force the code, or also in the framing and passing, at the same session, of other bills adopting amendments which are made by the Legislature a part of the body of laws established, is a question which we do not find it necessary to decide.
Unless it is saved by the provision of the Constitution just quoted, it is probably true that the last proviso of subdivision 50 of the Act of 1895, amending article 566, was void, because it related to a subject embraced neither in that article nor in the title of the amendatory act. It would be true, also, that such proviso, from merely being published by authority in the Revised Statutes, would not acquire the force of law. The whole of the article as amended would not, in this view, be void, since the objection affected only the parts of it which were not germane to the subject of the original article, and therefore all of article 642 in the published volume, except those parts to which the objection applies, stood as the law of the State when the Legislature, in 1897, came to act upon it, and could properly be referred to as an article of the Revised Statutes in framing an amendment.
The question therefore arises whether or not the title to the Act of 1897, in giving the number of the article to be amended, sufficiently indicated the subject treated in the unconstitutional proviso, as a part of the subject of the amendatory act. We can see no substantial reason why this question should not be answered in the affirmative. The object of the requirement that the subject of an act should be stated in its title is simply to direct attention to the subject to be legislated upon. Such subject is sufficiently indicated when the title gives the number of an article of the Code in which it is included; and the fact that a provision in such article may be unconstitutional does not lessen the effect of the reference to it as notice that it is to be made the subject of further legislation. The amendatory act derives no force as law from any virtue in the act amended, but takes its effect from the new exercise of legislative power. If such power is exerted and the legislative will expressed in accordance with the Constitution, such expression becomes law without the aid of the statute referred to in the title, whether the latter is constitutional or not. The statute *300 amended is referred to only to indicate the subject with which the Legislature proposes to deal, and to such purpose its validity is not essential. The very object of the amendment may be to supply a constitutional enactment in the place of one which was unconstitutional.
It is sometimes said, broadly, that, since an unconstitutional statute is void, it can not be amended, and that hence another statute attempting an amendment of it is void. It is doubtless true that the amendment of an unconstitutional law does not impart efficacy to it, but it by no means follows that the new statute is void. It may contain all the elements of a valid enactment and therefore may have the force of law from its adoption. The mere fact that it attempts to amend an invalid statute can not defeat it when it is, itself, a complete expression of legislative will, made in conformity with constitutional requirements.
While the invalid statute may have no force of its own, it may serve, when properly referred to, to indicate the subject upon which the Legislature proposes to pass a valid law.
It was held in the case of Quinlan v. Houston, etc., Railway Company,
The various provisions of article 642, as contained in the Act of 1895, did not constitute legislation upon more than one subject. All of such provisions might properly have been put in one statute with a title sufficiently broad to cover them. The defect consisted in the restrictive character of the title, which limited the subject to the creation of corporations. But, when the Legislature in 1897 acted upon the subject, it employed a title sufficient to cover all the provisions actually contained in the article to which the title pointed, and hence the new exercise of the legislative power made all such provisions valid.
Our conclusion is that the provision in question is valid, and that plaintiff, not having complied with it, is not entitled to the issuance of the permit.
Writ refused. *301