90 F. 80 | 9th Cir. | 1898
after making the statement of the case as above, delivered the following opinion:
As the provision of section 6 of the act of 1887 relating to express companies is not included in the title of the act, and is not properly connected with the subject of that title, it is clearly void as to express companies, under section 20 of article 4 of the constitution of the .state. But the defendant does not base his right upon that provision. His claim is that he has the right to retain the bonds in his posses.sion by virtue of the act of October 21, 1864, amended and approved December 19, 1865, and as further amended by the act approved October 24, 1870. Gen. Laws Or. 1843-72, p. 616, compiled and annotated by Matthew P. Deady and Lafayette Lane. The plaintiff claims that this statute was expressly repealed by section 25 of the act of 1887, providing for the repeal of sections 1, 2, 3, and 16, c. 24, of the Miscellaneous Laws of Oregon. It is conceded that such
The second proposition of the plaintiff in error is that the law under which the defendant claims the right to hold the bonds in question has no validity because it was never properly adopted. That is to say, the ad: approved October 24, 1870, was amendatory of previous acts requiring the deposit: to be made with the county treasurer, instead of with the state treasurer, and the amendatory act requiring the deposit to be made with the treasurer of the state failed because it did not properly describe the act amended. The first act was approved October 21, 1864, and was entitled “An act to regulate and tax foreign insurance, banking, express and exchange corporations or associations.
The reference to the title of the original act was therefore not accurate, but it was not such an error as was calculated to mislead the reader as to the purpose of the amendment. Trivial errors in describing the title of the original act, which cannot mislead, will not invalidate the amendatory act. People v. Howard, 73 Mich. 10, 40 N. W. 789.
This statute, as amended by the act of 1865 and by the act of 1870, appears to have been set forth and published as required by the constitutional provision. Laws 1870, p. 46, and Gen. Laws Or. 1843-72, p. 616, compiled and annotated by Matthew P. Deady and Lafayette Lane. This was sufficient, and disposes of plaintiff’s objections to both amendatory acts. Oregon v. Phenline, supra. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.