17 Cal. 23 | Cal. | 1860
Field, C. J. and Cope, J. concurring.
The plaintiff below, respondent here, filed a bill to restrain the defendants from carrying out the provisions of an act and amendatory act passed at the last session of the Legislature. (Session Acts of 1860, 90-138.) The titles of these acts are respectively as follow: “ An act to authorize the county of Butte to purchase and hold two hundred thousand dollars of the first mortgage bonds of the California Northern Railroad Company, and to issue the bonds of said county for the payment of the same, and for other purposes connected therewith,” page 90. “An act amendatory of and supplemental to an act entitled, an act to authorize the county of Butte to purchase and hold two hundred thousand dollars of the first mortgage bonds of the California Northern Railroad Company, and to issue the bonds of said county for the payment of the same, and for other purposes connected therewith,” page 133. By the last act the original act is amended in all of its sections, except the first. The first section is in these ivords: “It shall be the duty of the Board of Supervisors of the county of Butte to call an election, giving twenty days’ notice thereof, by publication in all the newspapers published in said county, to be held on or before the first Saturday in April next, for the purpose of submitting to the qualified electors of said county, the proposition for said county to purchase and hold two hundred thousand dollars of the first mortgage bonds of the California Northern Railroad Company, having twenty years to run to maturity, and to issue the bonds of said county in payment for the same, the proceeds thereof to be applied by the California Northern Railroad Company in building or constructing
The fourth section of the amendatory act is as follows: “ This section shall be known as section nine of said act. If the election to be held in pursuance of the act to which this is amendatory and supplementary, shall authorize the issuance of said bonds of said county, the Board of Supervisors of said county, in that event, are authorized and empowered to issue the bonds of said county in accordance with the provisions of said act, to the California Railroad Company, or any other company that may be incorporated to construct a railroad connecting the same points as provided in said act.”
The main question made by the record, and pressed by the respondent is, that this act is not a law, for the reason that the matter prescribed is not the will of the Legislature, but a mere transfer to the people of Butte county of powers to legislate. The argument is, that the Constitution vests the Legislature with the law-making power, and that this department cannot delegate its powers to the people of the State, or any portion of them. It is contended that this act, by the fourth section, makes the issuance of the bonds absolutely dependent upon the result of the election; and that, therefore, the majority of the voters of the county, and not the Legislature, decree their issuance. The general principle is unquestionably true, that our system is not a pure democracy, but a representative republican government; one of whose departments, the Legislature, has the exclusive faculty of enacting laws. But the legislative department, representing the mass of political powers, is no further controlled as to its powers, or the mode of
The case of Parker v. The Commonwealth (6 Penn. 507) arose upon an act giving the citizens of certain counties the power to decide by vote whether the sale of vinous and spirituous liquors shall be continued within those counties, and imposing a penalty for the sale of such liquors when a majority of the votes had been against such sale. It was held that the act was unconstitutional. This was delegating to the people the right to pass a penal law.
Grant v. Courter (24 Barb. 242) is a case where a law was made to depend upon the consent of two-thirds of the tax payers
The majority opinion thus states the conclusion: “ There is no difference in practical or legal effect between an act conferring power to borrow money upon the event of the people deciding, in a mode provided by the act, that it is expedient to borrow, and an act vesting the power absolutely, but prohibiting its exercise, unless the people shall decide it is expedient. In neither case do the people decide, except impliedly and by inference, upon the expediency of the law.
Some stress is laid upon the peculiar terms of the act of 1860. “ If the election shall authorize the issuance of said bonds, the Board of Supervisors, in that event, are empowered to issue the bonds.” It is ingeniously urged that this language shows that the authority for the issuance of the bonds comes from this election, and not from the law, and that, therefore, the voters are really the law makers. This argument is more specious than sound. If effect were given to it, it would prove that no condition dependent upon the act or will of a third person, could be made in a law, since the person so acting would be, in effect, the law maker. But we have
If the effect of this act had been made dependent upon the acceptance or approval of the Board of Supervisors, no doubt would exist of the validity of the act and of the condition. How is it less effectual from the fact that the act is only operative by the consent of a larger number, to wit: the body of the people of the county, who may be considered, for all municipal purposes, corporators of the county ?
The substance of the act is this grant of power to authorize the issuance of these bonds, upon condition of the assent of the voters, and the precise words used by the Legislature are not important, the sense and design being obvious from a just construction of the whole act.
It is not easy to draw the exact line of discrimination between the principle of the cases in New York, which deny the constitutionality of acts of the Legislature, like the school law, and of those cases which affirm the constitutionality of acts like those in the ease of the city of Rochester. Eminent Judges have doubted the soundness of the distinction, and denied the conclusion reached in the first class of cases. It is, perhaps, enough to say that the distinction is recognized; and, in our judgment, the rule announced
2. It is urged that publication ivas not made for twenty days after the amendatory act was passed. But this was not required. The substantial matter was provided for in the original act, and the details provided for in the amendatory act did not affect the substantial features of the original act; nor was it contemplated that there should be twenty days’ publication of the provisions of the amendatory act.
3. There is no force in the point that polls were not opened in every precinct. The act did not require that this should be done, but the election seems governed by the same rules which prevail at elections for public officers.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.