147 Tenn. 589 | Tenn. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The above-styled cases were consolidated by consent of the parties, and were heard together in the lower court and in this court.
The three suits were brought by state officials to enjoin interference with the possession of the offices they held. It was alleged tha the defendants were claiming to be entitled to exercise the function*, of the offices held by complainants by reason of the provisions of an act of the legislature known as House Bill No. 183, approved by the Governor January 31, 1923. It was averred that said act was unconstitutional and void. A temporary restraining order was issued by the chancellor, and answers were filed by the defendants. The chancellor sustained the validity of the act and dismissed the three bills, from which decree the complainants have appealed to this court.
The discussion here has been confined to the question of the constitutionality of the act.
The first assault made upon the act is that it violates section 17 of article 2 of the Constitution, in that: (1) It contains more than one subject; (2) that the body of the act is broader than the caption; and (3) that it undertakes
It is first contended that the caption of the act expresses no subject of legislation whatever. We think this is a mistake.
The title of the act is as follows:
“An act to reorganize the administration of the State in order to secure better service and through co-ordination and consolidation to promote economy and efficiency in the work of the government, creating and establishing certain departments and. offices and prescribing their powers and duties, fixing certain salaries, abolishing certain offices, boards, commissions and ether agencies, and repealing conflicting acts and parts of acts.”
The subject of the act seems rather plain from an inspection of the title. It proposes “to reorganize the administration of the State” in the manner indicated.
As here used, the word “administration” means the executive part of government. This is the primary meaning of the word as defined by Noah Webster. It is so used by such authorities as Lord Macaulay and Dr. Johnson. It is so used by all counsel in this case who refer to this act sponsored by the chief executive as the “administration bill.”
“The administration of government means the practical management and direction of the executive department. . . .” Black’s. Law Dictionary.
The word is sometimes used to express a broader meaning, but commonly indicates the executive machinery of government.
It is argued, if this be the subject of the act, the body of it is too broad, because it is said to regulate matters of a
Tbe board of law examiners is only affected in this, that by section 39 of tbe act tbe registrar of professions and trades is made a sort of secretary and treasurer for tbe board to receive all applications for licenses, and to collect all fees fixed by law in connection with tbe work of that board. His other duties, in so far as this board is cohcerned, must be performed with the consent of tbe board, and no judicial function of tbe board is conferred upon this official, if it be conceded that tbe board of law examiners is a judicial body.
The extent to wbicb the act touches the supreme court is that by section 16, section 12, subsec. 7, and section 21 tbe department of finance and taxation and tbe commissioner of finance and taxation are given certain authority over tbe expenditures of the court. This authority so given does not, we think, infringe upon any judicial pero-gative of tbe court. Whether it touches upon tbe court’s inherent and statutory power of administration with reference to its own business is another Question, but a question not at all material in determining whether the act undertakes to regulate tbe exercise of tbe judicial powers of the court.
It is true that quasi judicial powers are conferred on such officers, but that dors not make them judicial officers. In Richardson v. Young, 122 Tenn., 471, 125 S. W., 664, it is shown that as a matter of practice it has been found impossible to entirely preserve the theoretical lines be- • tween the three departments of government. In Woods v. State, 130 Tenn., 100, 169 S. W., 558, L. R. A., 1915F, 531, it is noted that judicial powers are commonly conferred on sheriffs, clerks of courts, notaries public, registers of deeds, district attorneys general, and other administrative officers.
We know, too, that the power to make rules is commonly given to boards and commissions. 12 C. J. 847; Woods v. State, supra. These rules have the force of statutes, and their formulation is really the exercise of a legislative power.
So the fact that certain limited judicial and legislative powers are conferred upon executive officers does not change their status as such officers, nor is it inappropriate or beyond the scope of a statute dealing with executive officers to confer such powers.
Since it is the customary and usual thing to endow executive officers with some legislative and judicial authority, we do not think such matter in this act made it broader than its ^aption.
The statute before us undertakes to deal, it is said, with about sixty commissions, boards, departments, and officers
It has bfien held in Tennessee since Cannon v. Mathes, 55 Tenn. (8 Heisk.), 504, that the generality of a title is not objectionable if not made a cover for legislation incongruous in itself, and that the legislature must determine for itself how broad and comprehensive the object of the statute shall be. Our cases are very numerous.' The last review of them is contained in State v. Cumberland Club, 136 Tenn., 84, 188 S. W., 583.
We would heistate to say what is the limit, if any, to the scope of an act of the legislature suitably entitled. We have many acts covering very wide fields.
For instance, chapter 142 of the Acts of 1875 is entitled “An act to provide for the organization of corporations.” In this statute and the amendments thereto is contained most of the corporation law of Tennessee, and its validity has not been seriously questioned. Railroad v. Transportation Co., 128 Tenn., 277, 160 S. W., 522.
In State v. McCann, 72 Tenn. (4 Lea), 17, the court held an act to contain but one subject that dealt with the fees of the clerks of all the courts in this State, the county trustees, registers of deeds, the district attorneys, and the Secretary of State.
In Carroll v. Alsup, 107 Tenn., 257, 64 S. W., 193, a revenue bill with all its many provisions was held to contain but one subject.
We cannot say that an act which undertakes to reorganize the administration of the State is omnibus legislation, although it may affect sixty officials, so long as unity of purpose is preserved.
The question as to whether the various provisions of an act are congruous and germane is largely a question of fact to be determined upon our knowledge of affairs. Frazier v. Railroad, 88 Tenn., 138, 12 S. W., 537.
Upon careful examination of the statute before us, we think its object or purpose is sufficiently expressed in the title, and that its provisions are germane to the title, and not incongruous with each other.
Some reference is made to authorities in other states upon the limits of a legislative enactment. We cannot go into these, since we have so many cases of our own.
The authorities generally are considered in Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction, section 117, and the author states that “there is no constitutional restriction as to the scope or magnitude of the single subject of a legislative act.” It may be noted that the supreme court of Kansas held that “An act. to establish a code of laws;” embraced but a single subject or object; yet it might include all the state’s general statutes. Bowman v. Cockrill, 6 Kan., 311.
Before passing we should notice a statement in Acklen v. Thompson, 122 Tenn., 43, 126 S. W., 730, 135 Am. St. Rep., 851, to the effect that a single act could not be passed containing provisions for the protection of game animals,
We think the statute under consideration is expressly repealing. This purpose is expressed both in caption and body. Shelton v. State, 96 Tenn., 521, 32 S. W., 967; Turner v. State, 111 Tenn., 593, 69 S. W., 774; Stinnett v. State, 142 Tenn., 94, 217 S. W., 343.
The statute by abolishing numerous offices created by former acts, the incumbents of which office,, were to direct the various activities to which said acts devoted the State, thereby, repealed such portions of said former acts as immediately .provided for their execution. In section 59 of the act before us some forty-nine offices, commissions, boards, etc., are abolished.
We thmk the statute does ..’ecite in its caption and otherwise the title or substance of the laws in port repealed.
Where an act proposes to repeal or amend several laws relating to one subject, it is not neecssary for it to recite the title or substance of each previous law separately. One descriptive word or phrase may be employed if it conveys the purport of all the earlier statutes. Thuo two acts establishing and defining the powers of the municipal corporation of the city of Knoxville were sufficiently identified by mention of them as the “charter of sa’d city” in a later
To the same effect is Van Dyke v. Thompson, 136 Tenn., 136, 189 S. W., 62, where the reference was to the charter of Chattanooga.
Again it was held that an amendatory statute made apt inference to our various liquor laws as “the law- of the State of Tennessee prohibiting the maní lacture, sale, importation, transportation or possession of intoxicating liquors.” Minter v. State, 145 Tenn., 678, 238 S. W., 89.
The substance of all the laws directly trimmed by the act of January 31, 1923, was the creation of officials to carry on for the state various efforts undertaken. These were all executive or administrativo officials. Such laws practically furnished the State its administration, and. a statute entitled “An act to reorganize the administration of the State, . . . abolishing certain offices, . . . repealing . . . acts and parts of acts,” unerringly pointed to the laws it was designed to reach.
Such i> reference is clearer and carries sharper notice of the general scope of the repeal than had ah effort been made to recite in haec verba all the titles of all the previous acts. This woxlt have made a voluminous caption indeed. Members of the legislature were plainly notified by this caption that this act proposed to operate on the earlier laws setting up the administration of the State.
In a late case it was said: “This court has established a liberal interpretation in upholding amendatory acts where the caption and the body of the act taker' as a whole, and from a practical standpoint, indicate the subject of the legislation sought to be affected.” Greenwood v. Rickman, 145 Tenn., 361, 235 S. W., 425.
Section 59 provides: “That from and after the date upon which this act shall become effective, the following departments, bureaus, offices, boards, commissions and agen--cies of the state government heretofore created by law shall be and are hereby abolished: [Then follows a list of forty-nine departments, bureaus, offices, etc., state tax commissioner, state board of equalization, state revenue agents, etc.]”
We have heretofore seen that the caption of the act under discussion pointed to the laws establishing the administration or administrative offices of the State as those-to be affected. It did not, however, detail these laws. But section 59 abolished the state tax commissioner, “heretofore created by law,” the state board of equalization, “heretofore created by law,” the state revenue agents, “heretofore created by law,” and so on through a list of forty-nine.
To abolish an office created by a law is but a method of repealing so much of the law as creates the office. So that section 59 in equivalent words partially repealed the law creating the state tax commissioner, the law creating the state board of equalization, the law creating the state revenue agents, ,and partially repealed the laws creating the other officers therein enumerated. The various laws were identified as those creating the various offices. This is entirely adequate, for the substance of each of these laws was the creation of the particular office with provisions
To further simplify the reference to the laws partially repealed, a list containing the acts of the legislature so treated, enumerated by year of passage and chapter number, is set out in section 64 of the act before us.
It is nest insisted that the act of January 31, 1923, was not passed as required by section 18 and section 21 of article 2 of the Constitution. The charge is that an aye and no vote was not taken on the final passage of the hill in the House, and that the hill was not properly submitted for final passage in the House after it was returned to that body with Senate amendments. Without going into this, we find no affirmative showing in the House Journal that constitutional procedure was not observed. Our cases have firmly established the proposition that, where an act of the legislature has been signed by the respective speakers of both houses in open session, and that fact noted on the journals, and has been approved by the Governor as required by the Constitution, every -reasonable presumption is in favor of the regularity of its passage, and the act will be sustained unless the journals affirmatively show the absence of some constitutional requirements. The court will nr l presume from the mere silence of the Journal that one of the legislative bodies has disregarded the Constitution. Jackson v. Mfg. Co., 124 Tenn., 421, 137 S. W., 757; Home Teleg. Co. v. Nashville, 118 Tenn., 1, 101 S. W., 770, 11 Ann. Cas., 824; State v. Algood, 87 Tenn., 163, 10 S. W., 310; Williams v. State, 6 Lea, 553; State v. McConnell, 3 Lea, 341.
A majority of the court were without intention to modify this rule in Webb v. Carter, 129 Tenn., 182, 165 S. W.,
It is submitted that the act of 1923 violates section 1 and section 2 of article 2 of the Constitution, which divides the government of the State into three parts, executive, judicial, and legislative, and forbids any person belonging to one department from exercising the powers of another department, “except in the cases herein directed or permitted.”
Section 57 of the act provides that with the approval of the Governor the commissioner of each department shall have authority to consolidate any two or more offices created in his department by the provisions of the act, or to reduce the number of, or create new divisions therein. It is said these officers are thus given legislative powers.
We have heretofore noted that certain legislative powers are customarily given to administrative officers. Whether the power here conferred on the Commissioners is in contravention of section 1 and section 2 of article 2 of the Constitution is a question that does not arise on this record. It will be time enough to determine this question when it is raised by some removed officer or employee or other person adversely affected.
The final contention of the complainants is that by the act of 1923 they were legislated out of their offices; that these offices were not abolished absolutely and in good faith, but were recreated with substantially the same du
They rely on this court’s previous declaration that the legislature is without power to “take from the officer the substance of the office, and transfer it to another, to be appointed in a different manner, and to hold by á different tenure, although the name of the office is changed, or the office divided, and the duties assigned to two or more officers under different names.” Malone v. Williams, 118 Tenn., 390, 103 S. W., 798.
Upon this ground and others the court held unconstitutional chapter 184 of the Acts of 1907, providing a new charter for Memphis.
The same bench that decided Malone v. Williams, with one change in its personnel, three years thereafter found it necessary to limit the application of the broad doctrine of that case just above quoted.
Chapter 298 of the Acts of 1909 gave Memphis another charter — a commission form of government, instead of the bicameral form. The effect of this act was to abolish certain offices and to turn out certain officers, and this same attack, successfully made on the act of 1907 was made on the act of 1909.
This court, however, in an elaborate and carefully considered opinion by Justice Shields, sustained chapter 298 of the Acts of 1909. Hunter v. Crump, MS. Jackson, 1910. The court held it competent for the legislature to change the plan of government under which a municipal subdivision of the State had hitherto functioned, when it seemed
Chapter 10, Private Acts of 1911, provided a new charter for Chattanooga, dispensed with certain offices and officers, and Malone v. Williams was invoked against that Act. The court, though, followed Hunter v. Crump, and Justice Buchanan in a published opinion said:
“But there is a public necessity that the legislature shall have power to abolish an office when it has ceased to be a necessity to the public, or when it forms a part of a scheme of municipal government, and its abolition is necessary, or so deemed by the legislature, in order that a better form of municipal government may be conferred; and here, or in this class of cases, because and by reason'of the public necessity that this power should exist in the legislature, the incumbent of the office holds it subject to the legislative power, and the right to abolish whensoever that power and right may be exercised by legislative enactment not otherwise in conflict with the Constitution.” Van Dyke v. Thompson, 136 Tenn., 136, 189 S. W., 62.
In 1915 the legislature adopted a new system for the penal reformatory and charitable institutions of the State. By chapter 20, Acts of that year, these institutions were placed under the direction of a “board of control.” Chapter 3 of the Acts of 1915 repealed chapter 125 of the Acts of 1897, providing for the management of the state penitentiary. Under the act of 1897 one Linkous held the office of chaplain at the Brushy Mountain branch of the state peni
“Appellant insists that the two acts, when construed together, indicate a purpose to legislate him out of office, while leaving the office with its duties unimpaired. But the answer to this is that, if the legislature considered that chapter 125 of the Acts of 1897 should,' in the interest of the public be repealed because a better scheme for the management of the state penitentiary could be enacted, then it was not only within the competency, but the duty of that body to repeal the act of 1897, and substitute therefor appropriate legislation; and this although an incident of the repeal might be the shortening of the relator’s existing term of office. . . .”
“The effort was not to recreate or revive the same system with appellant eliminated. The conclusion reached was that- the penal, reformatory, and charitable institutions controlled and operated by 'the State should be under the management of a state board of control, such as is created by chapter 20 of the Acts of 1915; and, having reached that conclusion, the legislature set about the accomplishment of the reform. Chapter 125 of 1897 was an obstacle. It stood in the way of the contemplated reform, and for that reason it was repealed. It was appellant’s misfortune that the act on which his office hung stood in the way of a scheme for better government of the State’s institutions.” State ex rel. Linkous v. Morris, 136 Tenn., 157, 189 S. W., 67.
It should be observed that Chief Justice Neil, who prepared the opinion of the court in Malone v. Williams, con
The bona-fides of a new order cannot be tested alone by the transfer of the duties of old offices to new ones, as has been argued. Such a test would make it impossible to put a new scheme of government into effect, unless intrusted to the old hands. There are particular services that must be rendered by some one in any form of government, and a new system cannot be stricken down because it proposes to continue to discharge essential duties. Old offices may be abolished, not only when their functions become useless, but when, as constituted, they do not fit into the new scheme.
Now, the act' of January 31, 1923, inaugurates a new regime. This proposition is not. debatable. Heretofore the administration of the government of the State has been one of distributed powers. Hereafter the “administration,” using the word as previously defined, is to be one of centralized power, the governor controlling.
What place could such offices as complainants have been filling have in the new system? .
The tax commissioner and the members of the board of equalization were chosen by the legislature. Chapter 113, Acts of 1921.
The warden of the main prison was appointed by a former Governor. Chapter 39, Acts of 1919.
These officials all had their tenure, compensation, duties, and responsibilities fixed by statutes. They could not be removed except for cause. Wide latitude was given them in the conduct of their work. If they differed from the Governor as to the policies of their offices, he was helpless during their terrhs. The tax commissioner and the board of equalization were entirely independent of him; the highway department nearly so.
The duties of the old highway department are transferred to the department of highways and public works by the act of 1923.
The duties of the warden are transferred to the department of institutions.
The duties of the tax commissioner and the board of equalization are transferred to the department of finance and taxation. A new board of equalization is organized in connection with the department of finance and taxation, consisting of the Governor, the commissioner of finance and taxation, the superintendent of taxation, the treasurer, and the secretary of state.
The commissioner of -finance and taxation is appointed by the Governor, and the superintendent of taxation is appointed by the commissioner of finance and taxation; so
The commissioners of the eight departments established by the act of 1923 are appointed by the Governor and hold office “at the pleasure of the Governor.”
The officers, assistants, and employees of each department are designated by the commissioner of that department “with the approval of the Governor,” and are subject to “employment regulations established by the department of finance and taxation.”
It is thus obvious that no official nor group of officials ordained by the new law can successfully oppose the judgment of the Governor or gainsay his will. It was frankly stated at the bar that the design of the act of 1928 was to confer upon the Governor absolute authority in the administrative affairs of the state.
Of a truth, then, officials otherwise selected than by the Governor, not amenable to him, independent of his wishes, with tenures fixed, and broad powers conferred by statute, are out of place in the plan adopted. They could defeat the Governor’s most cherished purpose. As stated by Justice Buchanan, they would stand in the way of what the legislature considered “a scheme for better government of the State’s institutions.” State ex rel. Linkous v. Morris, supra.
We might speak of the co-ordination and consolidation and economy and efficiency in the work of government referred to in the act of 1923,- and how that, if the enactment has such tendencies, these considerations are paramount to the rights of office holders. This, however, would require some examination of the controversy as to the probable drift of the act, and we think we have said enough.
It is acclaimed by defendants’ counsel as a return to fundamental principles, making the Governor the chief executive in fact, as well as in theory.
No expression from the court as to the wisdom of the statute would be seemly. We should say, however, since in our opinion it deals alone with duties anad functions essentially executive, the centralization of power does not offend the Constitution. All these powers might have been conferred on the Governor individually, and he might have been directly' charged with their execution had the legislature deemed it feasible and best so to do.
' The chancellor was of opinion that section 14 was invalid and elided it from the statute. No error is assigned upon this action below, and we acquiesce therein.
The act of 1923 is so comprehensive, touches so many things, and so many other laws, it will for a time require some construction. It may be that it contains other provisions that cannot stand, not so far brought to our attention. Nothing, however, has yet been suggested, and we have discovered nothing that goes to its integrity as a whole. Some other minor objections were rniade to the statute in argument, which we do not think require discussion. They have been considered, but deemed unimportant.
The decree of the chancellor will be affirmed, and complainants’ bills dismissed.