31 Neb. 262 | Neb. | 1891
. Upon the adjournment of this court last night, I was of the impression, and I believe so intimated, that we would immediately commence and write out an opinion in the regular way upon the propositions submitted. I did not expect then to deliver our decision in the manner in which it is now proposed to do it; but there are reasons deemed imperative why we should announce extemporaneously the decision we have come to now, and perhaps take a longer time in the preparation of the final opinion than we feel at liberty to withhold our decision from the parties interested, especially the members of the legislature.
I may say that we find it a larger question than we, or perhaps the public supposed it to be. While this matter has been agitating the public of the state and attracting a great deal of attention for a month or six weeks, since shortly after the election, busy people have not had the opportunity of giving it any of that technical and special examination which law questibns of importance demand, and especially one of this magnitude.
It will be conceded, I think universally, that the right of contest of an election otherwise than by legal proceedings in the proper court, is a creature of the constitution and statutory laws. It has been considered necessary to provide for contests by written law at least since the early settlement of Nebraska. While yet in a territorial form of government, and before the passing into statehood was anticipated as a matter of the near future, the legislature of the territory provided for this contingency, and pursuant thereto, the statute, a part of which is to be found on page 144 of the old revised statutes of the territory, was enacted.
That was the law when we passed from the territorial to the state form of government. Under the first constitution and on February 27,1873, the legislature enacted a statute upon the subject of elections; section 25 of this act provides the method of contesting the election of executive officers. That section provides: “ Whenever any elector of this state chooses to contest the validity of an election, or the right of any person proclaimed duly elected to the office of governor, secretary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, or other state officer, he shall proceed in like manner in giving notice and taking testimony as is provided incase of a contest relative to members of the legislative assembly, and said testimony, when taken, shall be certified by the person or persons before whom the same is taken, with a copy of the notice, to the president of the senate, who, in open session of the senate, shall open the same, and, after due deliberation of the same by the senate, they shall decide which has a right to the office, and their decision shall be final.”
This statute remained the law at the time of the adoption of the new constitution, that under which we are now living. In 1877, the first legislature, after the adoption of
This act remained the law until the passage of the act of 1879, entitled “An act to provide a general election law, the procedure relative to contested elections, and the filling of vacancies in office,” which was approved March 1,1879. This is the act under which the proceedings arise which have given occasion for this inquiry and this examination by the court. The most of these provisions are very familiar to the gentlemen whom I am now addressing in particular, and it will not be absolutely necessary to particularize them.
But special attention is called to section 4 of article 5 of the constitution of the state, under which that act was passed,- and by the light of which it must be considered. Section 4 of article 5»reads: “ The returns of every election for the officers of the executive department shall be sealed
In pursuance of that clause of the constitution, the act of the legislature which we are about to consider was passed. It seems to have been the second, and it must be presumed, the better judgment of the people as represented in the legislature of the state; and I may say here that this election law is one of the acts — one of the chapters of the statute by which we are now governed — that was arranged by the commission that was appointed for the purpose of codifying the laws by virtue of the act of the legislature of 1877. Two of these commissioners, to-wit, Mr. Calhoun and General Conner, were members of the convention which drafted the constitution, which, upon being submitted, was ratified by the people of the state; the other member, as most of you know, was Mr. Ames of this city, all of them lawyers of well known ability.
So far as I know, or am able to ascertain, the work of that commission, especially that which we are now considering, was original. I do not find that it was “borrowed,” as the term is used, from any other state; possibly it was, but my advice is that it was original with the .compilers. Of course, we must believe that, i&pon its being reported to the governor and by him to the legislature, as the work
Before we examine this statute, however, I will state that in making up our opinion special weight and consideration must be given to the constitutional provision requiring that this function of contest should be decided by the two houses of the legislature in the manner provided by law; and while I concede that that proposition is liable to branch out into a great many considerations, and leads to an almost exhaustless field of investigation, or may, yet, it is perhaps not necessary that we should follow it into all to which it may invite us.
In the course of the argument yesterday, it was suggested by one of the attorneys that the procedure of the legislature was generally — and the argument was that it might be in all cases — regulated by the joint rules of the two houses, or by the rule of that house whose procedure might be under consideration. Now, in one sense that suggestion is undoubtedly true. It is, or was once, the universal rule that the laws which are to govern the procedure of the legislative bodies and were not the general standing laws governing all the people, were to be enacted, so to speak, in the shape of rules which they should formulate and prescribe for themselves. Under that idea it was that the legislature in all the older states, and some of the'newer ones, were almost unlimited in their field of legislation. But about forty years ago the idea began to prevail that the practice of legislative bodies should be controlled by law in many of the most important things which they were called upon to do. Before that time all chartered privileges were given out by the legislature with scarcely any restriction upon its actions, and at this time, in the state of Ohio, where, I believe, this reform started,
But it was in a line with that thought, with that sentiment, which became almost universal in this country, that all of those constitutional provisions which provide that the title to bills which before that time had been considered a mere matter of form, and up to 100 years ago were not attached to bills when they passed the legislative bodies, but were attached to them by the clerks as a kind of label, I say it was in obedience to this sentiment that it was provided in later constitutions that no act should contain more than one subject, and that should be clearly expressed in •its title; and the constitutions in many other respects provided especially the manner in which the legislative functions should be exercised and performed by the legislature; and in this, took away largely from these bodies the power to regulate their form of procedure, merely by their own
With these remarks, I come to the section which was enacted in the manner proposed by the commission — enacted by the legislature and formally adopted as the law twelve years ago — section 77, Bear in mind that this act was passed in strict conformity to the constitutional provision which I have read: “Contested elections for all of said offices shall be determined by both houses of the legislature by joint vote in such manner as may be prescribed by law.” “Upon the reception by such presiding officer of papers relating to contested elections, they shall immediately give notice to their respective houses that such papers are in their .possession. Where the papers relate to the contest of any executive state officer, the house of representatives shall notify the senate, and a day shall be fixed by both houses by concurrent resolution, for the uniting of the two houses to decide upon the same, in which decision the yeas and nays shall be taken and entered upon the journal.”
Now that section is the law of the land. Its constitutionality has not been attacked in this court, and until it is, it has all the binding force of a constitutional provision. If it is attacked, while it is impossible for the court to tell what line of thought may be presented, or what authorities might be shown applicable to the subject, it is almost impossible to conceive without such suggestion or argument, that it could be held to be otherwise than in strict conformity to the requirements of the constitution which
Now, unless we are astray fundamentally in our view •of this constitution and law, it was essential to the validity •of a concurrent resolution for any purpose whatever, that at should have been signed by the presiding officer of the ■senate, as well as of the house.
It is suggested, and is a matter of history, that the presiding officer of the senate is one of the men whose election is contested. It is barely possible that the learned ■men who drafted this statute, and the learned legislative-representatives of the people who enacted it into a law, failed to take into consideration the possibility — perhaps I ■might say the probability — that some time or other in the future history of the state the lieutenant governor’s right to the office would be attacked by contest proceedings. Granted that they did fail to take that into consideration at all, then where are we left? What is the position? If it was clear that they did not take that into consideration in the passage of the law, then in the wide field of construction that is left to the courts, especially those of last resort, the wide field of discretion to construe the laws so as to carry out the true intent and meaning of the law-makers, would we be given the power to so construe their language as to carry out what we believe to have been their true intent and meaning?
But I do not think that we are driven to that consideration. The mere function of signing a bill, the mere certificate on the part of the presiding officer of’ the senate that such a bill has passed the house over which he presides by a vote taken by ayes and noes, which is., all this signature amounts to in this case, is not, in our opinion, such an act that the presiding officer would be excused from performing by the fact that his personal interests are involved in the matter.
I will grant that there is some distinction between the case at bar — the case of the lieutenant governor and the resolution now under consideration — and that of a presiding official called upon to certify to a financial measure, or a corporation measure in which indirectly he has an interest; I will agree there is some distinction to be taken there, but in general it amounts to about the same as though the gentleman chosen to preside over the senate, who is
It is true that his right to act in that official position is attacked, but it is a well known principle of law, recognized by the bar and the people that even a defacto officer’s acts, when performed, have all the legal weight and authority of those of the regularly elected and installed officer. So that it is our opinion that there is nothing in the constitution or the laws,-or in the feature of the case itself, which made it necessary for the lieutenant governor to step down from his office and fail to act upon this resolution. Not that I insinuate that he did do that at all; I am uninformed officially as to that matter, but if such had been the case, if it was his duty so to do, if it was his duty to refrain from acting in the office to which he has been declared elected, and the duties of which he has entered upon and discharged, in this instance even then there was an alternative officer provided by the statute, to-wit, the president pro tern, of the senate, who, as I am at present advised at least, could, in the absence of the lieutenant governor, have performed his functions in all respects.
Therefore we are of the opinion that the resolution itself cannot be taken as evidence of any fact without the signature of some one at least purporting to be the presiding officer of the senate.
And it is worthy of consideration that it is due to the people of this state; it is due to the dignity of the proceeding which is now going on and which has attracted great attention, that a record should be made of these important proceedings. A record should be made which will be looked
Section 15 of article 5 provides: “Every bill passed by the legislature, before it becomes a law, and every order, resolution, or vote to which the concurrence of both houses may be necessary (except on questions of adjournment) shall be presented to the governor. If he approve he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become a law; but if he do not approve, he shall return it with his objections to the house in which it shall have originated, which house shall enter the objections at large upon its journal and proceed to reconsider the bill. If then three-fifths of the members elected agree to pass the same, it shall be sent, together with the objections, to the other house, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and if approved by three-fifths of the members elected to that house, it shall become a law, notwithstanding the objections of the governor,” etc.
I think that that consideration takes away from the court called upon to construe the whole law applicable to this-question, the argument that they must construe the law so-that in any event it will not fail of the purpose for which, the provisions taken together were enacted.
Section 15 is copied almost- literally from the similar clause in the constitution of the United States, with this-exception : That in that constitution it is divided into two-parts, the first applying only to bills and matters of primal,, so to speak, legislation, while the second clause makes it. also applicable to, using the exact language of this clause, “order, resolution or vote.” By some means I had got the impression that there was a distinction in the constitution of the United States and the practice of congress between joint resolutions and concurrent resolutions, and upon that idea — and I think some time in conversation T have expressed it — I have been of the opinion that following out that supposed distinction might lead to the method of construing the law of the question which is now before-us to the reverse of the opinion at which we have arrived.
But upon a careful consideration of the authorities, and the clauses of the constitution which are applicable, I am unable to see that there is any distinction whatever between a joint resolution and a concurrent resolution, im reference to the necessity of its being presented to the governor.
The appropriate action for such purpose was information in the nature of quo warranto. It is of the nature of this proceeding that it can only be commenced, and the information therefor filed, by leave of the court. The writ ■of quo warranto was never anywhere a writ of right, but courts would not arbitrarily refuse to file the information, but would exercise a sound discretion according to law. (See People, ex rel., v. Waite, 70 Ill., 25, and authorities there cited; People v. Tisdale, 1 Douglas [Mich.], 59; State v. Brown, 5 R. I., 1; State v. Lehre, 7 Rich. [S. C. L.], 234; Commonwealth v. Jones, 12 Pa. St., 365.)
Keeping in mind that from the beginning up to a comparatively recent period in the history of the states of the Union, the only method of trying the title to an office was by suit in court, and that neither a citizen as such nor a claimant to the respective offices could commence such suit as a matter of right, the argument suggests itself with considerable force in considering the act of the legislature involved in this case, that while the constitutional provision which said act was designed to supplement and carry out, and the act itself, considered together, do give to any elector the absolute right to contest the validity of the election of any executive state officer, it may and proba
The questions propounded to us are somewhat several, and, while the meaning is apparent, there is a little more said than need to be, and it could have been presented in a more condensed form.
The conclusion, however, is that the joint resolution should be presented to the occupant of the executive chair, notwithstanding he is the same man who is spoken of in the notice and other proceedings of contest. That should he fail to sign it, and return it to the house in which it originated, with his objections, and upon its reconsideration it should fail to receive the vote of three-fifths of the members elected, it fails, so far as that proceeding is concerned. If he fails to return it and it remains the constitutional time — which I believe is five days — that it then becomes a law, notwithstanding his failure to return it, unless the legislature by adjournment should prevent its return.
This leads us to the conclusion that the resolution, a copy of which is before us, and from which it may be gathered that it has passed the two houses and has the signature of the speaker of the house, and not that of any one purporting to be the presiding officer of the senate, and does not purport to have been presented to the executive — that the meeting of the legislature in joint convention, by virtue of that paper, is not a legal meeting for the purpose of hearing and deciding the contests now pending.
Furthermore, there appears in these papers copies of
I believe we were asked to say — at least we feel called upon to say in response to something that was said by counsel — that so far as this resolution is concerned, if it were not for the fact that it fixes a day, I believe the 20th, on which the two houses should meet in joint convention; if it were not for that fact, it could be presented to the lieutenant-governor and with his signature could be presented to the governor and thus evade the necessity of further time in again passing the resolution through the two houses, as it seems to require several days; but as it is, it certainly could not answer the purpose without an amendment changing the time of meeting to some future day, and it would be policy in all events to set that time far enough in advance to give not only the two houses an opportunity to pass upon it on the three several days, if it is deemed necessary to repass it, but also to allow the governor the time constitution gives for its consideration and return, if he desires to occupy the full time.