80 Cal. 220 | Cal. | 1889
This is an application by petitioner for a peremptory writ of mandate, directing the respondent, state controller, to draw his warrant in favor of the petitioner for the sum of $297.75, alleged to be due petitioner for supplies furnished to the state mining bureau for the forty-first fiscal year. The demand has been duly
“Sec. 1. The sum of one hundred thousand dollars is hereby appropriated for the support and maintenance of the mining bureau, created under an act entitled ‘An act to provide for the establishment and maintenance of a mining bureau/ approved April 16, 1880, and the act supplementary thereto, approved March 21, 1885, and at least seventy per cent of this appropriation shall be used for geological work in the field.
“Sec. 2. Not more than one half of the said sum appropriated under this act shall be expended during the forty-first fiscal year.
“ Sec. 3. This act shall take effect immediately.” (See Stats. 1889, p. 149.)
The case turns upon the question of the sufficiency or insufficiency of this act to authorize the controller to draw his warrant for moneys expended under the appropriation therein attempted to be made.
The contention of the respondent is, that the act is insufficient, because the appropriation attempted to be made is not specific within the meaning of the constitution, the statutes applicable to the controller’s office and the revenue system, and the previous decisions of this court.
The-only provision of the constitution relating to the subject to which our attention has been called, or which we have been able to find, is that found in article 6, section 22. That part of the section bearing upon this question reads as follows: “No money shall be drawn
This act does not conflict with nor fall short of the requirements of either of these constitutional provisions. There is no provision in the constitution providing or prescribing any particular form of words in which an appropriation shall be made, except that it shall be made by law. Neither is there any provision in the constitution prescribing the' duties of the controller in the matter of drawing warrants upon the treasury, except as above quoted.
The duties of the controller are defined by part 3, title Í, chapter 3, article 6, of the Political Code. The first section of that article (section 433) has twenty-one subdivisions, each specifying some special duty of that officer. Subdivision 17 is the only one which need to be considered in this case. It reads: “To draw warrants on the treasurer for the payment of moneys directed by law to be paid out of the treasury; but no warrant must be drawn unless authorized by law, and upon an unexhausted specific appropriation provided by law to meet the same. Every warrant must be drawn upon the
Section 436 is a part of the same article, and reads: “All warrants for claims which have been audited by the board of examiners and filed in his office must be drawn in the order of the numbers which have been placed upon them by that board.”
Article 18 of the same chapter provides for the organization, powers, and duties of the board of examiners. In that article, at section 660, it is provided that “ any person having a claim against the state for which an appropriation has been made may present the same to the board in the form of an account or petition, and the clerk of the board must date, number, and file such claim, and the board must allow or reject the same in the order of its. presentation. The board may for cause postpone action upon a claim for not exceeding one month.” Section 661: “If the board approve such claim, they must indorse'thereon, over their signatures, ‘Approved for the sum of-- dollars/ and transmit the same to the office of the controller of state; and the controller must draw Ms warrant for the amount so approved in favor of the claimant or his assigns, in the order in which the same was approved.”
No point is made that this claim has not been properly presented to and approved by the board of examiners and filed with the controller.
Other sections of the article provide for the action to be taken by the board of examiners when claims are presented, for which no appropriation has been made, or where the appropriation has been exhausted, but these do not contemplate any action by the controller on such ground; the only further provision in regard to his powers and duties in that regard being that found in section 672, where it is provided that he shall not draw h.is war
It is claimed that the act does not specify upon what fund the warrant is to be drawn, and as he is required in every warrant to specify the fund out of which it is payable, therefore, that it is insufficient. Several authorities are cited which are claimed to support the proposition that the act itself must specify the fund out of which the money is to be drawn, but we do not think they bear that construction, in the sense in which it is claimed for it here, and as to the statutes, not one appropriation act in fifty designates the fund out of which the money is to be drawn. The majority of all appropriations are drawn out of a single fund, and that without any designation in the act as to what fund the money shall be drawn from.
In Fowler v. Pierce, 2 Cal. 167, cited by counsel, the question under consideration in that part of the opinion from which the quotation was made was whether or not mandate was the.proper remedy. The words quoted by counsel were not necessary to the determination of that question, and although the language quoted seems to assume that the fund out of which the money was payable had been specified in the act referred to, a reference to the act itself shows that such was not the fact in any sense other or different from that found in the act'under consideration here. The case, as a whole, is against rather than in favor of the position taken by respondent.
By reference to the act referred to in Stratton v. Green, 45 Cal. 149 (the act creating a board of tide-land commissioners, Stats. 1869-1870, p. 541), it will be seen that it provided for the incurring of large expenses and salaries, and that the controller should draw his warrant upon the general fund for the payment of the same, but neither in that act, nor in any other, did the legislature make any appropriation out of the general fund, or any other fund, for the payment of those expenses or salaries. No attempt was made to appropriate money for that purpose, and the mandate was in .that case refused for want of appropriation.
Baggett v. Dunn, 69 Cal. 75, was a case where the claim was for a salary,—a claim which was not required to be presented to the board of examiners. The controller refused to draw his warrant, because no appropriation had been made for the payment of the salary for that year, and the court sustained him.
In Marshall v. Dunn, 69 Cal. 223, the warrant was refused because the appropriation was exhausted, and the court sustained the ruling.
Neither the constitution nor the code requires that an appropriation act shall specify the fund out of which the appropriation shall be paid, nor is it usual in appropriation acts to do so. If such a specification is required, the wheels of the government ought long since to have stopped, for out of many acts which we have examined, including the general appropriation bills for the current and past years, we find none which make such designation.
But if the word “ fund,”' as- used in subdivision 17, section 433, of the Political Code, is synonymous with the word “appropriation,” it only remains to determine whether there has been an appropriation in this case.
Appropriations are made, and can only be made, by the legislature. The-constitution has prescribed no- set
“An appropriation is the act of setting apart, or assigning to a particular use or person, in exclusion of all 'others; application to a special use or purpose, as of . . . . money to carry out some public object.” (Webster’s Dictionary.)
“An appropriation of the money to a specific object would be an authority to the proper officers to pay the money, because the auditor is authorized to draw his warrant upon an appropriation, and the treasurer is
In this act we have a clear, distinct expression of the legislative will making the appropriation. The words “out of any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated ” are not necessary to the expression of that will, or the making of such appropriation. They are in common use in this state, but nowhere made necessary, and are not always used. (See act to provide for improvements of the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Asylum, Stats. 1889, p. 303; act to provide for a system of irrigation, etc., Stats.- 1877-78, p. 634, subd. 1 of sec. 4; act making appropriations for benevolent purposes, Stats. 1875-76, p. 323.) No doubt further examination would disclose many similar omissions. So far as we have observed, they are never used in the acts of Congress. ■ Whether they are in common use in other states, and if so., whether there is a reason for it, we have not time to inquire, nor do we deem it necessary, in the absence of any requirement for their use in this state.
If the word “fund,” in the point here made by the controller, and in subdivision 17, section 433, Political Code, is used in its technical sense, as designating the separate funds in the treasury, then the whole history and practice under it in this state from its earliest organization is against the contention now made, that the appropriation act itself must specify the fund upon which the warrant is to be drawn; but if it is used as "an alternative for “appropriation,” then all difficulty is removed, provided there is a specific appropriation against which the warrant may be drawn, and the case does riot differ from all others where the appropriation is not by express words made payable out of some one of the separate funds in the "treasury other than the general fund.
The board of examiners have, by their action under sections 660 and 661 of the Political Code, by implication at least, held that in this case "there was a specific appro
Let the writ issue as prayed.
Beatty, C. J., Paterson, J., Thornton, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.