27 Neb. 758 | Neb. | 1889
On July 8, 1889, Robert Eenton, A. Perkins, John Mordhorst, Michael Keckley, Patrick Murphy, and J. W. Bridenthal, plaintiffs, filed their petition for an injunction in the district court of said county against Thomas Yule, as chairman of the county board of supervisors, and Geo. E. Emery, county clerk, alleging that the plaintiffs are citizens and taxpayers and duly qualified electors of said county, which is duly organized under the laws for the government and administration of counties; that the defendants are duly elected and qualified officers of the county as designated, and that on May 7,1889, said chairman and the board of county supervisors called a special election to be held in said county on June 18 following, to submit to the legal voters for their acceptance or rejection the proposition to issue bonds of the county, to the amount of $100,000, of the denomination of $1,000 each, for the purposes of building and completing a court house on block twenty-four of Cropsey’s addition to the city of Beatrice, at the county seat of said county; the entire proceeds, or so much as required, to be devoted to that purpose ; said bonds to be .payable to the bearer at the state’s fiscal agency in New York city, at the expiration of twenty
That notice of the election was duly given, and it was held, returned, and canvassed in the same time and manner, and by the same officers, as required by law, at a general election in this state, by which it appears there were cast 5,059 votes, of which 2,589 were in favor of the proposition and 2,470 against it.
This election was called under an act entitled “An act to amend the second sub-division of section 25, article 1, chapter 18, of Comp. Stat., approved February 26, 1889,” the defendants claiming authority under said law to issue said bonds.
The plaintiffs aver that the proposition was not carried, and that the statute under which the same is claimed to be authorized is unconstitutional and invalid for the reasons:
1. That the statute does not set out the entire section amended.
2. The substance amended, so far as it attempts to grant a power to borrow money and issue bonds, is not germane to the subject-matter of the second subdivision of the section amended.
3. The subject of the amendment, the power to borrow money and issue bonds, is not within the title of the amendatory act.
That the defendants, in violation of law, claim that insomuch as the proposition received a majority of the votes it is earned, and they have the power to levy and collect the special tax provided for in the call for said election, and by law to issue, dispose of, and redeem said bonds and the interest thereon, notwithstanding such power is derived solely from the provisions of section 30, article 1, chapter 18, of Comp. Stat., which requires that said proposition must have received two-thirds of all the votes cast.
"Wherefore the plaintiffs pray for an injunction against the defendants, restraining and enjoining them from proceeding in any inspect to carry out the proposition submitted at said special election, etc.
Whereupon, on July 8, 1889, the following order was made:
“ The petition having been presented to the district judge of the first judicial district of Nebraska, and deeming it proper that the defendants should be heard before granting the temporary injunction within prayed, in the presence of attorneys for both parties, the 13th of July, 1889, at 2 P. M., at the court house in Beatrice, .is appointed as the time and place for the hearing of the application therefor.
“ In the meantime defendants are restrained as prayed within and until such hearing and ruling thereon, on giving bonds according to law in the sum of $1,000.
“J. H. Broady, Judge.”
On July 15 following the defendants demurred to the petition, that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. On July 17 following it was ordered by
The first point presented by appellants in the brief of counsel is, that the act of the legislature approved February 26, 1889, entitled “An act to amend the second division of section 25 of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes of Nebraska of 1887,” in relation to county buildings and offices, and to repeal said second division, is invalid and without the force of law; and in support of this proposition attention is called to the fact that that part of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes of 1887 embracing section 25 was passed by the legislature and approved on the 30th day of March, 1887, and that on the day following, to-wit, March 31, 1887, an act was passed and approved amending said act, which act of March 31 was not carried into the the compilation of 1887 other than as a foot-note to the page containing said section 25, with a query, whether it was in force; and the conclusion is drawn that the act of 1889 was directed to, as well in the title as the purview, and sought to amend, a repealed and superseded section.
This question was before the court, substantially, if not precisely, in the case of the State, ex rel. Burnham, v. Babcock, 23 Neb., 128. That case was submitted upon a stipulation, from which I extract the following:
“ It is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between the parties that the annexed transcript, which is incorporated in and made a part of this stipulation, is a true and accurate history and transcript of all things connected with and pertaining to the voting of $5,000 of bonds of the county of Logan, state of Nebraska, on the first day of October, 1887, said bonds having been presented to the auditor of state for registration, and he having refused to register said bonds solely on the ground that the law of 1887, being chapter 28, entitled ‘An act to amend the second division of sections 25 and 26, chapter 18, of the Compiled Statutes
In passing upon the question thus submitted the court, in the syllabus, says: “An act to amend section 25 of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes of 1885 was passed and approved March 30, 1887, to take effect from date, and on the succeeding day an act was passed to amend the second division of section 25 of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes of 1885. Held, That the amendment related to the section 25 as amended on March 30, 1887.”
Now if it was competent for the legislature on the 31st day of March, 1887, to amend the section in question by referring to it in the title and in the purview of the act as “section 25 of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes of 1885,” notwithstanding the act of March 30, then it was equally competent for the legislature of 1889 to amend the act of March 31, 1887, by referring to it both in the title and the purview as “section 25 of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes of 1887,” although the act of March 30 had been given the place in that compilation formerly occupied by the corresponding section of chapter 18 of the compilation of 1885.
It cannot be denied that there is some confusion in the application of the amendatory acts to provisions sought to be amended, but as said in the opinion above referred to, in citing the case of Comstock v. Judge, 39 Mich., 195, “ Where the amendment is plain and can be carried out, it may be held valid, even though the section numbers of the original act and of the amendment are in confusion.” The act to be amended, after all, is the act enrolled by the secretary of state, and on file in his office, and all references to compilations, or biennial publications, as session laws, are matters merely of convenience, and it often happens that that -which is used for convenience fails of its purpose
The second point presented and urged by the appellants is, that the act of 1889 does not seek to change or amend section 30 of said chapter, which is the section which gives the board of supervisors the only authority they have to levy and collect the special tax to pay the interest on the bonds, and that section requires, as a condition to their having that power, that the proposition must have had two-thirds of all the votes cast at that election.
Section 30 in its present form constituted a part of chapter 18 of the Compiled Statutes as long ago as 1881, and its provisions were a matter of detail, directory in their character, and as such applicable to section 25 as it then stood, which limited the power of the county board to the expenditure of fifteen hundred dollars for the purpose of erecting or otherwise providing a court house, jail, and other county buildings, without first submitting the proposition to a vote of the people of the county at a general election, and the same is ordered by a two-thirds vote of the legal voters thereon. Section 26 required the county board, in all cases where they should deem it necessary to levy a tax in excess of one dollar and fifty cents per one hundred dollars valuation, except in certain cases, to submit a proposition therefor to a vote of the people of the county. Section 27 prescribed the mode of submitting questions to the people for any purpose authorized by law, and sections 28 and 29 also contained matters of detail applicable to the foregoing sections. Section 25 is first in the order of sequence in the chapter which prescribes by what majority a proposition may be adopted, and is the only one which has been amended or sought to be amended. That section was first amended by the act
The act of February 26, 1889, is directed to the words three-fifths, as originally contained in the amendatory act above referred to, and amends and changes them to read a majority. The act had no other purpose, and has no other effect whatever.
Construing all these acts together, there can be no doubt that it was the intention of the legislature to clothe the county boards of the several counties with the power, and to impose upon them the duty in the class of cases therein
The point referred to in oral argument upon the amended petition of the relators, to the effect that the proposition submitted provided for the erection of a court-house upon a certain block of ground which, in fact, is not within the original plat of Beatrice, not having been discussed or referred to in the brief of counsel, I only notice here to say that a designation of a block or lot of ground upon which a public building may be erected under the provisions of the statutes now considered has no place in a proposition under said act, and would be held as merely surplusage, unless it be plainly shown that voters were misled thereby.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.