169 P. 929 | Idaho | 1917
In her petition for a writ of mandate plaintiff alleges that during the fourteenth session of the legislature she was assistant engrossing clerk of the House of Eepresentatives; that on March 9, 1917, just prior to adjournment, the House of Eepresentatives passed the following resolution:
“Be it resolved, that the employees of the House shall receive compensation in addition to their usual per diem rate for all time in discharging their duties, in excess of eight hours per day at a rate based upon that per diem and that the speaker of the House and the chief clerk are hereby authorized to certify to the state auditor all such claims for compensation which in the speaker’s judgment, they are entitled; be it further
“Eesolved, that the speaker and chief clerk are hereby directed to retain a sufficient number of employees of the House to arrange and compáre records and files of the House and make final lawful disposition thereof; that the speaker and chief clerk shall receive for such services the sum now being paid them as their per diem, and are authorized and directed to certify to the state auditor such additional compensation for the other employees of the House as may be necessarily incurred for the work covered by this resolution.”
In his return defendant denied that the speaker and chief clerk had any authority to certify to plaintiff’s claim or authorize its payment, and that the duties alleged to have been performed by her were duties devolving, by statute, upon the chief clerk of the House. Plaintiff demurred to the return.
The employment of clerical and other assistants to the legislature has been provided for, and their duties and compensation have been fixed, by secs. 75 to 84, inclusive, Eev. Codes. The only provision to be found authorizing the performance of work, or payment therefor, after the close of a legislative session, is in see. 79, and it is as follows:
“It shall be the duty of the secretary of the Senate and chief clerk of the House, at the close of each session 'of the legislature, to mark, label and arrange all bills and papers belonging to the archives of their respective Houses, and to deliver the same, together with all the boobs of both Houses, to the Secretary of State, who shall certify to the reception*139 of the same; and upon the production of said certificate to the state auditor, the auditor is authorized and directed to draw his warrant upon the treasurer in favor of the above-named parties for the sum of twenty-five dollars each, and the treasurer is authorized to pay the same out of any money in the general fund not otherwise appropriated.”
The resolution relied upon by plaintiff is not a law. Sec. 15, art. 3, of the constitution provides: “No law shall be passed except by bill, .... nor shall any bill beeomé a law unless the same shall have been read on three several days in each House, previous to the final vote thereon.” And it is provided in sec. 10, art. 4: “Every bill passed by the legislature, shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the Governor. If he approve, he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become a law;.....” It is not contended that the resolution was a bill, nor that it was submitted to the Senate or presented to the Governor.
No constitutional or statutory authority exists for one branch of the legislature, acting independently of the other, to bind the state for the compensation of employees for work to be performed after adjournment, nor is any authority to be found, other than the resolution above quoted (which is ineffectual) to justify the speaker and ehief clerk in certifying this claim to the state auditor, nor to make it the duty of that official to draw his warrant in payment thereof.
This action cannot be maintained. The demurrer to the return is overruled, the alternative writ quashed and the peremptory writ denied. Costs are awarded to defendant.